133arc585

joined 2 years ago
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[–] 133arc585@lemmy.ml -4 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

I don't think you know what "fascist" means.

Moreover, people will happily complain that Chinese/Russian "propaganda" is allowed to exist, especially on the internet. They will demand that Chinese/Russian "propaganda" is removed from social spaces. And, then they somehow they have a problem with other countries (esp. China/Russia) wanting to do the exact same thing. The premise is that the propaganda being put out is misrepresenting the truth to influence public thought: when it comes from China/Russia, people want it blocked and removed; when it comes from the West, blocking and removing it is some sort of "free speech" issue (or, as you wrongly claim here, "fascism").

In this particular case, I don't personally know hardly anything about the movie, and I do strongly disagree with using "promoting homosexuality" as an excuse to ban something. But in general, countries wanting to put a damper on other countries' propaganda is near universal.

[–] 133arc585@lemmy.ml 3 points 2 years ago (2 children)

AFAIK Apple is the company that has moved to 3nm process before any other tech company. Apple’s camera are dog crap, but other than that they are streets ahead.

Sure, but I didn't say they were at the forefront in every facet of tech. That "just" in my comment you quoted is also doing some heavy lifting: they aren't only ("just") producing stolen IP-based tech; they are in part but not entirely. What I said was again two-fold:

  1. Not everything they produce in tech is stolen IP, such as the network hardware I mentioned (see below); and
  2. Since every country with tech manufacturing is engaging in corporate espionage, that is a useless metric to judge a country/company's trustworthiness.

Networking standards are agreed before implementation. It is not that the signal is stronger or there is a better reception. The difference between 4g and 5g is down to coding how the signal is sent.

There is plenty of room for advancement in network tech that's largely independent of the specific protocol it's carrying. That's why I mentioned Huawei in particular, because they have had some of the highest-throughput carrier-grade switches (that is, a single device can switch a much higher number of connections at a much higher bandwidth than alternatives). To simplify: instead of an ISP needing a dozen switches from a competitor to achieve the throughput of it's supported bandwidth for the number of customers it has, it might need only a couple of the Huawei switches. And, frankly, it can be the case that a particular piece of hardware is able to put out a stronger signal than alternatives, for the exact same protocol (e.g., 4G or 5G); you could very well produce a consumer grade WiFi router with larger signal range, or a cellular tower with a larger signal range (yes, there are physical limitations to these, but we aren't saturating that in general yet).

This really is not the case. Companies look to steal tech not nations.

Well as I said the USA as a nation performs corporate espionage on foreign companies who are direct competitors to a USA-based company. I would think other nations do too, but I didn't look that far as I have more familiarity with my chosen point of reference, the USA, and all I needed to show was existence.

As for how good Huawei is, how do you think they got the expertise.

Once again, missing the point. You can't steal tech that your competitor doesn't have. If they were producing the exact same tech, you could speculate that it's purely stolen IP. But if they're at the forefront, as I've said, they can't possibly have stolen it (else, the people they stole it from would also be able to produce it).

Not only that but they are interfering in politics of other nations. They have a campaign to intimidate citizens of other states, right up to the point of kidnapping.

This is blatantly false xenophobic fearmongering and frankly off-topic to this conversation. The original point was that it was irrational (fueled by racism and/or xenophobia) to flatly distrust Chinese tech. I mean, if you wan't to play there, would you not consider the USA's meddling in foreign politics, including having colonies, and funding and helping enact coups and installing puppets, to be just as problematic? To preempt, it's not whataboutism to point out a double-standard: if you don't trust Chinese tech for the reason you just listed, you also can't trust USA tech (or really any "Western" tech for that matter). But if you aren't so flatly distrusting of Western tech just by nature of being produced by the West, you need to assess why you are flatly distrusting of Chinese tech just by nature of it being produced by China.

So no that is not racism. That is taking a moral approach to not trust a rogue state ran by a dictator.

It is racism, because it's founded in the racist notions of "Orientalist mystery", Yellow Peril, Western chauvinism, and white supremacy. It's hypocritical to take a "moral approach" to only one country; if it was truly a moral approach, you would apply it to any other country having the problematic characteristics you're trying to point out. Also "rogue state" here is meaningless, and it's not ran by a dictator (but I think you either know that, and don't care, because it's keeping with popular rhetoric, or don't know that, because you don't care enough to educate yourself and would rather keep with popular rhetoric).

[–] 133arc585@lemmy.ml 0 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Read my edited footnote. I do not fully agree with the claim itself either.

[–] 133arc585@lemmy.ml 9 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) (3 children)

Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.

I hate this saying. It's not explicit, and logical consequence isn't bidirectional, but it implies that those who do remember the past somehow won't repeat it. Which is blatantly false. Many people, even those who intimately know history, want to repeat it. Either because they think material conditions are just different enough to lead to a different result this time, or that the precise way the actions in the past was carried out was subpar and with tiny tweaks it would lead to a different result, etc. I do generally agree with the explicit statement[^1], but I strongly disagree with the implicit statement.

[^1]: And even on the explicit statement I still have reservations. Sometimes material conditions are different enough, or the precise manner in which actions are carried out are different enough that those who know nothing about the past aren't condemned to repeat it: what those who know nothing about the past do is only superficially similar to the past, and can have radically different outcomes.

[–] 133arc585@lemmy.ml 37 points 2 years ago (5 children)
  1. Strong nuclear force: holds the nucleus of an atom together
  2. Weak nuclear force: responsible for radioactive decay
  3. Electromagnetic force: of charged particles
  4. Gravitational force: attractive force between objects with mass
[–] 133arc585@lemmy.ml 3 points 2 years ago (4 children)

Right so that's entirely meaningless. Read my comment again. I didn't say they don't steal tech, what I said was two-fold:

  1. Every country with manufacturing ability steals tech. Therefore basing whether you trust a country/company on that factor is worthless.
  2. There are some fields, such as networking tech made by Huawei, where they can't possibly be stealing tech, because they're at the forefront, ahead of all competitors.

You took the one very specific thing I didn't say in my comment (namely, that they don't steal tech), and decided to just shit out a bunch of links saying they do. Yet, you didn't address any of the points that I did make, such as saying that is a meaningless angle to look at this from.

[–] 133arc585@lemmy.ml 17 points 2 years ago (6 children)

This is why countries are banning use of their tech being anywhere near government communications.

No, that's also racism and xenophobia. They spread propaganda about supposed backdoors in network hardware, but can never actually point to any. If there's no exfiltration, you aren't "giving them access to your data".

I have zero trust with a nation that actively steals from any nation it can get away with.

Considering a lot of Chinese network hardware, specifically Huawei, is at the literal forefront of technological development, continually developing and producing the fastest devices with the highest throughput, etc., it is false to say they're just stealing their tech. They're beating out all the countries you could posit that they're stealing tech from. Moreover, if you're basing your supposed trust in a tech manufacturing company/country based on whether or not they steal tech secrets, what countries could you possible trust? The USA steals tech through (government enacted) corporate espionage against firms competing with firms in the USA[^1][^2]. You'd be hard pressed to find any country with tech manufacturing that isn't engaging in corporate espionage.

[^1]: Edward Snowden says NSA engages in industrial espionage [^2]: NSA is also said to have spied on the French economy

[–] 133arc585@lemmy.ml 10 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) (11 children)

Call that tin foil hat syndrome or whatever.

Racism. It's racism and xenophobia.

[–] 133arc585@lemmy.ml 7 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

You obviously didn't read the article (or even the 2 sentence bit copied into the OP comment).

[–] 133arc585@lemmy.ml 4 points 2 years ago (1 children)

I understand that. I don't use any of it anymore but when I did I used the refillable ones.

It's just insanity to me that every single one of those has: a PCB, with chips (they have usb charging, and timing chips to auto-turn off, and a draw sensor), and a battery. Then the metal casing it's all in. And that all gets thrown out. A reasonable sized battery and all its lithium[^1], thrown out. Fully functional chips, thrown out. A PCB with a nonzero amount of gold, thrown out. And people go through them at a rate that's just absurd.

[^1]: Each vape battery has somewhere between 0.25 and 0.5 grams of metallic lithium.

[–] 133arc585@lemmy.ml 5 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) (3 children)

Tangential, but there are refillable versions of those vapes that cut down on waste almost entirely (and cost less). You buy the device once, and then a bottle of nicotine salts, and the refillable cartridge. The only waste you're producing is the cartridge every once in a while when you replace it (no extra cardboard, plastic, etc) and the plastic nicotine salt bottle when it's empty. You aren't throwing away a battery, electronics, or the bulky device. And I mean the same form factor as what you're probably buying too, I'm not talking about the old fashion cloud-blowing box vapes.

[–] 133arc585@lemmy.ml 18 points 2 years ago

From the rest of your comment history? Yes, it's entirely believable. It's more surprising that you're walking it back, really.

1
submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by 133arc585@lemmy.ml to c/deathgrips@lemmy.ml
 

Released June 22, 2018

 

I firmly believe a lot of current mental health issues are worsened by living under capitalism, as do others. Some of the most obvious examples to me are:

  • Anxiety about being able to afford food and housing, having a stable job, not having emergency medical events, etc.
  • Depression from not having free time due to being overworked, or from not being able to afford entertainment and distraction, etc.

One potential remedy to mental health issues has been developing in the form of psychedelic therapy. Besides the issues related to restricting access by making the treatment prohibitively expensive (both the drug and the administering physician) that are seemingly unavoidable in profit-driven healthcare systems, I think there's a massive danger in using psychedelics to effectively pacify people.

Psychedelics can be used maliciously, in that they can be used to help people accept their life as it is--this sounds fine, until you realize that it can be used to make people accept being exploited and being effectively destitute. I think the problem here is that the medical institutions (and probably most patients) are going to have the goal of: being less depressed, less anxious, etc. If psychedelics were actually used to "wake people up to their reality", they'd probably become more depressed, more anxious, etc--counter to the stated goals. I think one of the first steps towards wanting to change the existing system is seeing the flaws in the existing system and how one is negatively affected by it.

Then, if psychedelics are (going to be) used to pacify people suffering under capitalism, is their widespread adoption not a bad thing? If people are willfully blinding themselves to their suffering, is any hint of revolutionary spirit being extinguished?


I don't think these issues are unique to psychedelics, either. If existing depression treatments numb you to all emotion, good and bad, they can make existing while being exploited more bearable.

 

Here is the DOJ's report, which states that the MPD and Minnesota's largest city "engage in a pattern or practice of conduct in violation of the U.S. Constitution and federal law."

"Our investigation showed that MPD officers routinely use excessive force, often when no force is necessary. We found that MPD officers often use unreasonable force (including deadly force) to obtain immediate compliance with orders, often forgoing meaningful de-escalation tactics and instead using force to subdue people," the report states. "MPD's pattern or practice of using excessive force violates the law."

The DOJ probe found that MPD:

  • Uses excessive force, including unjustified deadly force and unreasonable use of Tasers;
  • Unlawfully discriminates against Black people and Native American people in its enforcement activities, including the use of force following stops;
  • Violates the rights of people engaged in protected speech; and
  • Along with the city, discriminates against people with behavioral health disabilities when responding to calls for assistance.

Specific mention was made to illegal attacks on protestors and journalists.

It's nice to see confirmation of what we've known: they aren't just evil, they're preying on the weak and disadvantaged.

 

Cavs' performance is too good. I love this version.

 

What news sites do you follow? I'm looking for sites with RSS feeds in particular.

 

Is there a way to hide scores on posts/comments as in the web UI? I peeked the code and the user preference is loaded, it's just the code that displays the scores doesn't seem to check against the user preference.

-2
Caching issue? (lemmy.ml)
submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by 133arc585@lemmy.ml to c/lemmy@lemmy.ml
 

I'm loading https://lemmy.ml/c/worldnews@lemmygrad.ml and the username display in the top right is showing other people's usernames, not mine. It showed one, and I refreshed, and now it's showing another. Here's what is showing right now for me:

Here is what I see right now

Edit to add just to show that it's changing: Another one

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