

Being Christian or going to church doesn’t make you a good person any more than a speed limit sign prevents people from speeding.


Being Christian or going to church doesn’t make you a good person any more than a speed limit sign prevents people from speeding.


You’re spot on with accountability. Why not just legally allow people harmed by following the advice to be ableto sue the influencers and allow those with proper credentials to become certified in the topic and certification protects from lawsuits?
Or maybe not the second part. Anybody giving bad advice should be sued.
“This isn’t medical advice, but drinking battery acid will allow you to live forever.” Would never hold up in court.
Freedom of speech seems to be the most misunderstood right.


The US is not in a recession as of this posting date. I read something recently from Fidelity Investments that suggests that the US is heading toward a recession.
Your exact question was found on the Q&A page
Supporting evidence Key takeaways
The US economy continues to grow, although it is sending some mixed signals.
Corporate earnings remain strong even as consumer expectations sag.
US tariff policy remains uncertain, and much of the impact from tariff hikes is still ahead.
Additionally, you may find this page interesting. It charts the business cycle across countries and quarters. If you play with the selections, you’ll see that countries’ economies do not always progress forward, nor are the rates of change consistent, so the page is not a predictor of what’s to come.
FWIW, a financial advisor that I know said that his company is recommending that their investors shift to a portfolio with more foreign investments.


Not 75%, just 3.5% is needed (probably).


You have a lot of good points and I may have missed the intent of the article, but a knee jerk reaction of “lower traffic = AI is bad” is not helpful either. My point is that I frequently find myself hitting a page just to check a reference, quote or remember something. AI search results can be useful here. It’s no different than how DuckDugkGo has a sidebar if the results are from StackOverflow. It’s nice to get quick answers. I would like to see a fair solution to the content creators being able to stay in business.


This will be unpopular, but hear me out. Maybe the decline in visitors is only a decline in the folks who are simply looking for a specific word or name and the forgot. Like, that one guy who believed in the survival of the fittest. Um. Let me try to remember. I think he had an epic beard. Ah! Darwin! I just needed a reminder, I didn’t want to read the entire article on him because I did that years ago.
Look at your own behaviors on lemmy. How often do you click/tap through to the complete article? What if it’s just a headline? What if it’s the whole article pasted into the body of the post? Click bait headlines are almost universally hated, but it’s a desperate attempt to drive traffic to the site. Sometimes all you need is the article synopsis. Soccer team A beats team B in overtime. Great, that’s all I need to know…unless I have a fantasy team.


You’re reading this the wrong way. Why is the defense department censoring the media? What are they doing or planning that they don’t want the media, and therefore the people, to know about? If this was a practice run for limiting news, it’d be happening in some other department first.
Electric heaters are wasteful. How about spending that energy wisely while also generating heat?
https://fedia.io/m/[email protected]/t/2828343
(Sorry for the full link, I can’t figure out how to reference an article on another instance on the mobile app.)


A port scan and then inspection of the ports is a great habit. Another fun thing to do is to set up WireShark to listen to what your fridge’s IP address is doing. Who is it calling? How often? What services (ports)? While your fridge may have a DNS server, unless it’s been pre-loaded with the internet, it’ll need to query another DNS to reach the outside world. DNS is usually unencrypted, so you can see what it’s asking to connect to.
Many of these devices announce their services via Bonjour or whatever protocol. It’s a way for devices like Alexa to find out that you have a printer, interrogate the printer and then Alexa will tell you that your printer is low on ink and by the way, Amazon has a special sale, just for you.
If anything is unencrypted, check it out (with WireShark). If it is encrypted, there’s a chance that you can hijack it with a proxy server. Set up a SOCKS proxy and add a DNS label (I can’t remember what it is) to tell the devices in your network that you have a proxy. Block the fridge from the internet and see if it will autodetect the proxy. There are other ways to tell devices that your home network requires a proxy via autodetection & wpad.dat files in specific locations on your network. You can configure your proxy to log all traffic, like WireShark does and then see what’s in the payload.
I’ve done this with limited success on various devices. More mature products like Alexa are locked down. Those cheap home cameras from China are pretty hackable.
Have fun!


I’ve thought through this. Would this new country have the resources to defend itself from an attack from the US?
What if this new country joins NATO on its first day of being a country? Would the US be required to defend the new country from itself?
A far more effective solution would be a “soft succession”. Pay special attention to the section on economic leverage. What if California joined with New York, Massachusetts, Illinois and any other “blue” states and just stopped paying federal taxes? I can’t find it now, but I saw a infographic that the “blue” states are the primary funders of the federal government by a significant amount. Without money from these states, the federal government cannot exist. All of this framework has been reinforced by the judicial branch.
This is already happening. In Minnesota, the DOJ is suing the state. This is a lawsuit to watch. If the legal blog from above is correct, the DOJ lawsuit will fail, just as before:
Federal courts have recently blocked President Donald Trump from interfering with sanctuary city policies; earlier this year, a federal judge stopped Trump from withholding federal funding from cities that refuse to assist with immigration enforcement, including Minneapolis.


You just described most tech stocks.
As Cory Doctrow explains:
the fundamental duty of every CEO of every high-growth tech company: explaining how his company will continue to grow. These growth stories are key, because growth stocks trade at a huge premium relative to the stocks of “mature” companies.
I came here to say just this. I used to belong to a hobbyist group that would reserve track time for races. They were timed trials for safety and had tow trucks and medics on standby. The best was when they watered the track in the winter and let it freeze overnight. Those were the slowest races I’ve ever seen. In addition to being safe fun, they taught how to handle your car in extreme situations.
Here’s an example race: https://www.onelapofamerica.com/#!HOME
I’m imagining every strenuous lift resulting in a toot!


I think you’re on to something. This could accelerate the movement of tech jobs to India & other countries vs just importing cheap labor.
In the past, when tech jobs were outsourced, it was just the coders. Lately, ilve noticed entire teams being outsourced, manager, project/product managers, coders, agilists, designers and others. Big companies are letting all technology be performed offshore and only the business units remain. This administration policy move could accelerate this trend, which could have far reaching implications.
I scrolled way too far to find this.


This may not help at all, but I worked at a toxic workplace. I got good at recognizing when I was being manipulated. Eventually, I learned that if I hid the hurt and acted as if the jabs didn’t hurt, it would send the toxic folks into a toxic rage, but the ironic part is that they could not complain to management about me not being affected.
One day, I was called from one of the people from a recorded line (certain customer facing phones were always recorded, you could even hear the beeps). After the call, I told my manager, we went to HR, who pulled the recording and that person was moved to another area. I left shortly after for other reasons.


This contradicts what I’m reading in that AI model costs grow with each generation, not shrink.


I came here to see if it was the early signs of the demise of YouTube. I secretly want all these content producers to move to a privacy-respecting platform, especially those who produce tech or privacy related content.
Now, for why I don’t watch videos anymore, the medium isn’t as easily consumed by me. I prefer text. At home, it’s noisy and I get interrupted every 90 seconds. I lose interest quickly and fast forwarding isn’t as easy as scanning text for a topic shift. My mind wanders on some topics, internally exploring that topic deeper. With text, i can just stop reading. With video, i need to realize that I’m processing a thought and hit pause, then rewind a bit. I get interrupted a lot. On the bus, I need to remember headphones and I hate when people shoulder surf. That’s harder to do with text. Give me a plain text RSS feed that I can read anytime.
I expected the whole comment thread to be like this.
I’m self hosting to learn. I’ve been hacked before and I lost stuff and then I refined my technique and started over again. Nothing I do is “mission critical”, so I now have the mindset that it will fail, I will lose data and time and I will get hacked. Honestly, it’s helped me to be better at home and at my workplace to have this mindset. Always plan for failure (and keep backups).