deweydecibel

@deweydecibel@lemmy.world

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deweydecibel,

reply guys surfing in from elsewhere

I love this term.

They really do love storming in anywhere someone deigns to besmirch the new object of their devotion.

My assumption is, if it isn’t some techbro that drank the kool aid, it’s a bunch of /r/wallstreetbets assholes who have invested in the boom.

deweydecibel, (edited )

Bing guys don’t seem to have a system status page (that I could find)

Microsoft’s current MO is “very basic information is a privilege, not something you as the user should have access to easily”.

It’s why I have to use PowerShell and Graph to get half the relevant data I need, because they won’t just put it in the god damn admin panels.

deweydecibel,

I liked this channel much more when it was just “Welcome to the Hydrologic Press Channel, today we’re pressing ___”, and then they do it.

Now it’s, lots of unnecessary build up, with an on-camera host, just filling time out to hit that 10 minute mark.

Perfect example of how YouTube’s algorithm destroys good channels.

deweydecibel, (edited )

Ok, that’s fine. We’d need more details about what actually transpired and what the support team told the cops.

But it sure seems like in a situation where the support team calls them, it should be with the understanding that they’re there for backup, not to barge in and fire.

But looking at the report, that’s what happened.

Also:

On May 2, 2024, at 10:58 a.m., Olympic Division uniformed officers responded to a radio call at an apartment in the 400 block of South Gramercy Place to assist the Los Angeles County Department of Mental Health (DMH) who were attempting to place an individual, later identified as 40-year-old Yong Yang into custody.

Why was the Department of Mental Health “attempting to place him into custody”? They were trying to detain him and take him from the premises, under the law…which sounds an awful lot like an arrest with a different set of paperwork.

So basically these were just cops without guns…who went ahead and called the cops with the guns anyway.

I said it another comment but where was the emergency here? Why did they need to get him into custody immediately? He could not hurt anyone but themselves locked in an apartment alone. He was showing aggression when people tried to enter, but could not hurt them if they stayed out.

Why did they enter and give him someone to hurt? Seeing as how all that was going to do was give them justification to hurt him.

deweydecibel,

There never was a chance.

Generally when companies like this are bought it isn’t to acquire the talent. That’s legitimately what needs to be taken into account when it comes to things like antitrust. You want to buy out this company, are you buying it because you want their talent to join with yours to make something better? Cool. We’ll let you do that provided you do it today fair and competitive manner.

Any other reason for wanting to buy this company is going to need to be pretty heavily scrutinized.

deweydecibel, (edited )

It amounts to the same thing, though. Whether you got a few months pay to carry you through or not you still lost your income, and there’s no guarantee you’ll ever find a job that matches it in pay, benefits, etc.

iPhones And Androids Can Now Warn You of 'Secret Trackers' (www.ibtimes.co.uk)

In a collaborative effort, Apple and Google have developed an industry-standard detection feature called “Detecting Unwanted Location Trackers” (DULT) for Bluetooth trackers. This standard allows users on iOS and Android devices to be alerted if an unknown Bluetooth tracker is monitoring their location.

deweydecibel,

No, both types are:

www.faa.gov/hazmat/packsafe/lithium-batteries

Since most people have no idea how many grams of lithium are in their lithium batteries, airlines just ban them from checked luggage outright.

deweydecibel,

Article feels heavily AI written or AI-extended.

deweydecibel, (edited )

It has to keep pinging so the iPhone knows it’s still close. Other devices detect that ping; it can’t choose who hears it when it calls out.

That’s the whole thing: they are constantly calling out to any Apple device in the area so that device will report to Apple the tag’s location through the Find My network. It has to call out, otherwise it can’t function as a tracker.

Which is where this new standard comes in. Alerting you to an unrecognized device nearby that is pinging out while you’re moving, because previously there was no shared standard that permitted this across all devices.

But there’s really no good solution to this that isn’t going to be messy and trigger a lot of false positives. It’s a band-aid on a problematic technology that has been normalized, and now they’re trying to back-port privacy into it to save face. All of this discussion should have happened before they started selling anything.

It’s bad enough to sell cheap consumer tracking devices and provide access to a whole mesh network of other people’s phones to use them on, without any consideration for what they would be used for. It’s especially egregious that they made that technology proprietary so Android devices could not easily identify a tracker near them.

deweydecibel,

The solution would probably just be to dismiss the alert with a response like “I am on a plane, bus boat, etc. I’m traveling with strangers and their stuff”. Then it would temporarily remember all the local devices, and then dump that list after a set period of time.

deweydecibel,

but Congress would rather ratify Roe v. Wade (which they should) into law than see marijuana legalization.

I acknowledge that you said “they should”, so that’s good, but I have to question why you even thought to use that example? In what world would they not prioritize that? Even if they were all pro-legalizing marijuana, Roe is a decidedly more important issue.

Realistically they would just do both things at once but if we’re going to commit to this hypothetical where they can only do one thing at a time, yeah, it goes without saying protecting women’s reproductive rights (that were only recently taken away) is more pressing than pot.

deweydecibel,

If you need to use parentheses to explain the joke, you failed at telling the joke.

The whole point with these sorts of memes is they’re supposed to be relatable enough and easy enough to grasp with the added context of the image.

deweydecibel,

This is honestly what puts me off using Proton. They advertise way too much and way too aggressively. It’s just a bad vibe for a company that’s trying to set itself up as an alternative to Google.

I use Tutanota but I’m looking to find something else because I’m sick of platforms that lock you into their ecosystem, and the fact they don’t provide any means of using other mail clients like Thunderbird has become a deal breaker.

Problem is there doesn’t seem to be consensus on third place.

deweydecibel,

I understand your feeling, but I think massive advertising is needed.

Why is it “needed”?

This is high level marketing, basically telling the general public there is another way other than big tech

Why do they care about attracting all these people?

Every one of them increases their operating costs, and doesn’t provide revenue if they stay in the free tier. Why do they want to increase their numbers so badly?

Why isn’t it enough to just make a good product and let that be what brings people in?

The only reason for this kind of aggressive advertising is because they’re making a push for growth. They want to become one of those “big tech” companies.

Let me be clear, I’m not shaming them for advertising their services. But I’m uncomfortable with the scale and aggression with which they do it. They are putting money into this, and a lot of it. It’s not like they’re a non-profit, the end goal is pretty obvious here.

We’ve been through this before with so many other tech companies, Proton will be no different. It’s just entering the honeymoon phase, is all.

deweydecibel, (edited )

You see this in action anytime people go “no no you just don’t understand how this works” as a way of sidestepping the overall issue. They try to bury you in the minutiae of it, and what’s “technically” possible without acknowledging that A) what’s possible will increase over time and B) the issue is not technology, it’s the intention of it and the motivations of the people behind it.

It’s like trying to deconstruct the concept of a gun, talking about all its potential mechanical malfunctions, its capacity limits, the fact you have to aim it, and so on, all as a way of trying to downplay the danger of it being pointed directly at you.

deweydecibel,

If there are multiple layers there, it’s because they were deemed necessary.

Yes, but with the caveat that companies are also concerned about lawsuits and bad headlines because of irresponsible people, and that influences what is considered “necessary” as well.

deweydecibel, (edited )

Yes but imagine it all nicely arranged on a dashboard, with little made up metrics, and spreadsheets and bar graphs and other bullshit, all done automatically, from the 365 panel, and the CEO didn’t have to set anything up.

The passivity and the integration of it is the biggest concern.

If there’s one thing I have learned from seeing a bunch of different small companies, is it they don’t bother to take the time to clean up all the bullshit and turn off all the garbage in 365/Intune. They manage the security and the needed software, all the other crap that Microsoft shoves in there and turns on for them, they don’t pay attention. At some point Microsoft will just add this crap, employees won’t be aware, or they will be aware, and it would require admin credentials to turn off.

deweydecibel, (edited )

Not to “well actually” you, but…

long periods in the Florida sun

This is Disneyland in California, not Disney World in Florida.

And more to the point, Disney World in Orlando is already represented by the Actors Equity Union, and has been for years, for all the good it does them.

All that’s happening here is Disneyland performers will now be repped by the same Union as Disney World’s.

Should also be said, not every performer you see at Disney World is in the Equity union. Basically, only the ones that “perform” and/or have scripted lines, and that criteria is curiously nebulous. There are loopholes Disney exploits to hell and back in Orlando.

It does include many of the costumed actors, particularly the ones that participate in shows or do the meet and greets on Main St and such. But not all of them. Plenty of costumed people have to walk around in the Orlando heat without union representation.

The good news is, the union opened up their membership rules recently (probably why Disneyland is now joining) which may lead the way to more employees being able to join and close those loopholes.

I’d also imagine stronger labor laws in California will give the union more power in forming their Anaheim contract than their Orlando one.

deweydecibel,

They’re not talking about that, they’re talking about this from last year:

nlrb.gov/…/board-rules-that-employers-may-not-off…

deweydecibel,

It’s frustrating the image for that article is of the 4th Doctor, given the BBC had stopped erasing tapes by the era of the 3rd Doctor. There are no missing 4th Doctor episodes.

deweydecibel,

See, this is great for the first 2/3, then betrays the immaturity when it starts talking about sports as “kids games”.

Sports have been a critical part of human culture for longer than the language you use to dump on them. You do not have to like them, but belittling them just speaks to a kind of petty bias.

Netflix Windows app is set to remove its downloads feature, while introducing ads (www.techradar.com)

Netflix has managed to annoy a good number of its users with an announcement about an upcoming update to its Windows 11 (and Windows 10) app: support for adverts and live events will be added, but the ability to download content is being taken away....

deweydecibel, (edited )

“While downloads will no longer be supported, you can continue to watch TV shows and movies offline on a supported mobile device,” the Netflix document says

So essentially Windows devices are no longer “supported” wrt this particular feature.

If I had to guess, it might be because the people that pirate Netflix shows may be doing it from the Windows app using the download feature. After all, you have full access to the file system on Windows.

Meanwhile, iPhones have always been locked down to prevent the user from accessing the file system, and Android in the last couple versions has locked its file system down too, while Google continues to become increasingly fierce in trying to detect and block anybody with a rooted device.

deweydecibel, (edited )

Only if the people that pirate the shows are able to obtain those higher quality downloads.

As these platforms become increasingly hostile to users, they’re going to be well aware of the subsequent increase in piracy, and implement even more methods of preventing their content from being pirated.

It will always be impossible to stop piracy completely, but you can make it increasingly difficult to obtain best quality.

Keep in mind all of the various things that are starting to be implemented or suggested to ensure device/environment “integrity” in recent years. I promise a day is coming when Netflix and other streaming services will only allow streaming to “approved” browsers and devices, i.e. the ones that allow them to scrutinize every single bit of the stack down to the hardware.

deweydecibel,

If we’re talking about mobile, the Jellyfin app lets you download to the device already.

If we’re talking about laptops, as far as I’m aware, the Jellyfin desktop app doesn’t have a download feature.

deweydecibel,

My partner works in historical archiving for science and medicine. Museum work, basically. He’s told me so much of the archives are donated collections of notes, letters, journals, and so on from important doctors, researchers, scientists, etc. Donated by the subject themselves in their later years or by their families.

He’s told me there is a growing issue with those people starting to donate entirely digital collections, but even worse than that, are all the documents that are not being stored on a physical hard drive, but on web services and clouds. By the time these people are willing to start donating their things, so much of it has just been deleted forever without them realizing it. Or worse, they die, and their families no longer have access.

Working in IT, I told him about Microsoft’s growing push to eliminate Outlook and PST files, make it all web based email, and he wasn’t surprised, but he was still bummed to hear it. Apparently a not insignificant amount of those donations are locally stored emails.

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