antonim

joined 2 years ago
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[–] antonim 7 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

Recently went down the rabbit hole (ok, I'm lying, I just read a Wikipedia article and one scientific study), and found out that the venomousness of the platypus has crazy implications for mammal evolution:

In spite of the rarity of venom among extant mammals, venom may be an ancestral feature among mammals, as venomous spurs akin to those of the modern platypus are found in most non-therian Mammaliaformes groups.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venomous_mammal

(The monotremes are the platypus and the echidna, which unlike the platypus isn't venomous but still has the spurs.)

[–] antonim 3 points 2 months ago (2 children)

It's fucked up that RT and similar sites with their ratings are so important for so many filmgoers. I would guess it's because film theatre tickets have become more expensive so people are trying to be as selective as possible with what films they spend their money on.

So people listen to the "average", go to the movies based on predigested opinions, and end up making their own filmgoing experiences, horizon and taste closer to the average as well. The risk in filmgoing is being minimised (which kind of mirrors the behaviour of the film industry so it's not without reason that the audiences behave like that, I guess; but it still sucks).

[–] antonim 5 points 2 months ago

long, narrow, harder to read

If you're using Lemmy in your browser, you can click on the image and it will open in full size, which you can zoom in and it's pretty big.

[–] antonim 6 points 2 months ago (3 children)

One of my family members participated in one such project, she wrote scenarios for a number of video lectures for schoolkids. It was bad, it was really fucking bad, and I could write an essay explaining why it was so, there's a wide variety of reasons ranging across the technical, legal, administrative, etc. Just one example: you're making a lecture about art? Yeah, go contact the copyright holders if they would be merciful enough to allow us to use the artwork in the video.

And your idea that the default approach should be that kids have no interaction with their teachers is honestly horrifying.

[–] antonim 3 points 2 months ago

I tried it out and in some respects it really is excellent, but it loads more slowly than the native "new tab". So I stick to the native one (having removed much of the default crap, of course; now it's just a 8x4 table of my "quick links").

[–] antonim 1 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) (1 children)

I saw it on r/croatia, tbh.

[–] antonim 8 points 2 months ago

As a Croat, I'm baffled we've reached it.

[–] antonim 1 points 2 months ago

It's the lever that's used to steer the trolley in the original illustration of the problem.

[–] antonim 13 points 2 months ago

They already did something similar back in the day. I remember watching a music video some ~10 years ago where they placed an ad like five seconds before the end of the song, right at the musical climax, ruining the mood with surgical precision. I was absolutely infuriated and went off to Google wondering if there's a way to block ads. And the rest is history.

[–] antonim 3 points 2 months ago (1 children)

The paper is very interesting, but sadly it's not what I'm talking about. It talks about the alternation of the sort: objéct (verb) - óbject (noun), which is basically a manner of word formation, it is present synchronically and intradialectally. My examples are of semantically unmotivated shifts across different dialects and across time, happening among -ate verbs only (i.e. they don't form the verb-noun pair, it's just the same verb in both cases). So I see no "conflict" here to resolve.

It might be that the -ate shift is somehow analogically induced by the verb-noun shift - but how? It actually seems to go the opposite way: in the verb-noun pairs the verb has final stress, whereas the shift affecting the -ate verbs produces the noun-like initial stress. This certainly doesn't affect or support any existing distinctions, at most it just creates confusion by using the noun-like stress for verbs (assuming it is legitimate to call either of the accents noun-like or verb-like in general).

English “preferring” the stress in the first syllable

I've seen this sort of claim regarding English stress many times, but it really isn't an acceptable formulation, it's a "rule" that can be applied everywhere and nowhere. (Similarly so, it would be unacceptable/useless to say that English prefers /k/ to /g/ if all we could say about them is that the former is statistically more frequent than the latter.)

However, it seems you've nonetheless given me some material that might answer my question - the paper you link mentions the book Studies on the Accentuation of Polysyllabic Latin, Greek, and Romance Loanwords in English by B. Danielsson, which also addresses -ate verbs. I'll have to try to find it, it looks very promising.

[–] antonim 15 points 3 months ago

literally 1984 😔

[–] antonim 5 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

If I've understood it correctly, this decision has just been reversed by the Indian court:

https://indianexpress.com/article/india/sc-delhi-hc-order-take-down-page-ani-wikipedia-case-9992611/

The Supreme Court Friday set aside the Delhi High Court’s October 2024 order asking Wikimedia Foundation Inc to take down a page published on Wikipedia, which carried details of the High Court hearing on a defamation complaint filed by news agency ANI against the online encyclopedia, including the comments of the judge.

A bench of Justices A S Oka and Ujjal Bhuyan said, “It is not the duty of the court to tell the media to delete this and take that down… Both the judiciary and the media are the foundational pillars of democracy, which is a basic feature of the Constitution”. “For a liberal democracy to thrive, both should supplement each other.”

113
history of rulesophy (lemmy.dbzer0.com)
 
 

Budući da fektečekrski portali ne djeluju iz sistemske potrebe za meta-analizama ili sintezama društvenih procesa, već su dijelom žrvnja informacija čiji je ciklus valjanosti od 12 do 24 sata, i stoga se ne mogu izmaknuti, uzeti si dovoljno vremena da prouče sve aspekte neke informacije, a kamoli da ih prouče znanstveno i objektivno, obilato financiranje fektčekera neće riješiti ovu društveno-medijsku krizu. Također neće učiniti ljude ni medijski ni politički pismenijima. To ipak ne znači da takvi projekti nisu korisni. Jesu, za povećanje cijene rada u medijima, za nova zapošljavanja, za regrutiranje novih talenata, za plasiranje javnih informacija koje mejnstrim ponekad propusti kvalitetno popratiti jer eto baš upravo događa neki srcedrapajući ili moralni skandal koji nosi more klikova, pa time i more prihoda.

Sve to zaista doprinosi otpornosti sektora, pa utoliko ima smisla. Međutim, zbog političkog i emotivnog naboja koje ljudi imaju prema temama poput Covid epidemije i klimatskim promjenama, te zbog plitkosti obrade informacija, ne mičemo se zapravo s mrtve točke. Nijedna od organizacija kojima su podijeljena sredstva iz NPOO za fektčeking najvjerojatnije neće se približiti pronalasku rješenja za one društvene probleme koje će ovim sredstvima dobiti priliku adresirati. Fektčekerski mediji nemaju sistemsku snagu da se izdignu iznad kratkotrajnog života pojedine informacije, da je vide u povijesnom i socioekonomskom kontekstu i vjerojatno baš zato i dobivaju obilna sredstva. Jer kao što kaže onaj mem, nitko ti neće platiti obrazovanje uz pomoć kojeg ćeš ga srušiti s moći.

160
Wagnerule (lemmy.dbzer0.com)
 
 

Last Friday, the Southern District of New York court issued its final order in Hachette v. Internet Archive, thus bringing the lower court proceedings to a close. We disagree with the court’s decision and intend to appeal. In the meantime, however, we will abide by the court’s injunction.

The lawsuit only concerns our book lending program. The injunction clarifies that the Publisher Plaintiffs will notify us of their commercially available books, and the Internet Archive will expeditiously remove them from lending. Additionally, Judge Koeltl also signed an order in favor of the Internet Archive, agreeing with our request that the injunction should only cover books available in electronic format, and not the publishers’ full catalog of books in print. Separately, we have come to agreement with the Association of American Publishers (AAP), the trade organization that coordinated the original lawsuit with the four publishers, that the AAP will not support further legal action against the Internet Archive for controlled digital lending if we follow the same takedown procedures for any AAP-member publisher.

So what is the impact of these final orders on our library? Broadly, this injunction will result in a significant loss of access to valuable knowledge for the public. It means that people who are not part of an elite institution or who do not live near a well-funded public library will lose access to books they cannot read otherwise. It is a sad day for the Internet Archive, our patrons, and for all libraries.

Because this case was limited to our book lending program, the injunction does not significantly impact our other library services. The Internet Archive may still digitize books for preservation purposes, and may still provide access to our digital collections in a number of ways, including through interlibrary loan and by making accessible formats available to people with qualified print disabilities. We may continue to display “short portions” of books as is consistent with fair use—for example, Wikipedia references (as shown in the image above). The injunction does not affect lending of out-of-print books. And of course, the Internet Archive will still make millions of public domain texts available to the public without restriction.

Regarding the monetary payment, we can say that “AAP’s significant attorney’s fees and costs incurred in the Action since 2020 have been substantially compensated by the Monetary Judgement Payment.”

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