antonim

joined 2 years ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] antonim@lemmy.dbzer0.com 24 points 2 weeks ago (10 children)

An American is taking care of the Russian community and defending it from CIA propaganda, that's so anti-imperialist. I'm sure Russians are thankful 🙏

[–] antonim@lemmy.dbzer0.com 0 points 2 weeks ago (5 children)

Until the next re-bloating update where your settings get reverted

As a Windows user, I've had this problem with Firefox browser a number of times, and never with Widows.

[–] antonim@lemmy.dbzer0.com 16 points 2 weeks ago (6 children)

I didn't know I'm already a computer pro by following a couple of idiot-proof steps I found by googling.

[–] antonim@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 2 weeks ago

"some" = the one that's the basis of and technically closely tied to the one you're using right now

[–] antonim@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 2 weeks ago

.li is maintained by an another group so it usually still works when .is doesn't; most of their database is the same. Unlike .is they have some pretty aggressive advertising on there, however, popups and stuff.

[–] antonim@lemmy.dbzer0.com 39 points 2 weeks ago (3 children)

It's the opposite, AA is pretty reliable whereas Libgen (.is domain) has been offline for over a month, came back online just a few days ago.

[–] antonim@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 2 weeks ago

Yeah, usually they're just sourced from public-domain book collections such as Google Books (who scan older books which can end up visually messy), and I'm pretty sure some of those that are offered on Amazon were straight-up based on pirated PDFs.

[–] antonim@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 2 weeks ago

because you’re paying

Well no, it's the buyer who is paying. Which they might find off-putting, if the final price is too high, so you get fewer buyers and less profit.

As for the quality, there’s literally no reason that a book that is printed on demand has to be low quality or use low quality materials.

Except that in practice they simply are of lower quality. I've seen quite enough of such books. Maybe higher quality materials could be used, but that would raise the price for the end-user even more, and possibly slow down the production.

and the proof is the fact that Amazon is filled with AI generated garbage books

One has to wonder how much money they actually make, though. I saw some YT videos about the topic, IIRC it's really difficult. Their mere presence doesn't prove their profitability but only the belief by many people that they could be profitable.

It's easy to start a business, sure. But you didn't explain the rest of the process and don't seem to actually know a lot about the particulars of book publishing (neither do I, but whatever I do know doesn't agree with your imagined "solution").

[–] antonim@lemmy.dbzer0.com 3 points 2 weeks ago (4 children)

I guess, but print on demand is also more expensive than printing in bulk, when looking per unit, and of lower quality (paper and binding). I'm not too familiar with the details of book publishing but I wouldn't expect that people are not using this route simply because they failed to notice its benefits.

[–] antonim@lemmy.dbzer0.com 5 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

It's mostly self-evident, I guess, so I didn't think it needs translation. The ambulance had to pass through, the protesters tried to follow it through the police cordon, but the police blocked the ambulance and attacked the protesters.

 
 
 
 

I'm not primarily an English Wikipedian; most of my Wikipedia time is spent contributing to Swedish Wikipedia or explaining the encyclopedia to the Swedish public. But I still hang out here. I fix mistakes I come across while reading. I illustrate articles, dabble in policy debate, take part in some talk page conversations, even write the occasional English article. Mostly I haunt Articles for Deletion, where I keep an eye out for anything related to Sweden, to help hunt down and contextualise sources to ensure we can save notable articles.

Usually, it's a simple task of expanding the article a little bit, adding a few sources to make sure key information can be verified elsewhere, and letting people know it's no longer the same text as was taken to AfD.

Sometimes it's a frustrating exercise for everyone involved.

 
 

(I should note I'm ESL and I've noticed my pronunciation is a hodgepodge of British vs. American and older vs. younger pronunciation variants.)

As I was watching Geoff Lindsey's YT videos, I noticed the way he pronounces "transláte", particularly in "Google Transláte" where I heavily prefer the accent "tránslate" - although in the verb (i.e. outside the website name) I would be fine both with tránslate or transláte (but probably with mild preference for the former).

So I looked it up and it turns out this is a widespread case of variant British vs. American stress pattern, also affecting other "-ate" verbs: donate, locate, migrate... The polarisation doesn't appear to be absolute, e.g. to take representatives of US and UK pronunciation: Webster 1913 (=1890) has dónate, lócate, mígrate, but still transláte, Jones (Pronouncing Dict.) 1944 has final stress in all four, but the Concise Oxford Dict. of Current Eng. (1964) mentions the variant mígrate. Today the influence of US on UK is probably even stronger. But already in 1909 Jespersen mentions the variant pronunciation of dictate, narrate, and vacate (Mod. Eng. Gramm. vol. 1, §5.57), so surely it hasn't appeared in UK only due to US influence?

Is there some dialectological or formal explanation of this change, or a study of where and how it spread?

 
 

The Wikimedia Foundation has suspended access to this page due to an order by the Delhi High Court, without prejudice to the Foundation's rights. We are pursuing all available legal options.

We remain committed to access to knowledge as a human right. We are working to ensure that everyone can access and share free knowledge on Wikipedia.

In accordance with applicable legal processes, the Wikimedia Foundation filed an appeal before the Supreme Court of India, challenging the takedown order. The appeal was admitted and the Supreme Court issued notice to the concerned parties on March 17, 2025.

This regards active litigation, and this page will be updated when we are able to share more information.

 

As first reported by The Free Press, interim U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia Ed Martin (who has been nominated by President Donald Trump to serve permanently in that role of DC's top prosecutor) has accused "Wikipedia (of) allowing foreign actors to manipulate information and spread propaganda to the American public." Martin claims that "information received by my Office demonstrates that Wikipedia’s informational management policies benefit foreign powers." These and other serious accusations are contained in a four-page letter sent to "Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. AKA Wikipedia" in Washington, DC on April 24. Martin alleges that the WMF's activities violate IRS rules for 501(c)(3) non-profit organizations, so its tax-exempt status should be removed, and has given the Foundation until May 15 to respond.

Major concerns cited in the article include:

  • foreign (non-US) actors spreading propaganda;
  • the dominance of non-US citizens on the Board of Trustees;
  • accusations from Wikipedia co-founder Larry Sanger on the non-neutrality of the encyclopedia's content.

Martin's letter to the WMF asks twelve detailed questions, including:

"4. What steps has the Foundation taken to exclude foreign influence operations from making targeted edits to categories of content in order to reshape or rewrite history? Who enforces these measures, and how? What foreign influence operations have been detected, and what did the Foundation do to reverse their influence and prevent it from continuing?"

The Free Press notes that "the letter is unusual, since investigations into charities and their tax-exempt status are typically handled by the IRS." Moreover, Nonprofit Quarterly reported at length on the difficult and lengthy process required by US law to remove a nonprofit's tax-exempt status.

Note that federal law (26 US Code Section 7217) prohibits senior officials of the executive branch, including the president, from requesting that the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) conduct or cease an audit or other investigation of any taxpayer (including tax-exempt entities); there is an exception for written requests by the treasury secretary to the IRS as a consequence of the implementation of a change in tax policy. [...] Congress would seemingly have such authority, but, to date, such legislative action has not been publicly contemplated.

The Washington Post covered the Free Press article, writing that Martin's letter "is part of a broader campaign by the Trump administration and its allies, including Martin, against institutions, media outlets and online platforms they have accused of pushing liberal agendas or political views." The newspaper also reached out to Molly White, who viewed the letter as part of the administration's attempts at "weaponizing laws to try to silence high-quality independent information", as well as Wikipedia beat reporter Stephen Harrison, who said that Martin "seems to want an America First version of Wikipedia", rather than a global information source.

An earlier WaPo article reported that Martin had appeared over 150 times as a guest commentator on Russian state-controlled broadcasters RT and Sputnik from August 2016 to April 2024. Among his statements, he had told "an interviewer on the same arm of RT's global network that 'there [was] no evidence' of a Russian military buildup on Ukraine's borders, criticizing U.S. officials as warmongering and ignoring Russia's security concerns," nine days before Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Martin did not declare any of these appearances on a Senate Judiciary Committee questionnaire for his upcoming confirmation vote or possible conformation hearing. Several of Martin's appearances on Russian propaganda outlets are shown in another WaPo video.

The Verge also reported on the original Free Press story, while adding that "Martin is known for thinly justified legal threats against media organizations," having recently sent similar letters to various medical journals, including "the New England Journal of Medicine, the CHEST Journal, and Obstetrics and Gynecology, accusing them of being 'partisan in various scientific debates.'"

In addition to her previous comment for WaPo, Molly White told The Signpost that "the biggest harm here is not to Wikimedia, but to the rule of law and to free expression. Letters like this, threatening organizations over clearly First Amendment-protected activities, are a shocking illustration of the authoritarianism that has rapidly blossomed under Trump. I'm proud that Wikipedia continues to prioritize accurate and scientific information as determined by its global volunteer editing community and its policies, not the political propaganda of a single administration looking to impose its views." White published an op-ed on similar topics on the January 15 issue of the Signpost.

Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy Wales himself took part in a discussion on the matter at Village pump, while a WMF spokesperson released this statement to the media:

The Wikimedia Foundation is the nonprofit organization that operates Wikipedia, the backbone of knowledge on the internet, and other free knowledge projects. Wikipedia is one of the last places online that shows the promise of the internet, housing more than 65 million articles written to inform, not persuade. Wikipedia's content is governed by three core content policies: neutral point of view, verifiability, and no original research, which exist to ensure information is presented as accurately, fairly, and neutrally as possible. The entire process of content moderation is overseen by nearly 260,000 volunteers and is open and transparent for all to see, which is why we welcome opportunities to explain how Wikipedia works and will do so in the appropriate forum. Our vision is a world in which every single human can freely share in the sum of all knowledge.

 
 

Presented by Dr. Brian Davis, University of Louisville, April 10, 2025.

The Mesozoic is commonly known as the "Age of Dinosaurs." The beginning of our own branch of the family tree was unfolding at the same time, mostly in the shadows. Mammals might have been tiny, but they experimented with a wide range of lifestyles. In this talk, Dr. Brian Davis explores what early mammals were like, and how palaeontologists find their fossils. This presentation answers the question, “What do mammal fossils tell us about how they lived, and perhaps why they went on to become so wildly successful?”

Admittedly even as a layman I think this 45-minute lecture could've gone into more depth and skipped over some of the basics, but it's still a nice watch. Sadly the sound quality isn't very good, I had to turn on the auto-generated subtitles...

 
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