t3rmit3
@t3rmit3@beehaw.org
- Comment on The Astronomer CEO's Coldplay Concert Fiasco Is Emblematic of Our Social Media Surveillance Dystopia | 404 Media 1 hour ago:
Most concerts don’t have jumbotrons, though, and a jumbotron at a sporting event that is highlighting fans who are dressed in team colors is very different than just focusing on random people. There’s a lot of ink that’s been spilled on the creepiness of “kiss cams”.
It can be both wrong to cheat, and also wrong for us as a society to act as though being outside your home is consent for people to take videos of you as a subject. We should all have the right to exist without being someone else’s entertainment or content.
Was it dumb for them to be there together? Yeah, though mostly because it’s dumb to cheat.
I am not sure how much this incident has to do with facial recognition or media surveillance.
I think this situation is a horrifying lens into just how much surveillance and social media sharing of strangers people are accepting of.
You say, “you can reasonably expect hundreds of cameras owned by both individuals and the venue” as though there’s nothing wrong with just recording everyone that is in public. Incidentally catching someone in a crowd is one thing, but zooming in on and singling people out is another. I don’t think it’s a particularly long leap to get from your quote to, “it’s reasonable for police cameras to see you and know where you are if you’re out in public”.
- Comment on Internet regulation is entering its hall pass era 2 hours ago:
I fully expect that just as citizens in China have had to VPN into other countries and use those countries’ services to avoid their government’s censorship, we’re going to start seeing the US and UK users doing this as well.
- Comment on The Astronomer CEO's Coldplay Concert Fiasco Is Emblematic of Our Social Media Surveillance Dystopia | 404 Media 4 hours ago:
I’m glad someone is saying this, because frankly this whole situation is nasty as shit.
Are cheaters bad? Yes. Should people have informed the spouses? Yes. But that’s not why people are posting memes about this non-stop, this is just schadenfreude.
There reasons beyond cheating why 2 people may not want to be broadcast to the world as a couple. If this was 2 men, we’d all understand the problems with this, but social media is not going to allow us the nuance to differentiate; social media’s desire to play righteous sleuth for its own entertainment and ego is not a good thing, and we can’t make it only do good.
Is no one even considering whether their spouses want this level of attention, rather than the entire Internet deciding to make it national news for a week?
- Comment on Nintendo’s Zelda movie has found its princess and hero of time [Bo Bragason and Benjamin Evan] 6 hours ago:
Is this a criticism of the quote, or a response to it?
Once again, you’re not actually just stating your issue, and your responses are ambiguous enough that they could be interpreted either as an objection to people treating Hunter Schafer in a way that you perceive as negative, or an objection to Hunter Schafer.
- Comment on Steam is cracking down on porn games, to keep Payment Processors happy. 1 day ago:
Again, the issue is this is an American company setting American content policy internationally.
That is not the issue. That may be the subset of the issue that you have a problem with, but the actual issue is a payment provider setting purchase restrictions period. That it is happening in the US is not uniquely bad; it would be equally bad happening anywhere else.
Storefronts and brands can set up local branches and sell through those using the local digital payment provider without getting in trouble with their headquarter’d country.
To set up and sell in that country, they then have to comply with the local payment providers. Which shouldn’t be deciding whether people can purchase something.
Censorship that happens via companies unilaterally acting on what they believe to be the government’s wishes is still censorship.
- Comment on Steam is cracking down on porn games, to keep Payment Processors happy. 2 days ago:
Every company is headquartered somewhere, or has some market that it cannot afford to withdraw from, and that makes them all ultimately subject to said governments. No business decision is made free from pressure when it comes to governments.
- Comment on 3D Printing Patterns Might Make Ghost Guns More Traceable Than We Thought | 404 Media 2 days ago:
Just more scientifically unsound forensic “evidence” for prosecutors to bamboozle juries with.
- Comment on Steam is cracking down on porn games, to keep Payment Processors happy. 2 days ago:
We’d be in the same place. It’s not any better or worse for a private versus a public entity to do harm.
Also, the government is already part of this. If the DOJ told Visa, “hey, stop fucking around with that, you don’t need to be trying to control legal agreements between parties, that’s our purview”, they’d drop this behavior in an instant. They are doing this in large part because they believe it is in line with the government’s ideology.
- Comment on A few people are ruining the internet for the rest of us 2 days ago:
Yeah, that’s the sane take, but America is decades deep in Red Scare culture and anti-Latino rhetoric, and Cuba combines the two.
- Comment on A few people are ruining the internet for the rest of us 3 days ago:
I’m simply seeing the article’s point in asking people to stop following the top, say, 2% most divisive voices.
I would perhaps believe this if the article (or the study) actually listed those accounts. As it is, all they’re doing is leaving it up to readers’ perceptions who the “divisive” accounts are, and insinuating that those are likely misinformation. It’s just pushing people towards the political center.
there were a good number of Bernie backers at Trump rallies
In 2016, 12% of people who voted Sanders in the primary voted for Trump in the general. By the 2020 election, that demo was gone. In 2016 Trump was a rebellion vote against the rigged democratic primary, but after Trump’s first term, they’d all seen what a monster he was, and begrudgingly voted Biden.
I honestly doubt that anyone but moneyed think tanks have much bad to say about him
I don’t think you’ve spoken with many Trumpers if you think they don’t have bad things to say about Sanders. I discussed him extensively with conservatives in my sphere. The conversation usually goes something along the lines of, “yeah, it’s great he’s pro-union and wants to fix healthcare, but he’s also pro illegal immigration and wants to raise taxes through the roof! You know he’s a socialist, right?” The better-informed/ indoctrinated ones will even bring up him (correctly) lauding the literacy gains in Cuba under Castro.
- Comment on A few people are ruining the internet for the rest of us 3 days ago:
P.S. Do we agree that Bernie Sanders is NOT divisive? That the majority of actual people agree with most of what Bernie says, and it is only a few rich interests that object?
I think we probably agree that Bernie Sanders is correct, and that most people want for themselves what he says we should all have, but I don’t think he would necessarily be considered “non-divisive” by these standards if his social media account were more prolific.
I think perhaps where you and I may disagree, is that I don’t think political animosity is intrinsically bad, only misplaced political animosity. We should have animosity towards people intentionally causing harm.
I also don’t think it’s a coincidence that we’re seeing yet another source telling people that now is the time to defuse and become less polarized to politics, right when Trump is in the process of deporting thousands of people and setting up concentration camps.
Yes, the real war is the class war, but even if the foot soldiers of the oligarchy shouldn’t be working class people, they are. It’s not billionaires out there in ICE uniforms, or getting deputized or joining bounty hunter groups to arrest brown people, or reporting brown people to ICE. That’s also where the “for themselves” bit that I emphasized comes in, because the truth is that there are a LOT of working class people who are opposed to helping others (especially along racial or religious lines), and helping others is the core of solidarity. Not all problems can be solved with class consciousness.
- Comment on A few people are ruining the internet for the rest of us 3 days ago:
Mis/disinformation is not the same as “divisive political content”. Political content can be both true, and divisive (e.g. Trump being a pedophile). Something that is accepted by the majority may still be misinformation, yet not be divisive.
Truthfulness determines whether something is misinformation. How much something matches a group’s beliefs determines whether it is divisive: if everyone agreed that the world was flat, that would not be divisive to state, but it would be misinformation.
Conflating them entrenches the perception that the most widely-held, non-“divisive” viewpoint must not be misinformation.
Go check out Truth Social if you want to see what a space where only “non-divisive” (to them) but near-total misinformation looks like.
- Comment on YouTube Forces Dubs Now 5 days ago:
How to fix youtube: Image
- Comment on A few people are ruining the internet for the rest of us 5 days ago:
the sense that the entire world is on fire
Leaving aside the massive literal heatwave and multi-state wildfires and global-warming-accelerated flooding happening just this month and all… we’re literally seeing a campaign of race-based kidnappings and trafficking by the government, the deployment of active military personnel in the streets, and a DOJ arguing that the President is not bound by law or court orders.
If you don’t think the world is on at very least metaphorical fire, I don’t know what to tell you, Guardian author. “I can get my coffee in peace without thinking about that stuff” is not some brag.
- Comment on No, Ubisoft's EULA clause ordering you to destroy your games isn't new, nor is it unique 5 days ago:
I didn’t check Kinetic, but Larian’s is good. This is the full termination section of the EULA:
- TERMINATION
This Pact shall remain in effect for as long as you use, operate or run the Game.
You may terminate the Pact at any time and for any reason by notifying Larian Studios that you intend to terminate the agreement. Upon termination all licenses granted to you in this Pact shall immediately terminate and you must immediately and permanently remove the Game from your device and destroy all copies of the Game in your possession.
You understand and agree that certain Services connected to the Game, and the support and access to such Services are provided by Larian Studios at its discretion and may be terminated or otherwise discontinued by Larian Studios at any time, for any reason or no reason, in its sole and absolute discretion.
The first block is termination by the user, and specifies removal of the game if the user chooses to terminate the agreement.
The second block is termination by Larian, and only covers “certain Services”… “provided by Larian Studios” (so likely multiplayer matchmaking), and that block doesn’t specific game removal.
- Comment on No, Ubisoft's EULA clause ordering you to destroy your games isn't new, nor is it unique 6 days ago:
the same clause can be found in the EULAs for various games on Steam, including Final Fantasy 7 Remake, Metaphor: ReFantazio, and Oblivion Remastered.
Squeenix, Sega/ Atlus, and Microsoft. Exactly who you’d expect.
- Comment on I’m not ignoring your message – I’m overwhelmed by the tyranny of being reachable 1 week ago:
My partner is my emergency contact point. If you don’t have their number, it means that there’s no case in which your emergency is my problem. ;)
- Comment on Virginia Enacts Stupid, Completely Unworkable ‘Social Media Time Limit’ Law 1 week ago:
So this bit here:
Populate a public list of other users with whom such user shares a social connection within such service or application
seems like the easiest way to circumvent this law, with the least effort. Just hide connections for users in VA, and now you’re not a social media site.
- Comment on The Future of Forums is Lies, I Guess 1 week ago:
I think Anubis is really focused on scraper-bots feeding AI models, rather than posting bots. It’s based on requests to non-standard endpoints in your own app, which you specify for Anubis in a couple places (e.g. leaving out of /robots.txt or /.well-known).
If you’re using e.g. a python bot that uses headless chromium executing JS to post stuff, you’re probably going to code in known-good endpoints for comments and posts, rather than hitting random ones like a scraper bot would.
Anubis is good for stopping the n-request-per-second spamming of scrapers, but not so much for just blocking non-human bots that post at normal rates.
- Comment on Crunchyroll accidentally confirmed it uses ChatGPT for subtitles 1 week ago:
Nope, just been learning and speaking it for a long time. :)
Good luck with your studies, and you can always dm me if you have any other questions!
- Comment on Crunchyroll accidentally confirmed it uses ChatGPT for subtitles 1 week ago:
By the way, is there a rule to how these short forms are formed?
Yep! Most Japanese verbs (with a few exceptions like ‘shimasu’ becoming suru) use one of the ‘i’ variants (‘i’, ‘ni’, ‘ki’, or ‘ri’) after the kanji, that indicates they are verbs. Yakimasu (to burn/ cook), shirimasu (to know), arukimasu (to walk), arimasu (to be), shinimasu (to die). Ki will become ku in the shortened version, and ri will become ru, ni -> nu: yaku, shiru, aruku, aru, shinu.
I believe the verbs that don’t end in one of those like tabemasu (to eat) will default to ‘ru’ (taberu), but I don’t know if that’s a rule off the top of my head, or if I just can’t think of any others right now.
In the cases where rendaku applies, such as yogimasu (to swim), the end kana will also have rendaku applied, e.g. yogu. Ki -> ku, gi -> gu.
- Comment on Crunchyroll accidentally confirmed it uses ChatGPT for subtitles 1 week ago:
The radical for water is actually derived from the standalone kanji. It’s basically an extremely short-stroke version of the kanji.
Ikimashou is just the ‘formal’, full-length version. No difference in meaning. Just as “iku” is the casual version of “ikimasu”.
Ikimasu -> iku Ikimashou -> ikou
- Comment on Nobody Cares If Music Is Real Anymore 1 week ago:
I don’t use streaming at all, I buy every song I own on iTunes or other services that give you DRM-free files.
As with all AI, I’m not intrinsically opposed to AI music as a concept, but I don’t want to use it now when the services that make it are leeching off of artists without paying them. I don’t get “into” bands (e.g. I can’t tell you the names of almost any musicians in the bands I listen to), and I don’t usually like concerts, so it’s not like I’ll be missing out on those like some fans would be.
I’m sure “AI” can produce perfectly milquetoast music, but are you ever going to want to listen again? I have tracks I’ve listened to hundreds of times because they mean something to me emotionally (and often have a temporal element wherein I remember where I was living and what I was doing the first time I heard it) – and most of my tracks do not have lyrics.
Layering nonsensical lyrics atop forgettable melodies sounds more like torture than a service providing any value.
I suspect this is mostly an artifact of our current early AI music models. Just like we got past the days of 8-finger monstrosities in newer image models, we’ll get more ‘context-aware’ and sensical lyric models for music. We just won’t be getting there ethically.
- Comment on TikTok is being flooded with racist AI videos generated by Google’s Veo 3 2 weeks ago:
Holy shit. Somehow it’s both exactly what you expect, and shocking. Literal dehumanization and genocide, played as jokes.
- Comment on TikTok is being flooded with racist AI videos generated by Google’s Veo 3 2 weeks ago:
Who’s ‘we’? xD
- Comment on Crunchyroll accidentally confirmed it uses ChatGPT for subtitles 2 weeks ago:
Yes, 君 is ‘kun’ when used as an honorific.
海 is ‘umi’, or sea/ocean. You are correct that the second half of the kanji (母) is the same as the standalone character for mother, but it’s base radical is ⽏, which also just means morher. The first radical, ⺡, means water/ liquid, so you can sort of infer “water mother = ocean”. Not all kanji work out this nicely with their radical structure, though.
Last part is spot on, ikou (行こう) is the (conjugation?) of iku or ‘to go’ that expresses a suggestion to do, i.e. “let’s (go)”.
- Comment on Crunchyroll accidentally confirmed it uses ChatGPT for subtitles 2 weeks ago:
I have to since my partner doesn’t speak Japanese, but half the time I end up having to correct lines for them once or twice, to make things make sense. The non-egregious stuff I don’t even bother with. It’s crazy how amateurish some of the mistakes are, or even what are clearly choices to omit entire sentences, for no reason.
- Comment on Crunchyroll accidentally confirmed it uses ChatGPT for subtitles 2 weeks ago:
The actions of an employee, when reviewed and released by a company, are the actions of that company. A company is just the sum of its employees’ actions.
- Comment on Brazil rules that social media platforms are responsible for users’ posts 3 weeks ago:
It will make it extremely risky from a liability standpoint to operate any platform that allows users content. The EFF has a bunch of writeups on these types of laws. This is the last of a 4-part series on them: Link
Fediverse operators would for example be extremely vulnerable to lawsuits, because almost none of them can afford teams of lawyers to deal with claims, true or not, that they failed to enforce content policies.
It gives power to large corporations like Meta and Xitter, who can afford to handle legal threats.
- Comment on LeechBlock NG 3 weeks ago:
If I had the self control to not just unblock the sites or uninstall the extension, I’d have the self control to not go there in the first place. :P