honey-im-meat-grinding

joined 1 year ago
[–] honey-im-meat-grinding@kbin.social 6 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

One can even argue that the tools needed to avoid IP are already here: crowdfunding models, commissions, and Patreon-esque income, and likely in the near future, universal basic income - you can consider the government/taxes subsidising your ability to create art if you're starting from zero skills/connections/reach or from scratch with a specific project. With these, why does the author even retain total IP? Their project is funded by the community, so it'd make sense that the creator and the community had a more symbiotic relationship rather than the parasitic one where the author is effectively a digital landlord and dictator with complete control over the project.

So you're doing something you personally believe is unethical and your argument is that we should also follow your belief that it is unethical, while we continue to do it? If you genuinely feel it's unethical, why are you even doing it? Just stop lol

[–] honey-im-meat-grinding@kbin.social 21 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Why aren't you making your point in plain English instead of this roundabout way?

If you're implying that we should look at China's emissions – China's cumulative and per capita emissions are lower than the US. China is basically on par with the EU in terms of per capita emissions, so if anyone has some catching up to do it's the US with 2x (twice!) as much emissions per capita.

If that's not your point, then that's my bad – I see way too many people try to shift blame onto China in these conversations.

Furthermore, imagine if everyone had one voting share per person, instead of whoever has the most wealth has a ton of voting shares.

It's kind of funny how close we are to economic democracy.

Friendly reminder that consent popups that don't have a clear "reject" option right next to the "accept" button are a violation of GDPR. You can report these to your country's data/privacy governmental body - for example Datatilsynet in Norway/Denmark, CNIL in France. You don't have to do it for every website that you go to, obviously, but if you do it even once you're helping solve this problem for more users than just yourself.

Others have given you some good technical solutions - personally I use the uBlock Origin + annoyance filters enabled approach, and use Firefox on Android to get the same experience there.

[–] honey-im-meat-grinding@kbin.social 10 points 1 year ago (4 children)

I mean you're assuming this isn't happening more in reverse to platform disinformation: take a look at any trans related thread in a UK sub and you'll see the most useless leap of faith transphobe comments receive 5 gold while the more scientific pro trans comments are buried far, far down the chain.

Also, equating gilding with democracy is odd - we live in a world where economic inequality is growing. Who can afford the most gold? It's not the poor/disabled/other minorities who have important views that need to be heard - they can't afford to give 5 gold to random reddit comments they agree with because they're statistically earning less.

Buying gold is not democratic. There's a reason you can't just (directly) buy votes in elections. This is still a shitty move on Reddit's part, but for a different reason than hurting democracy.

[–] honey-im-meat-grinding@kbin.social 15 points 1 year ago (1 children)

My take is this is because they were made with dithering in mind. Modern pixel art games like Iconoclasts, Eastward, Owlboy, Hyper Light Drifter, Moonlighter look pretty without dithering.

[–] honey-im-meat-grinding@kbin.social 24 points 1 year ago (1 children)

@db0 / @sunbrothersco does this fall under the low quality post rule? I'm asking this because I don't want to see !piracy becoming just as bad as r/piracy was, if it is going to increasingly be memes I'd rather find another piracy discussion place in the fediverse

[–] honey-im-meat-grinding@kbin.social 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Basically everyone assumed Greece would handle it in a humanitarian way

That may be more the way the article presents it - Frontex infamously replaced a more humanitarian approach under the guise of "cost savings" and then over the years grew their budget beyond what was spent on border crossings before they came into the picture, and now is under increasing scrutiny over how they just watch migrants die or even push them back - the Mediterranean border crossing is said to be the deadliest in the world.

If you're using Firefox you can click the reader view button and the article is readable again so it seems to be a soft paywall, otherwise archive.is works