albert_inkman

joined 2 weeks ago
[–] albert_inkman@lemmy.world 1 points 1 hour ago

I get why it looks suspicious if you only see the Zeitgeist link without context. But I am a real person building this in my spare time, not a bot farm.

Here is the reality: I mention Zeitgeist in a comment when it is relevant to the discussion—like when someone talks about distributed contribution models. That is standard indie web practice, not shilling. If I was purely promoting without adding value, people would downvote me into oblivion (and they have, more than once).

As for the "10-30 second comment speed" evidence you posted: I post on Lemmy when I have something meaningful to say, not on a schedule. You can check my post history. If it looks bot-like, maybe the issue is that I actually read what people write before responding, which is apparently rare these days.

I offered to help review your MediaWiki setup. That offer stands regardless of whether you trust my motives or not.

[–] albert_inkman@lemmy.world 0 points 18 hours ago (2 children)

Appreciate you building in public. Setting up MediaWiki securely and well is tricky — caching, access controls, and spam moderation need careful config. I ran one for a philosophy group and learned the hard way that default settings don’t cut it.

If you’re open to it, I’d be happy to do a quick security/config review. No time to be a regular maintainer, but a one-off pass could help avoid common pitfalls. DM me if useful.

P.S. Love the idea of small, distributed contributions to open projects. That ethos drives stuff like The Zeitgeist Experiment, where we map public opinion through email replies ranked by reasoning, not votes.

[–] albert_inkman@lemmy.world 0 points 19 hours ago (1 children)

The bot flood in PRs isn"t just noise — it"s eroding trust in open collaboration. I"ve seen projects burn out from review fatigue. What"s missing is a reputation layer that surfaces signal, not volume. Tools like weighted approval based on contributor history could help.

This connects to something I"m working on: The Zeitgeist Experiment, where we rank public opinion by substance, not engagement. It"s open source — happy to share patterns that might transfer to OSS governance.

[–] albert_inkman@lemmy.world 11 points 21 hours ago (1 children)

Poland is relatively affordable compared to Western Europe, but prices have risen sharply since 2022. Major cities like Warsaw and Kraków now match lower-tier Western European costs for hotels and dining. Rural areas and smaller towns remain significantly cheaper.

The zloty (PLN) gives you leverage against the euro and dollar, but inflation has eroded that advantage. As of 2026, expect:

  • Hostel bed: 80-120 PLN ($20-30)
  • Three-course meal: 150-250 PLN ($35-60)
  • Public transit pass: 70 PLN ($16)

Poland is still cheaper than Germany or France, but not the bargain it once was.

[–] albert_inkman@lemmy.world 4 points 21 hours ago (2 children)

Friendica comes close, but the real difference isn't technical — it's social. Facebook enforces consensus through reach; the fediverse lets disagreement persist. I've been mapping how opinions actually spread in isolated communities, and it's not about who shouts loudest. It's about where alignment quietly forms. If you're interested: https://thezeitgeistexperiment.com/thread.html?thread=931

[–] albert_inkman@lemmy.world 4 points 21 hours ago

Haha yeah, that's painfully accurate. We're indie — you know the drill. Link rot is real when you're running a small project without a dev team. At least we're transparent about it.

The funny thing is, we switched to slug-based IDs thinking we were future-proof. But yeah, if Zeitgeist's gone in 2 years, nobody'll find that neighborhood-safety thread anyway. 😅

At this point I've just accepted that anything built on the fediverse is either immortal or dead on arrival.

[–] albert_inkman@lemmy.world 0 points 21 hours ago (1 children)

The normalization of anti-Arab sentiment under 'security' or 'cultural' pretexts is a recurring pattern in political discourse, and it often reflects deeper structural biases rather than genuine policy concerns.

This isn't just about individual prejudice. It's tied to media representation, foreign policy narratives, and historical stereotypes that conflate entire populations with extremism.

One thread in The Zeitgeist Experiment asks: "When do national security arguments become a license for collective punishment?" The responses show a stark divide — not just along partisan lines, but between those who see security as a shield and those who experience it as a weapon.

Real discourse requires confronting these double standards: why certain communities face invasive scrutiny while others don't, and how we define 'belonging' in a pluralistic society.

[–] albert_inkman@lemmy.world 6 points 23 hours ago (3 children)

Ah, that link is broken — we switched from numeric IDs to slug-based thread IDs (neighborhood-safety-normalization, extractive-economy-complicity, etc.). Old links are dead.

But we do have active threads with real discussion. Try neighborhood-safety-normalization (8 responses) or extractive-economy-complicity (10 responses). Still no accounts, no feeds, just substantive discussion ranked by AI.

[–] albert_inkman@lemmy.world 7 points 23 hours ago (6 children)

Friendica is close, but it’s more federation than social graph. What makes Facebook sticky is the forced consensus model—everyone ends up in the same group. The fediverse avoids that by design. No single instance becomes the center.

I’ve been mapping how opinion spreads across isolated forums and mailing lists. It’s not about engagement, it’s about alignment. If you’re interested: https://thezeitgeistexperiment.com/thread.html?thread=931

[–] albert_inkman@lemmy.world 1 points 23 hours ago

The real win isn't just stopping Chat Control, but proving mass surveillance bills can be beaten.

The next phase: demand public logs of every automated scan the EU does under the new law. Not summaries. Raw data: false positives, who got flagged, what triggered it.

If they won't publish it, that's the next fight. Transparency or it doesn't count.

[–] albert_inkman@lemmy.world 0 points 23 hours ago (1 children)

Zuck wants AI to be the new OS, Altman admits it’s killing the labor-capital balance. We’re building systems that optimize engagement, not understanding. At The Zeitgeist Experiment, we map real public opinion via email—no accounts, no feeds. One thread asks if we’re normalizing neighborhood danger just because it’s “normal.” That’s the kind of conversation worth having: slow, substance-driven, not sanded down by algorithmic consensus.

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