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Ohio Woman Says She Regrets Sharing False Rumor About Haitians on Facebook
  • Except maybe RFK jr, of course.

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    PeerTube v6.3 released!
  • New in this release:

    • Separate audio and video streams, so that only one audio track is stored on the server even if there are multiple resolutions for a video, and viewers can choose only to stream audio. You can also do audio-only live streams. Cool.
    • Browse subtitles, search them, click on them, read them to a friend
    • Better video fetching from Youtube channels, in case you post there first
    • Smaller tweaks to improve user experience

    Cool stuff.

    PS: My favourite way to keep up to date on PeerTube content is to go to Piefed, press the search button, choose "PeerTube" under Instance Software and sort by "Recent first". It shows content from all PieFed channels subscribed to by PieFed users, so it's a limited scope, but I still think it's a nice little feed.

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    Ohio Woman Says She Regrets Sharing False Rumor About Haitians on Facebook
  • Holy shit. Maybe she's the one who has been eating all those pets.

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    Help me decode the importance of EU Commission roles
  • The Commission is basically two completely different things. Actually it's probably more than two things, but the way we often talk about it, it plays two key roles.

    One is that of a bureaucratic body that runs the union, delegates funds, oversees the implementation of EU legislation, submits observations to cases before the CJEU, posts content to @EUCommission@ec.social-network.europa.eu, and that kind of jazz. This is where there's a huge number of employees, and it's where a lot of EU funds are spent. We probably wouldn't be talking here if it wasn't for the Next Generation Internet programme, which is a part of Horizon Europe, which is seen as a scientific research initiative. So the Fediverse has a pretty direct relationship to things going on in the bureaucracy that I assume is positioned under the Commissioner for Innovation, Research, Culture, Education and Youth.

    This is, however, largely bureaucratic. Doesn't mean it's not important, but it's not where the juicy political decisions are made.

    The other role is that of a executive body. In the separation of powers in the EU,

    In its executive role, budget and staff might matter less. What matters is the political deals you can strike. Resources might help you craft better proposals that the Council and Parliament then needs to accept before it can be signed off to law, but the relationship to resources here is not that obvious.

    Then again, another bureaucratic role of the Commission is when power has been delegated to it to decide on a specific area, for example how to regulate a specific type of products. This is bureaucratic as hell, but it also gives direct decision-making power to the Commission to just decide pretty much as they please within a limited competence. So bureaucrats could absolutely mean power as well, albeit maybe not a very sexy type of power.

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    Help me decode the importance of EU Commission roles
  • It's not an obvious exercise. How "important" is migration and home affairs compared to the internal market? The internal market is certainly at the core of the competences of the EU, but maybe it's in the less established areas that more interesting developments are happening. Furthermore, they might suddenly become extremely relevant. Nobody predicted how important DG SANTE would become in 2020, for example.

    One indicator of importance might be staff size. I struggle to find a good and up to date figure right now, so I'll make do with a pretty bad and outdated one from 2020, showing the size of the staff under each Commissioner at that point in time. Johannes Hahn runs the largest operation as the DG of budget and administration. Budget is unquestionably important. Administration as well, but it might produce more staff than power.

    The Commissioner for Innovation, Research, Culture, Education and Youth comes in second place. The Commissioner for International Partnerships comes third.

    So these positions run the largest operations. Linking that to power is probably somewhat misguided - it would indicate that all three of these relatively anonymous positions were more important than von der Leyen. Entering a position with a lot of staff might even decrease your power, as you are forced into a role that might have more to do with management and less to do with politics; furthermore, if the field is already well-developed in the EU, it might not be where central developments are happening going forwards.

    A better indicator could be to go through the Directorate-Generals under the control of the different Commissioners. The Commissioner of the Internal Market, for example, is also responsible for for the Directorate-General for Defence Industry and Space. That might be important these days.

    In the traditional competences of the EU, the DG for for Maritime Affairs and Fisheries would be considered very important. These days, and especially on this platform, people might be more interested in the DG for Communications Networks, Content and Technology.

    Wherever Union competences are weak and/or anonymous, there's greater room to innovate and to surprise us by striking some crazy deal. In politicized issues that we intuitively care about, the Commissioner's power will also be relatively weaker as they are kept under strict control. So there's an inherent tension: The fact that a Commissioner is widely considered as being important might actually make them less relevant by making it harder for them to pursue an agenda. They might end up just striking smallest common denominator compromises with all involved actors, and have little to say themselves for the outcomes as such.

    So that's a messy non-answer, and I guess nobody is any wiser. But it's difficult, in my opinion, to give a very clearly defined answer which positions are important and which are not.

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    How are you doing with your communities?
  • Oooff, that's harsh. My girlfriend is currently in the process of finishing up her PhD, and my job recently exploded in my face, so I can relate a little to parts of what you're going through. At least good to hear you're dealing with the cold efficiently, even if it's hell while it's going on!

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    How are you doing with your communities?
  • The owls in my feed never fail to lighten up my day!

    I hope you're doing better, and I'm happy to hear that the community is bringing something positive to you as well! There's at least no doubt there's a lot of us who appreciate the effort. :)

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    A Perfect Day for Bananafish by J.D. Salinger
  • Just read it for the first time now.

    Wow.

    Thanks for the recommendation!

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    Pope Francis pushes false claim that both presidential candidates are "against life"
  • The organisation that happily cooperated with fascism in Italy you mean?

    The child raping one?

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    Pope Francis pushes false claim that both presidential candidates are "against life"
  • Yeah, it's not what he's saying. But the formulation - sending a child away from the womb of it's mother" - is fundamentally fucked up because it completely removes the mother from the equation. It doesn't even bother to explicitly deprive her of the control over her body - it simply doesn't recognise her existence at all.

    I think, more than anything, that's why this line of talking is fucked up. It kind of assumes totalitarianism where no matter what, it's at least not the choice of the individual women/owners of the wombs.

    What moderate Catholics will use as a defence is, I guess, the use of the word "child". No reasonable person would consider a lump of 30 cells a "child". But we all know the pope thinks it's a child as soon as the sperm hits the egg, so fuck that as well.

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    Pope Francis pushes false claim that both presidential candidates are "against life"
  • I'm this formulation it sounds like he's talking about government mandated abortion - it's like it's happening against the will of the owner of the womb.

    Clearly that's not what he's talking about, but in a narrow charitable interpretation, he would be correct that the government has no fucking business controlling whatever is going on inside women's wombs.

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    Threads makes it easier to evangelize the open social web with a new direct link feature | TechCrunch
  • The official story is that Meta is worried about being sued by people suddenly seeing their content pushed to some random website without their consent if it's enabled by default, so they won't risk enabling it by default. At least not before the fediverse is huge enough that everything you post going everywhere on the internet is the expected behaviour.

    Fair enough really. I wouldn't want to be sued for that either, and they obviously cannot expect Congress to understand.. anything.

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    New instrument! A rebec - kind of an early precursor of a violin.
  • Love the sound of it! Are you making these on commission or just as a hobby?

    I can imagine making bows is an incredibly delicate matter - I don't have time to fall into the rabbit hole of the history of bowed instruments right now, but I can feel myself slipping!

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    My former friend JD Vance has aligned with something far worse than MAGA
  • Judging character and identifying psychopaths are two wildly different skill sets, though arguably one depends on the other.

    I'm slowly getting better (more experienced) at identifying psychopaths and narcissists, but holy shit it can be difficult.

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    New instrument! A rebec - kind of an early precursor of a violin.
  • That's beautiful!

    Will you make a bow as well? Would it be possible to get a presentation of what it sounds like?

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    An evidence-based and critical analysis of the Fediverse decentralization promises
  • They define decentralisation as an even distribution of users? Or did I get that wrong skimming the paper?

    This seems arbitrary. Mastodon is a decentralised network, no matter how big Mastodon.social is. Lemmy is equally decentralised, even though there's a dominant actor.

    The other hubs in the network don't revolve around mastodon.social/lemmy.world. they connect to each other bilaterally - if the central hubs disappeared over night it wouldn't affect them all that much.

    I think the notion that decentralised networks can't have hubs of varying sizes is plain wrong, and a fundamental misunderstanding of what decentralized means.

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    [Lemmy] New NLnet funding for Lemmy
  • I think they find themselves in a position they didn't really ask for by being so huge that they're suddenly defining a lot of things. With that many users depending on your product, change necessarily becomes slower and you have to test things to a whole different level before implementing anything. I kind of see why it can be tricky to make technical changes to their ActivityPub implementation at this point, especially as people are yelling left and right for different and often contradicting features.

    Sure, it has some negative consequences, but Mastodon's success is still only a good thing, and I don't think there's any good reason at all to expect bad intent from any of it's developers.

    In other news, I'm getting really tired of all the shit they're receiving.

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    TIL that climbing the full height of Everest means starting at sea level
  • Pretty deadly for the sherpas though, who have to deal with the shit of the rich idiot tourists going there in massive numbers. So if they want to insist it's extreme, at least there's that.

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    [Lemmy] New NLnet funding for Lemmy
  • Hats off to the EU for funding both this and the recently announced Fediscovery, along with many other Fediverse developments (a personal favourite being Seppo!).

    For those unfamiliar, it's basically money from the European Commission. The Commission, as part of Horizon Europe, has a project called Next Generation Internet (NGI). NGI funds an independent organizatio,n NLnet, which takes the money from its sponsors and funds a variety of projects. NLnet is also sponsored by other actors (at least Switzerland); you can check each individual project funding on their website.

    So if you're a European tax payer, you're helping create this common good through your taxes. Thanks! :)

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    What happened with active users on Lemmy?
  • It's the Lemmy developers, who run Lemmy.ml and Lemmygrad.ml, who decided not to promote Lemmy.world on their "about Lemmy" website. This is completely unrelated to the admins of Lemmy.world. :)

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  • I picked up a Ducky One Mini at a flea market yesterday, and after cleaning it extensively it seems to be working pretty well for the most part. I'm using it for writing and coding, so not having dedicated arrow keys will take some getting used to, but other than that it seems neat enough for the price I paid.

    However, the alternative graphic button (on the right side of the space bar) is completely unresponsive. Pressing it just makes no difference at all. I used a tool that maps keyboard presses in Linux (xev), and it showed nothing when Alt Gr was pressed (just like the Fn button), so it seems no signal is being sent from the keyboard to the computer.

    It could be that this is due to some setting made by the previous owner, or maybe there's something else going on. Maybe I need to update the firmware. Maybe it's broken. I have no idea.

    The back-light behind some of the numerical keys is also disabled or broken, but it doesn't bother me much as I'm not a big fan of back-light anyway.

    But if anyone has any suggestions what to try for the alternative graphic key it would be much appreciated! For now I have re-routed right super (Windows button) to be read as Alt Gr, but it's not very convenient when writing Latex and using a lot of curly brackets. :)

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    > > > This song is also definitely not about anything going right now. No, it's a history song about people long, long ago who found themselves trapped on a ship of fools. > >

    In Yiddish with lyrics by Michael Wex.

    Geoff Berner is a Canadian musician and songwriter with a background in punk and klezmer, notorious for writing angry accordion songs about being antifascist and/or jewish.

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    mastodon.green Pauline von Hellermann (@pvonhellermannn@mastodon.green)

    Attached: 1 image #GE2024 What have Labour done in their first campaign week? Deselected left-wing (not Israel supporting) candidates!! Diane Abbott (not sure but looks like it), now Doctor Faiza Shaheen, in Chingford, and more. This is appalling. Really angry. #UKPolitics EDIT: it’s become a bit...

    Labour has decided to start their campaign with a bang, pruning women of colour and left wingers from the ballot due to reasons such as liking tweets sharing Jon Stewart videos. At the end of the day it boils down to support for Palestine.

    Looks like Labour is doing what they can to make sure UK politics remains completely fucked even after the end of the Tory rule.

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    social.coop Raph (@raph@social.coop)

    Attached: 1 video Student protestors are portrayed as anywhere between naive and brainwashed. Now listen to this. Nothing naive here. #Israel #Gaza #Chicago #Palestine #StudentProtests

    The police stormed the protest camp at the University of Chicago in the middle of the night, leading to a great interview with a student talking about, among other things, the cowardness of following orders.

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    I noticed responding to posts in communities hosted at lemmy.ml gives the following warning:

    > > > This post is hosted on lemmy.ml which will ban you for saying anything negative about China, Russia or Putin. Tread carefully. > >

    While I see where this is coming from and I agree with the general sentiment, I'm not sure it's a great idea to include such a message. I basically read it as an invitation to be off-topic and to derail conversations in order to annoy the admins. While it comes from a point of good intentions, it can be disheartening for the people running communities on Lemmy.ml to receive comments about Russia from users basically trying to get banned, in communities that has nothing to do with this issue.

    It's unfortunate, but a lot of valuable older communities are still hosted on lemmy.ml, and I think PieFed users should be encouraged to be constructive and on-topic users there as they should be everywhere else.

    An alternative suggestion: Maybe it could be useful to remind people which community they are posting in? Like, "This community is dedicated to renewable energy. Please keep this in mind when contributing to the discussion". Then again, that would be a mess to implement in a good way.

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    Hi,

    The CSAM scandal the other day got me thinking about the (often lacking) capability of the Threadiverse to deal with quickly with content moderation, and since PieFed has already been a bit experimental in this regard, I figured maybe this is a place where I could ask if an idea is feasible. Sorry if it's a bad match!

    The idea is to identify trusted users, in the same way that PieFed currently identifies potentially problematic users. Long term users with significantly more upvotes than downvotes. These trusted users could get an additional option to report a post, beyond "Report to moderator": Something like "Mark as abuse".

    The user would be informed that this is meant for content that clearly goes against the rules of the server, that any other type of issue should be reported to moderators, and that abuse of the function leads to revoke of privilege to use it and, if intentional, potentially a ban.

    If the user accepts this and marks a post as abuse, every post by the OP of the marked post would be temporarily hidden on the instance and marked for review by a moderator. The moderator can then choose to either 1) ban the user posting abusive material, or 2) make the posts visible again, and remove the "trusted" flag of the reporting user and hence avoiding similar false positives in the future.

    A problem I keep seeing on the threadiverse is that bad content tends to remain available too long, as many smaller instances means that the moderating team might simply all be asleep. So this seems like one possible way of mitigating that. Maybe it's not technically feasible, and maybe it's just not a particularly good idea; it might also not be a particularly original idea, I don't know. But I figured it might be worth discussing.

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    Congratulations on having made such a great tool, even in its early phase! It seems very solid.

    I'm curious about the long-term plans for the project: Is the idea to work strictly with the Threadiverse (similar to Lemmy), or are there plans to integrate more with the microblog platforms (similar to Kbin)? Any particular difference in approach to Fediverse integration vis-a-vis the two main platforms?

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