HiddenLayer555

joined 9 months ago
[–] [email protected] 4 points 6 hours ago* (last edited 6 hours ago) (1 children)

You can fit millions of books on a chip the size of your fingernail.

[–] [email protected] 16 points 15 hours ago* (last edited 14 hours ago)

The nearly 5,000 soldiers in Los Angeles detained one man, briefly. Was that worth $134 million and a constitutional crisis?

Yes.

Because it sets a precedence. Trump's MO has been to try more and more insane shit until the bar for what's normal shifts so far that people get desensitized and start thinking all of this is fine.

It's also shown that the systems that are supposed to be in place to stop things like this don't actually work. The first time someone in the government actually tried to defy those systems, they all either failed to kick in to begin with or were easily shut down or bypassed. Which is music to fascist ears.

All of this has been a massive success for Trump, Musk, and fascism in general. Meanwhile even mainstream anti-Trump media has been burying their head in the sand pretending that Trump is incompetent and has not done anything meaningful toward fascism, when in reality he's been getting everything he wants. That should be terrifying to everyone else yet it really seems that most people in the US, even those against Trump, just aren't getting it and are just trying to wait out the four years as if he'll actually step down then.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 15 hours ago* (last edited 15 hours ago)
[–] [email protected] 9 points 17 hours ago

That's exactly why they're trying to ban it.

[–] [email protected] 13 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

Obviously I'm not saying I want Israli civilians killed. I don't want that any more than I want Iranians and Palestinians killed.

That said, I'm finding it really hard to feel any sympathy for them.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago) (1 children)

Same as regular erasers then?

[–] [email protected] 0 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago) (1 children)

Even so, teaching kids there's no difference between something dissolving and disappearing is blatant misinformation. If they wanted to teach scientific concepts, they should actually teach how they work.

If your target audience is kids, you have to be more careful with your wording because they have limited background knowledge and will likely take everything you say at face value. Otherwise you can create life long misconceptions which they pass along to the next generation because they assume it's true.

These are the kinds of articles every science teacher hates because when they try to teach real science all the kids will go "nuh uh! I saw it on BBC! How can the dissolved solids be in the water when the news says it just disappears?"

And that's saying nothing about the implications of teaching kids that we'll just innovate our ecological problems away. The status quo is fine, and no one needs to change their own behaviours, just wait for the eco friendly products to roll in and consume as normal.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago)

This is the most frustrating article I've read in a while.

Experts say the new material breaks down quickly in around two to three hours, depending on its thickness and size.

Okay? What does it break down into?

But it's hoped that the new non-toxic material could offer a future solution as it disappears completely.

What material is it and how did you determine it's non-toxic?

Researchers say it is made by combining two small molecules which form a strong bond that allows the new material to stay tough and flexible.

Which two small molecules? Methyl mercury and cyanide are small molecules.

When placed in a mixture which had the same amount of salt as seawater, they found the new plastic dissolved "quickly in about two to three hours, depending on its thickness and size."

What does it dissolve into?!

Takuzo Aida, lead researcher at CEMS, explained: "Similarly, when tested in soil..a piece of plastic about 5 centimetres in size, it completely disappears after a little over 200 hours."

No it doesn't fucking "disappear." That's not how any of this works. Just because you can't see it doesn't mean it doesn't exist. Did a child without object permanence write this?

Recent studies have shown the damage microplastics cause as they pollute the environment and create health problems for animals, because they can be easily eaten.

Dissolved chemicals don't even have to be eaten, they can be inhaled by water breathing animals. They can also potentially bioaccumulate and pose a hazard to people eating seafood which a lot of people do in Japan.

He added: "In Japan, almost all packaging is made of plastic, and if we can really manage to reduce that, we can expect less environmental damage."

Then pass single use plastic regulations. Switch to recycled paper. Switch to bamboo. Switch to hemp. Switch to banana leaves. Use less packaging in general. Normalize having people bring their own containers. Pay people better so they actually have time to cook at home instead of having to buy fast food while working overtime. A new type of plastic doesn't solve the root societal problems that led to this. This is so blatantly a status quo enforcing non-solution.

Fuck this article. It tells you nothing other than useless fluff. Which makes me think this product is definitely a scam like every other "eco friendly plastic." Either that or BBC couldn't be bothered to translate any of the technical information they gave them.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago) (1 children)

Stablecoins

Hot ice

Cold fire

A bike lane for cars

A corporation that isn't the scum of the Earth

[–] [email protected] 16 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago)

Germany: Nuclear weapons are good actually

Also Germany: Ban nuclear power return to burning coal

Guess they don't like nuclear if it doesn't involve killing people

[–] [email protected] 2 points 3 days ago

Al Blue: When Al Capone becomes a cop.

 

I think the only thing worse than something not being private, is if the fact that it's not private is not common knowledge leading to tons of people thinking it's private.

Lemmy doesn't even show a list of what you the logged in user voted on. But it's trivial to use an external tool to see who voted on what regardless of whose account it is. I think obsecuring information like this does more harm than good, since a lot of people won't actively go out and research what kind of data in their Lemmy account is publicly accessible beyond the data they can see from the website itself.

It's been discussed before that there isn't an easy way to hide who voted for what on a federated platform while still having all the instances correctly count votes for everyone. Therefore, if actually making votes anonymous seems not to be viable, why not just make it public for everyone like Mastodon does? I don't think we should make them inbox items like on Mastodon, or at least not the same inbox as the rest of the notifications so votes don't drown them out. I think a dropdown on the content itself showing who voted on it and in which direction is probably enough. Also a tab on the user page showing a list of everything the user voted on, at least on the logged in user's own page (I mainly want this so I can keep track of what I voted on).

 

Everyone talks about how evil browser fingerprinting is, and it is, but I don't get why people are only blaming the companies doing it and not putting equal blame on browsers for letting it happen.

Go to Am I Unique and look at the kind of data browsers let JavaScript access unconditionally with no user prompting. Here's a selection of ridiculous ones that pretty much no website needs:

  • Your operating system (Isn't the whole damn point of the internet that it's platform independent?)
  • Your CPU architecture (JS runs on the most virtual of virtual environments why the hell does it need to know what processor you have?)
  • Your JS interpreter's version and build ID
  • List of plugins you have installed
  • List of extensions you have installed
  • Your accelerometer and gyroscope (so any website can figure out what you're doing by analyzing how you move your phone, i.e. running vs walking vs driving vs standing still)
  • Your magnetic field sensor AKA the phone's compass (so websites can figure out which direction you're facing)
  • Your proximity sensor
  • Your keyboard layout
  • How your mouse moves every moment it's in the webpage window, including how far you scroll, what bit of text you hovered on or selected, both left and right clicks, etc.
  • Everything you type on your keyboard when the window is active. You don't need to be typing into a text box or anything, you can set a general event listener for keystrokes like you can for the mouse.

If you're wondering how sensors are used to fingerprint you, I think it has to do with manufacturing imperfections that skew their readings in unique ways for each device, but websites could just as easily straight up record those sensors without you knowing. It's not a lot of data all things considered so you likely wouldn't notice.

Also, canvas and webGL rendering differences are each more than enough to 100% identify your browser instance. Not a bit of effort put into making their results more consistent I guess.

All of these are accessible to any website by default. Actually, there's not even a way to turn most of these off. WHY?! All of these are niche features that only a tiny fraction of websites need. Browser companies know that fingerprinting is a problem and have done nothing about it. Not even Firefox.

Why is the web, where you're by far the most likely to execute malicious code, not built on zero trust policies? Let me allow the functionality I need on a per site basis.

Fuck everything about modern websites.

 

If you're truly honest, you'd say yes.

If you weren't honest, you'd lie and say yes.

If you were truly honest and say no, then you're not being honest about your honesty.

If you weren't honest and say no, then you're being honest which is a paradox.

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