sharpsphere

joined 1 year ago
 

Man attempts to review game. Game ends up reviewing man.

[–] sharpsphere@lemmy.world 12 points 1 year ago (1 children)

It feels like the activity is partaking of me rather than the reverse

Thanks for giving me these words to describe the feeling so well. I don't feel interested and passionate... I feel consumed and dominated.

Now that I think about it, lots of words that describe focus have etymologies that feel appropriately sinister. Captivated, enthralled, enraptured, fascinated, bewitched, mesmerized, hooked - all related to being controlled against your will.

[–] sharpsphere@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

damn I actually remember seeing this when it was first posted to reddit

 

A stick figure animation of our hero battling the forces of e-vil.

[–] sharpsphere@lemmy.world 8 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Local hospital claims the lives of thousands of patients. Will it strike again?

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/241597

Professional animator Noodle takes on the 60FPS-industrial complex.

 

/c/dropout@lemmy.world

!dropout@lemmy.world

A place for fans of the streaming service Dropout and all its shows, like Make Some Noise, Dimension 20, GameChanger, Um Actually, and the whole Dropout/CollegeHumor cast extended universe.

[–] sharpsphere@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago (2 children)

I think someone will add it to base Lemmy eventually, but I doubt it's high priority. Might be a while.

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/232778

8BMT analyzes the iconic music of Ocarina of Time and reveals how composer Koji Kondo managed to bang out classic melody after classic melody using just 5 unusual notes.

What do you think is the best video game soundtrack of all time? What makes it unique?

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/264567

Hbomb tries and fails to make a short video about the origin of the "roblox oof sound" and is slowly driven to madness by the strange and sorry tale of Tommy Tallarico.

[–] sharpsphere@lemmy.world 20 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

That's a complicated question.

I'm going to make an assumption that, for your purposes, you most likely don't have anything to worry about, but still:

Does participating in an online community about anarchism out you on a watchlist? There's no way to know what precisely constitutes a "watchlist" or what criteria US intelligence agencies use to populate them, but we do know that the DOD considers anarchists an "extremist ideology" that constitutes a potential "internal threat." Public communications and documents from US agencies indicate that "anarchist extremism" and/or "anarchist violent extremism" is a threat that is being monitored by law enforcement and intelligence agencies.

To address the question of violence, we also know that certain methods of surveillance by the US government are notoriously broad, and are not predicated on the commission of a crime, so it's not unlikely that simple suspicions of anarchist extremism could land your data in an NSA database somewhere. However, your data on an NSA watchlist is very unlikely to get you arrested if all you do is talk about the ideology and don't make anything that constitutes a threat of harm. And you're probably in that database anyway for some other reason.

Can you get arrested/charged for crimes? Not to be hyperbolic, but police can arrest you and charge you with crimes for any reason at any time. There's nothing you can do that guarantees you won't ever be arrested. That being said, being arrested and charged does not mean you'll be convicted, and police don't have infinite resources to just arrest anyone and everyone forever.

Still, are there examples of anarchists who have been spuriously arrested and charged with crimes despite being nonviolent? Yes. I've been arrested for nonviolent, legal political protest. I wasn't breaking any laws. I spent a day in jail on a made up charge, then they released me and never pursued the charge in court. Just a scare tactic. That's not an unusual story.

For a more extreme and recent example, anarchists in Atlanta are being charged with domestic terrorism, and one of them was extrajudicially murdered, for their nonviolent protests to stop cop city. Organizers for the legal, nonprofit bail fund in Atlanta were also arrested and charged spuriously with money laundering and charity fraud in a related case.

Two things about those incidents, though. One, these arrests are by local police with a grudge, and so I doubt it's related to a federal watchlist. Two, the victims are actively engaged in organizing for a political protest movement, not just chatting about Bakunin and Proudhon on a forum.

I think you should get involved, talk, and learn more about anarchism, socialism, communism, any stripe of anti-capitalism. I'm confident that you can learn about it and chat about it safely, regardless of whether your data ends up in an NSA database. But you should be aware that getting involved in IRL organizing on the left, even nonviolently (as it almost always is), isn't safe. It's absolutely, 100% worth doing, but political resistance has never been safe, and part of a good education is learning how to protect yourself.

[–] sharpsphere@lemmy.world 0 points 1 year ago

That's a complicated question.

I'm going to make an assumption that, for your purposes, you most likely don't have anything to worry about, but still:

Does participating in an online community about anarchism out you on a watchlist? There's no way to know what precisely constitutes a "watchlist" or what criteria US intelligence agencies use to populate them, but we do know that the DOD considers anarchists an "extremist ideology" that constitutes a potential "internal threat." Public communications and documents from US agencies indicate that "anarchist extremism" and/or "anarchist violent extremism" is a threat that is being monitored by law enforcement and intelligence agencies.

To address the question of violence, we also know that certain methods of surveillance by the US government are notoriously broad, and are not predicated on the commission of a crime, so it's not unlikely that simple suspicions of anarchist extremism could land your data in an NSA database somewhere. However, your data on an NSA watchlist is very unlikely to get you arrested if all you do is talk about the ideology and don't make anything that constitutes a threat of harm. And you're probably in that database anyway for some other reason.

Can you get arrested/charged for crimes? Not to be hyperbolic, but police can arrest you and charge you with crimes for any reason at any time. There's nothing you can do that guarantees you won't ever be arrested. That being said, being arrested and charged does not mean you'll be convicted, and police don't have infinite resources to just arrest anyone and everyone forever.

Still, are there examples of anarchists who have been spuriously arrested and charged with crimes despite being nonviolent? Yes. I've been arrested for nonviolent, legal political protest. I wasn't breaking any laws. I spent a day in jail on a made up charge, then they released me and never pursued the charge in court. Just a scare tactic. That's not an unusual story.

For a more extreme and recent example, anarchists in Atlanta are being charged with domestic terrorism, and one of them was extrajudiciously murdered, for their nonviolent protests to stop cop city. Organizers for the legal, nonprofit bail fund in Atlanta were also arrested and charged spuriously with money laundering and charity fraud in a related case.

Two things about those incidents, though. One, these arrests are by local police with a grudge, and so I doubt it's related to a federal watchlist. Two, the victims are actively engaged in organizing for a political protest movement, not just chatting about Bakunin and Proudhon on a forum.

I think you should get involved, talk, and learn more about anarchism, socialism, communism, any stripe of anti-capitalism. I'm confident that you can learn about it and chat about it safely, regardless of whether your data ends up in an NSA database. But you should be aware that getting involved in IRL organizing on the left isn't safe. It's absolutely, 100% worth doing, but political resistance has never been safe, and part of a good education is learning how to protect yourself.

[–] sharpsphere@lemmy.world 0 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I think I'll always prefer to maintain two accounts just for the flexibility, but if I could follow a stream of /c/ posts-only from my Mastodon, it would really simplify the process of sharing those posts to my mastodon folks.

Right now, unless I follow the firehose of an entire /c/, then sharing a post to Mastodon means I have to see it from my Lemmy account, copy the post link, rewrite the link to open on my Mastodon instance, open it, and then share it.

[–] sharpsphere@lemmy.world 16 points 1 year ago

they're gonna love that sweet, sweet liability

 

/c/videoessays

!videoessays@lemmy.world

Post your favorites! Watch them over a meal, or when you’re slacking at work.

A video essay is a type of video that makes an argument or critique, usually from a single creator’s perspective. They can be short or long, casual or formal, modest or theatrical, and cover any topic.

[–] sharpsphere@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago (6 children)

Tried to follow a couple Lemmy communities from Mastodon, but it feeds you every post and comment, which gets unmanageable at any /c/ of reasonable size.

Is there a way that I can follow only the top-level posts from my Mastodon? Maybe I'm missing it.