FauxLiving

joined 5 months ago
[–] FauxLiving@lemmy.world 4 points 1 hour ago

FYI, clicking the “Claim now!” button under a game will still claim the whole bundle

i now own a bunch of porn games cuz i wanted to try Postal 2 -_-

Uhh, yeah me too. And they used my credit card to sign up for porn. Smh, GOG

[–] FauxLiving@lemmy.world 2 points 1 hour ago* (last edited 1 hour ago)

"Emails"

It's a messaging system where you pay like $.25/message, you have to be manually approved by the prison to contact the inmate and all messages are saved and screened for things like PII and criminal activity. You can be permanently suspended if either person breaks the rules (I think the inmate can be put in the box and lose gain-time also), the screening process often just rejects things without explanation, and it may take 24-48 hours to be delivered

It's better than the $.15/minute phone calls, but it isn't exactly a Gmail account.

It's basically another service provider that DOC has given their blessing so that they can fleece the families of inmates. It's cheap, breaks all the time and costs a ridiculous amount.

It is completely unsurprising that this happened.

[–] FauxLiving@lemmy.world 3 points 7 hours ago (2 children)

"Would you like to activate Co-Pilot for text entry?!"

[–] FauxLiving@lemmy.world 2 points 7 hours ago

Elisa is good too.

Or, once OP has come fully to the dark side, ncmpcpp

[–] FauxLiving@lemmy.world 4 points 7 hours ago

Had me in the first half...

[–] FauxLiving@lemmy.world 3 points 1 day ago

Which dude? How are you going to identify them?

Their full name, pictures and location would be required or your information about his rapeyness is worthless.

You're not going to have that person's permission to post their information and so you're doing it without their consent.

[–] FauxLiving@lemmy.world 1 points 1 day ago (1 children)

There are no private spaces online, because your privacy is only protected by the people who own the servers. Your data isn't private to them, nor any governments who can compell them.

You cannot trust that any data you put on services, that you're not completely in control of, is going to remain private.

There are countless examples of services selling your data, hackets getting access to your data or governments compelling a service provider to produce your data on demand.

The exception to that are services where you can enforce your privacy through well implemented encryption.

For exsmple, I don't need to trust a cloud storage provider that is storing my data because it's encrypted on my machine using keys that only I control prior to being stored. My privacy doesn't require me to trust that Google will protect my data from insiders, hackers or hostile governments because they don't have the ability to produce it. My privacy is protected by the laws of mathematics regardless of how compromised the service provider is.

[–] FauxLiving@lemmy.world 6 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (3 children)

I can't think of any way to use the app that doesn't rely on posting pictures and personal information of people without their consent.

[–] FauxLiving@lemmy.world 4 points 1 day ago

Getting rid of social media will improve your mood dramatically.

I also like doing homelab stuff, and it's even more satisfying to know I'm having a better experience than, say, someone subscribing to every streaming service but still having to watch ads.

[–] FauxLiving@lemmy.world -1 points 1 day ago (2 children)

It's not great, but it's an acceptable kludge if you're the one holding everyone back and you can't figure out the problem immediately. Set it to public, let the devs get to work and research the problem until you find a real solution.

The test environment data should be generic so if someone were to discover the bucket they'll get some pictures of cats and a bunch of people who live at 12345 anywhere street.

[–] FauxLiving@lemmy.world 25 points 1 day ago (7 children)

This wasn't vibe coding, it's incompetant devops.

You have to go out of your way to make these buckets public like this. Several giant "Everyone will have access to this" warnings, re-authentication, a permanent warning symbol on the dashboard AND regular e-mails reminding you that you have a public bucket. I don't even think you can do this via the API, it requires a human to manually make this setting.

I'm guessing that they couldn't figure out how to configure the Access Control Lists and just made it public so that it would work. That's fine in a test environment, without any user data but it's pure incompetence to have a production system setup this way.

 

I'll just post my initial comment in the entirety since what happens is entirely predicted by my first comment.

The topic was trans athletes and, like with any hot button political issues, there are rigidly defined 'sides' that come with a list of things that you must profess.

These things are simply declared as not being open to discussion and if you challenge that declaration, ye power trippin' bastards rear their ugly head. This dogma is unhealthy in any community and the people who enforce it through social pressure, cyber bullying and mod powers are actively harmful.

As to demonstrate my point I continued with the conversation, responding in good faith to the people who attempted a conversation, right up until I was mass banned (which only took a few hours).

The first comment is here if you want to see the entire conversation or think I'm hiding some secret transphobic rants in my comment history: https://lemmy.world/comment/15496985

The Initial Comment

This is an issue that exposes some of the more dogmatic people in the movement.

It is as if there is a list of positions that you’re required to believe and if you disagree with any one of them you’re labeled a heretic (transphobic, in this case).

Sports and the fairness of competition is a complex issue even when you’re just talking about cisgender competitors:

Can a person use performance enhancing drugs to train and then get clean enough to test positive for a competition? It seems unfair, to me, for the other competitors if this is the case.

It isn’t an unfair statement to say that the physical performance of cisgender men is higher than that of cisgender women. This is why we have separate competitions for men and women.

The issue isn’t as simple as a choice between “Transgender people should be free, without question, to compete in any competition” or “Transgender people should not be allowed to compete as their gender”

Framing it in such a black and white manner is harmful behavior, no matter which position you take.

We need to understand how people’s bodies are affected and what advantages of disadvantages are obtained and then base the rule changes on objective data and not appeals to emotion or ideological bullying.

Fabricated Pretexts

The last thing I said on the topic (bold added), as there were already commenters insinuating that I'm secretly a transphobe rather than engaging in discussion, was:

Obviously the people arguing that trans people should never compete are ignorant, I’m not supporting that position. From the point of view of fairness in competition there has to be an objective answer that’s backed by objective tests.

Simply declaring that trans people are beyond reproach and that any attempts to quantify biological advantage are unfairly discriminatory and anyone asking these questions is a bigot isn’t helpful.

I include this because included in the reasons for the bans is: "Transphobia attempting to make excuses for trans exclusion from sports." This is completely misrepresenting what I said and what I believe in order to create a pretext for a ban.

And the power trippin' bastards come in with the sweeping community bans (linuxphones@lemmy.ca, really?): https://lemmy.world/modlog?page=2&actionType=ModBanFromCommunity&userId=12926811

Conclusion

This kind of thinking is harmful to any community.

Labeling disagreement as bigotry is nonsense. Refusing to engage on a topic and using filters and bans to hide from people who don't perfectly align with your ideas is not how you make allies or educate people.

The people that do this are responsible for creating the impression that your communities are hostile and made up of extremists. Attacking allies because they don't fall in line without question is a blunder.

People with moderator powers should be held to a higher standard of responsibility and fabricating reasons for bans and mislabeling people as bigots is the ultimate abdication of that responsibility. These people are not interested in helping a community thrive, they simply want to be the ones with the power to strike out at people that they want to hurt regardless of the damage that it causes.

Thanks for coming to my TED talk (except you, Linuxphones@lemmy.ca, I pray you never learn how to exit vim)

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