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Hey -- if you've been made to feel unsafe by *any* member of our extended community (hardware hacking, openFPGA, Lix, etc); please, feel free to reach out.

We've gotten way too many recent reports of e.g. SA perpetrated by well-known community members, and it's about time the silence stopped.

Some more-secure ways to reach out:

signal: ktemkin.8051
xmpp(+omemo): kate@ktemk.in
matrix: @ ktemkin:katesiria.org

Let's all hold hands and watch bitcoin and AI crash together.

jk rowling, terf, etc 

from shon faye, author of the transgender issue, found re-posted on tumblr and i thought it was good enough to put here, i love to save stuff i find, don't mind me

(I've been checking for quite a while already. But the last boost told me that the issue is actually worse than I thought.)

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Grmbl. Since this apparently needs clarifying.

I will not boost pictures without *useful* alt text. Technically having alt text that's completely useless to the reader ("an image", "a tweet", etc.) is not enough. Yes, I check.

I just saw an alt text somewhere that described something as, and I quote, "An image". For fucks sake people, I know that already, the whole point of alt text is to *describe* the image. I know it's an image, maybe tell me what the fuck the image is? If you can't add good alt text, don't ad it at all.

@DeArcheoloog @TiciaVerveer It worked! It is really possible to turn wood without a toolrest on a pole lathe with a medieval chisel.

The chisel is quite heavy, but that helps to keep it steady.

I hope I can improve my skills this week, and make something useful. My ultimate goal is the late medieval children's tabor pipe I measured at the archeological depot of Leiden. But that feels far away: I need a lot more skill for that. I think I will start with the handle of a shoemaker's awl.

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'intellectual' podcasts 

I think I've finally worked out what annoys me so much about these 'intellectual podcasts'. Like, sure, they're almost always laundering right-wing politics, but I find them grating in a much more visceral sense than that, and this includes the ones that *aren't* right-wing.

I think it's because of how those shows are almost entirely centered on a few people sitting in a room enthusiastically agreeing with each other. There's a pretense of intellectual debate, but no actual depth of any sort.

There's no room for learning of novel perspectives, of different experiences. It's just two dudes - it's almost always dudes - talking over each other about how right they both are. No genuine reflection or inquiry.

@joepie91 That makes sense. And I've almost always seen organizations react to the problems that arise from this by further centralizing power and reducing people's agency. It's a downward spiral that eventually either destroys the organization or turns it into a bureaucracy, i.e. an organization which tries to make everyone interchangeable.

Which I guess is what Google was *trying* to become at the end of the day. Only they seemed to think they could do it better than others and have people still do decent work. I think it's pretty obvious at this point that they were wrong.

Hypothesis: the fact that tech workers have little genuine agency over the work they do and how they do it (the boss decides in the end, not them) leads to bad technical choices sticking around institutionally because the inertia is hard to overcome if you don't have power over the direction, and those bad technical choices are introduced in the first place through hype cycles because "banding together around an exciting new tool" is the closest thing that anyone has to community organizing.

(This is an unrefined thought)

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Pondering about the relation between worker agency/ownership and the susceptibility of the tech industry to hype cycles

"Social media wasn’t web 2.0, it’s what *killed* Web 2.0!

You might think I’m arguing over mere nomenclature but the important fact is that this era existed, and the Web3 pitch pretends it didn’t. We already had decentralized internet with social features. This fact contradicts the story the Web3/blockchain advocates want to tell you, so their story skips this entire era."

Good post over here: accordion-druid.tumblr.com/pos

re: fighting fascist media, meta 

To make this absolutely clear: this is in no way a *justification* for people getting involved in right-wing movements. That remains the responsibility of those people themselves.

The point I am trying to make here (and asking a question about) is that sure, we know what is *morally* the correct answer, but how does this translate into concrete actions to stop the issue from happening?

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fighting fascist media, meta 

I quite often have warned someone about a platform that's clearly targeting white supremacists, nazis, and other kinds of fascists as their userbase, but that superficially claims they're just "neutral".

These warnings rarely lead anyone to leave those platforms behind. And it usually takes a few years before it becomes publicly documented and accepted that yes, it really is a fascist platform.

On the one hand, the conclusion you could draw from this is that they should have listened to the warning, they should have taken it seriously. "I told you so" and all that.

You might argue that they probably understood perfectly well what it was, but they were actually okay with it as long as it wasn't too obvious, because a little bit of white supremacy helps them feel better as a white guy, and really the problem isn't that they ignored the warning, but that they are racist. And you'd probably be right.

But then the question becomes: how can we prevent this dynamic? Because however wrong and racist someone may be, that conclusion does not change the outcome of them likely having become radicalized further right in this process. How can we avoid that happening?

How do we stop "people who have internalized racist views and never introspected on them" from walking into the just-about-tolerable bar and falling into a fascist pit? Because yes, it's their own responsibility if they do so, but the consequences are borne by everyone else and that's still a problem.

I just realized a good argument against computer ads.

Contrary to regular ads, it is actually using your resources (your power, time on the CPU you bought, etc)

So, shouldn't ad companies paying you money for displaying their ads? Like they pay billboard owners or news paper owners, etc.

So until then, using ad block is just preventing theft.

I really need a home 🏡

Can someone please help me? I’m being #neglected & #abused
All you need is a spare room & a heart. Ask anyone you know.

Domestic violence orgs don’t help #disabled people. I need someone to take me in. I just need a quiet room.

I need to be safe with care. Please help.

#MEAwarenessHour #MECFS #pWME #PWLC #LongCovid #ChronicIllness

#Melbourne #Australia

@mecfs @disabilityjustice @disability @chronicillness @neisvoid @socialwork
@multipledisabilities
@longcovid

Kent iemand nog goede artikelen (liever geen boeken i.v.m. lengte) over de geschiedenis van de verzuiling in Nederland, die het vanuit een zuiver perspectief bekijken (dus de positieve én de negatieve aspecten), en niet alleen maar het gebruikelijke "och jee die verschrikkelijke verzuiling, gelukkig zijn we nu modern"-gedoe?

GGZ, soort van, maar positief? 

Gisteren kwam ik achter het bestaan van de Yes We Can Clinics, door een paar jongeren die me erover vertelden, en die er bijzonder positief over waren - dat ben ik niet bepaald gewend van GGZ-instellingen, dus mijn interesse was gewekt.

Even verder gelezen, en het behandelprogramma en de aanpak zien er echt heel goed uit, ze lijken het echt te begrijpen (ook waarom de bestaande GGZ niet werkt). Ook even gezocht of het niet weer e.o.a. dubieuze Scientology-tak is, maar dat lijkt niet zo te zijn.

Is iemand hier er bekend mee? Is er nu echt een GGZ-instelling die het *wel* snapt? Het is moeilijk te geloven. :boost_requested:

context re: originally a subtoot, but really a general frustration on fedi and elsewhere 

This would originally have been a subtoot, but it seemed more constructive to point out the broader pattern, rather than highlighting the one instance I just happened to run into.

It would help nobody to treat this as an isolated case.

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