RedWizard

joined 2 years ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] RedWizard@hexbear.net 1 points 11 minutes ago

This is cool but I still prefer my eReader for long texts. If my eReader had a web browser I'd use it for sure. Do I remember there being an option in the works to download an epub file for books in the wiki?

[–] RedWizard@hexbear.net 2 points 11 hours ago (2 children)

Uhhh hello!? More of this please!

[–] RedWizard@hexbear.net 14 points 19 hours ago (1 children)

Don't you see the difference! I'm just pointing out the difference! Why are you getting mad at me for my pedantic semantics!!

[–] RedWizard@hexbear.net 1 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Yeah this is true. But I know some people who say one of the reasons they buy apple is because of privacy. Specifically because they were in the news a few years ago in court defending their on device encryption. They have a kind of Anti-government surveillance veneer because of those news stories. When the reality is, they participate in state surveillance like any other vendor. Those court cases were not even unique because you can get the same kind of encryption on Android phones as well. But there was a kind of political publicity moment happening for Apple that I think they deliberately engaged in. I think that's why stories like this crop up from time to time.

[–] RedWizard@hexbear.net 19 points 1 day ago (3 children)

The group built an 8 TB ethically-sourced dataset.

My question is, is this dataset also Free Range or Cage Free?

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/31250684

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/31250679

"this morning, as I was finishing up work on a video about a new mini Pi cluster, I got a cheerful email from YouTube saying my video on LibreELEC on the Pi 5 was removed because it promoted:

Dangerous or Harmful Content Content that describes how to get unauthorized or free access to audio or audiovisual content, software, subscription services, or games that usually require payment isn't allowed on YouTube.

I never described any of that stuff, only how to self-host your own media library.

This wasn't my first rodeo—in October last year, I got a strike for showing people how to install Jellyfin!

In that case, I was happy to see my appeal granted within an hour of the strike being placed on the channel. (Nevermind the fact the video had been live for over two years at that point, with nary a problem!)

So I thought, this case will be similar:

  • The video's been up for over a year, without issue
  • The video's had over half a million views
  • The video doesn't promote or highlight any tools used to circumvent copyright, get around paid subscriptions, or reproduce any content illegally

Slam-dunk, right? Well, not according to whomever reviewed my appeal. Apparently self-hosted open source media library management is harmful.

Who knew open source software could be so subversive?"

 

cross-posted from: https://rss.ponder.cat/post/200001

Photo: Roy Rochlin/Getty Images for (BAM) Brooklyn

Lieutenant Governor Antonio Delgado’s abrupt announcement that he will challenge Governor Kathy Hochul in next year’s Democratic primary defies all the usual rules of political timing and calculation. Normally, politicians wait for a relatively quiet news cycle to announce their campaigns in order to gain maximum public attention. Instead, Delgado is asking us to think about the 2026 primary when most of the state’s donors, strategists, party leaders, and voters are focused on hotly contested races for mayor happening less than three weeks from now in Buffalo, Syracuse, Rochester — and the main event here in New York City.

By trying to displace the same governor he ran with on a ticket, Delgado is planning a rare, exceedingly difficult maneuver that has been attempted only twice in the past half-century and never with success. “Antonio, you are a talented guy, with a great future. Based upon my experience this may not be the most well-thought out idea!” Representative Tom Suozzi, the veteran Long Island pol who made two unsuccessful runs for governor, wrote on X.

But Delgado says the situation facing New Yorkers is too dire for normal politics.

“The status quo is broken. It’s just broken. People are hurting a lot. One in four folks right now in New York and New York City cannot afford basic needs. Where’s the vision for that?” he told me. “Where’s the decision-making around that to make sure we have a clear path forward? I’m not seeing it, and I haven’t seen it since I’ve been lieutenant governor. I wanted to be a part of the decision-making process. Unfortunately, I didn’t see a decision-making process.”

Delgado’s lament is a familiar one. The state Constitution assigns New York lieutenant governors little formal power and only two official duties: stepping up if the governor dies or resigns, and ceremonially presiding over the state senate. In practice, lieutenants have only as much staff, office space and input as the governor allows. Most end up criss-crossing the state every week, cutting ribbons, chairing committees and giving speeches promoting the governor’s policies, often in remote reaches of the state.

While the position is well-compensated – Delgado’s salary of $210,000 makes him the highest-paid lieutenant governor in America – more than one occupant of the office has simply quit, complaining that they got tired of being ignored, or sent out to promote policies in which they had no input.

“It’s easy to get suckered into pretending you’re important. I wasn’t about to pretend,” explained Alfred del Bello, who in 1984 quit as Mario Cuomo’s lieutenant after only two years.  Another lieutenant, Betsy McCaughey, went months without ever speaking to Gov. George Pataki. In 2014, Bob Duffy, a former mayor and police chief, cited the grind as a reason not to run for re-election as Andrew Cuomo’s lieutenant.  “While the consistent travel is vitally important to this position, the thousands of miles per week in the car have resulted in the residual effects of constant back and leg pain,”  he wrote to Cuomo in a 2014 letter explaining his withdrawal from the ticket.

Hochul stepped in as Duffy’s successor and hit the road, logging thousands of miles over the next seven years. Delgado, a Rhodes Scholar who resigned from an upstate congressional seat to take the job, told me he’s traveled 60,000 miles and attended more than 1,000 events, but never intended to simply be a cheerleader and grew tired of learning about administration positions by reading news reports. After some public spats with Hochul – Delgado independently called for President Biden to step aside and for Mayor Eric Adams to resign, positions contrary to the governor’s – he has become a full-blown critic who says Democrats in general need a fresh approach to politics and policy.

“You can’t tax credit your way out of housing. That is a model that we have tried over and over again, and every single time public funds get leveraged by the private sector and ultimately leave the community behind,” Delgado said. “Who’s gonna say, let’s figure out a new way to overhaul this system? Let’s figure out how to build state capacity and invest, maybe in something like a statewide rental assistance program? Seven out of 10 people right now in New York are eligible for federal rental assistance. And yet, right now, the governor proposes a $50 million pilot program – a pilot program in the middle of a housing crisis!  We need bolder, more aggressive, transformational leadership, and simply just tinkering around the edges, simply managing the status quo is not going to get us there.”

Delgado’s upstart campaign is a reminder that he first entered politics in 2018 as a maverick, unseating a Republican incumbent to represent a sprawling, conservative upstate rural district. “My district was 90% white, the eighth most rural congressional seat in the country, and Trump had won it by seven points just two years prior,” he told me. “People want folks who give a damn about them, who show up, who listen, who care, and who hold themselves and the system accountable. It shouldn’t just be about holding on to power. Power is not self-legitimating. If anything, it could be self-corrupting.”

That street organizer’s attitude – hold the system accountable – is a reminder that 2018 was a year that saw the arrival of a lot of young, left-leaning political disruptors.   Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez in the Bronx and Max Rose in Staten Island beat incumbents, as did four first-time progressive state senate candidates – Julia Salazar and Zellnor Myrie in Brooklyn, Jessica Ramos in Queens and Alessandra Biaggi in the Bronx – whose victories flipped control of the chamber to the Democrats. This new generation has seen the value of throwing out traditional political playbooks, which is why two members of the Class of 2018, Myrie and Ramos, are making long-shot runs for mayor and Delgado is taking on his own governor.

“I think what we were doing back in 2018, the vast majority of us who ran were outside of the machinery of politics,” Delgado said. “I certainly voted, but I wasn’t somebody who made my way through any type of gatekeeper or power centers or hierarchy or seniority or just pure partisan driven politics. And when you don’t make your way through that, you don’t owe anybody anything. You’re not beholden to any specific actors or leaders within the party; who you are beholden to are the people. And that has always been my outlook through this process.”

If Delgado is right, New York is ready for another spate of political activism comparable to the upheavals of 2018. We shall see.


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[–] RedWizard@hexbear.net 30 points 1 day ago (11 children)

This is the thing, right? You can't collect what someone doesn't have. He should be behind bars shrug-outta-hecks.

[–] RedWizard@hexbear.net 15 points 1 day ago

Maybe 5 or 6 years ago, my parents needed a new PC. At the time, I had access to a surplus store at a local uni and was able to buy them a really over spec'd desktop for like $100. It came with Linux Mint installed on it. I set it up at their house, plugged in their printer, which worked right away, and left it there. I NEVER had to go help them with it. It did everything they needed it to do, and it never once stopped working. I had to troubleshoot my Moms windows laptop more and more over those years, but never the Linux desktop.

[–] RedWizard@hexbear.net 41 points 1 day ago

For once I would love for Olivers show to end with:

"Alright so what can't we do about it? Well for starters we can get into more direct action, cutting utilities in the dead of night, destroying keep points of the military industrial pipeline, then we need a cell network of activists engaging directly with workers...."

[–] RedWizard@hexbear.net 2 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

I take care of my area and you take care of yours and so on down the line, then by god there won't be a car left.

[–] RedWizard@hexbear.net 3 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

What an interesting read.

In the lead-up to 9 May, buildings and shop fronts around Moscow are decorated with evocative Soviet-style posters commemorating the victory of the Soviet Red Army against fascism and Nazism. While Putin’s speeches often bash Lenin and blame the Bolsheviks for Russia’s contemporary geopolitical issues, it is clear that his government is compelled to selectively appropriate red symbols to retain legitimacy.

When I asked one communist why this was the case, she responded bluntly, ‘because the oligarchs have failed to build a single thing beyond the Soviets’. Their ultimate aim is quite different from that of the Soviets – private profit at the expense of the working people.

Hard to argue you're building a better Russia when all the metros are the same ones built by the Soviets. What a fascinating tight rope Russia's ruling class has to walk.

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