Stupid question: why is there such a drive to build critical industrial capacity close to potential warzones (to encourage peace efforts that prevent supply disruption, I guess)? e.g. Taiwan, Israel. Is there any basis for a pattern, or am I just seeing what I want to see?
Gsus4
I think it is a combination between interest rate hikes from the free money paradigm that propped up startups and the gig economy and the AI hype train driving the capture of public data (think enclosures 3.0) at the expense of strong communities. This somehow reminds me of when post-dot-com bubble companies like google had to become "profitable" so "don't be evil" went down the drain and they found ways to monetize their users' data.
isn't XMPP what you're asking for? I'm not a user, but I'm aware that these things exist, they just don't catch on because it's a nightmare to do federation and security all at once. Probably it will take some form of federated authentication ID, but then you have the problem of who manages that......
meta question from a new user still recovering from reddit-brain: why do some posts have 0 upvotes if downvoting is not allowed? Is downvoting somehow possible? If you mouseover the upvote number, it lists 0 downvotes.
But which fraction of AI-generated content is the threshold for collapse? And how is that fraction measured? How much new input is necessary to make sure the model does not overlook it?
Yea, I think a custom sort/filter option would be innovative comparing with other UX: e.g. I want all the newest posts of my subbed list with more than 3 comments and certain keywords in/out rather than just hot/new/most comments. RES partially enabled this.
I think you need to graph-traverse the "Instances" link at the bottom of the page for all communities to map it all. I'm actually working on this as we speak.