mozz

joined 2 years ago
[–] mozz@mbin.grits.dev 15 points 1 year ago

It’s not over until it’s over. It could still go terrifyingly wrong.

vote.org

[–] mozz@mbin.grits.dev 25 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (7 children)

Might I recommend the word "hamfistedly"? It's honestly a wonderful word to use about a lot of things that come out of the Trump operation.

[–] mozz@mbin.grits.dev 4 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

Oh, yeah, at that point it'll be a scalability clusterfuck. No idea what the solution is. Maybe something with persistent caches run by third parties or something? That actually would be fine, since all the actions are signed with the private key of the actor, I think.

ActivityPub is not to me a real great designed protocol but it's whatever. Usually the key part for social networks is the "social" part of it; the protocol or the web site can be pure shite and if people like interacting with the other people there then it's fine. But yes, you are correct that beyond a certain point of scalability there are some dragons lurking that don't have obvious weak spots.

[–] mozz@mbin.grits.dev 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

This is more what I was talking about

(You can find more like this at 538.)

I mean, I don't fully disagree with you that any number of polls like this aren't real representative of much. But, the point is that any time the voters were asked, they tended to prefer Harris as much as anyone else.

I actually fully agreed with everything you're saying until I saw how it worked out with Harris as the nominee and people's reaction to her. I'm sure the honeymoon won't last forever but it seems unlikely to me to see how that played out and then say "naw we should have done something different."

[–] mozz@mbin.grits.dev 3 points 1 year ago (3 children)

Apparently mbin does not put Like/Dislike activities in there

Yes. That's what I said. I'm actually not 100% sure about it; for all I know there's some way to get it, but AFAIK all the existing softwares don't publish votes "after the fact", only at the time to current subscribers. But then, of course, it's kind of a moot point because you can just grab it from any mbin instance's DB through the UI without needing to do anything special or any particular knowledge.

In a world where ActivityPub is only used in server-to-server, this would be fine. If we ever get to a (IMNSHO, better) scenario where we have more clients talking AP directly, then this will not work, and mbin will have to add those as well.

Not really. You can have your client talking to all the servers and grabbing votes for whatever you're subscribed to, and losing votes for anything you're not subscribed to. It works basically exactly that way for one-user instances already.

There is no sane way to square this peg into a round hole. Privacy and "Social Media" are inherently incompatible. The advice about not putting anything online that you are not willing to ever be made public is evergreen, and anyone that does not follow it will eventually have to learn it the hard way.

Tru dat. 100% agreed. It seems like there are all these people in this thread arguing that their votes need to be private. Their votes are not private, and will never be private, for as long as ActivityPub is what they're using. I can see some value, maybe, to making it slightly difficult to extract the information instead of just giving it for free to everyone, but holding onto the idea of your votes being private is a gateway to unhappiness and only unhappiness.

[–] mozz@mbin.grits.dev 0 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (21 children)

My objective standard is, what is going to help the Palestinians? And what is masquerading as that but (in large part) not going to help them but just going to risk a catastrophe for them that is continuation and widening of what's already their hell on earth?

That's not my personal feelings. I'm sure we disagree on what the outcome of different courses of action are, and that's fine, but that's why I am saying this and what my goals are in saying this. If what you're doing is the first thing then all good and I have no complaints about it.

I'm not getting into another effort posting disagreement with you.

Fair enough. You started talking to me, man. I was just talking about the convention. I'm gonna be giving criticism to people I think are making a mistake, just like you would give criticism to the Democrats or to me, if you think there's a mistake happening. All good from my side.

in support of a Gaza ceasefire

I mean, they're already "supporting" a ceasefire. They've been doing that. That's the issue, is Netanyahu is laughing their faces and telling them fuck your ceasefire, and they're not then escalating with him. But I don't think the issue blocking progress is just that they need to want a ceasefire very badly, and then that will solve the issue.

[–] mozz@mbin.grits.dev 6 points 1 year ago (5 children)

It's not quite that simple. As far as I'm aware, it's difficult to fetch from another instance "after the fact" what all the votes are for a particular user or comment; you have to be signed up to receive updates on it, and then after the fact you can go hunting around in your own instance's DB and see what all the votes were (or your UI can do it, if it's supported).

But, yes, there are instance softwares that will do it, and no one's defederating from every one of those instances (nor I think should they). Someone posted a link to an mbin instance breaking down the votes for this post. Votes are not private.

[–] mozz@mbin.grits.dev 12 points 1 year ago

You had your chance, Lady G

Do you remember what happened to Ernst Röhm?

They can see through you. You should have done a Mike Pence. They’re coming after him, too, but at least he made things right with God and fled from the temple. You, you stayed inside, and then outed yourself as a traitor. Good fuckin luck. Röhm was just minding his business; what makes you think they’ll make an exception somehow for you?

[–] mozz@mbin.grits.dev 1 points 1 year ago (2 children)

What happened to the other person?

I've noticed that this happens a lot. It's "what poll?" "this poll" and then all of a sudden some other person jumps in with a new line of questioning. Sort of a multi-person version of Never Play Defense.

The second part of the question which I sent to the other person dealt very directly with the point that you're making. There was a pretty extensive process of polling during the time when it was trying to find people to thrust into place as a substitute for Biden before he withdrew. They did a bunch of matchups of various random name-familiar Democrats.

I absolutely refuse to accept the logic that it would have been better to have a month of infighting about who the candidate should be, as opposed to unifying behind a single strong candidate who was leading in the polls. Who would you rather have had?

[–] mozz@mbin.grits.dev 29 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

You're proposing removing the bar entirely because it is not high enough.

Incorrect. I said that I see no obvious answer as to whether to remove the bar -- that's the (a) part. What I'm proposing to do is definitely to educate people about the existence of the bar and the fact that they shouldn't be voting on porn, or contentious political topics from an account with their real name, or etc etc like that.

More than 1% of the currently active Lemmy users are actively running a server (it's 1.4%, 649 active instances out of 45k MAU), so I think the number is definitely less than 99% of people who wouldn't know how to do it in the first place (or find an mbin or Friendica server or etc).

The broader point about it being fairly difficult / fairly rare to have the knowledge, I can agree with, but I wasn't saying necessarily that we should make it easier for the 98.6% of people to do; just that everyone should be aware that it's possible so they can make their voting decisions with that knowledge in mind.

[–] mozz@mbin.grits.dev 0 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (23 children)

There is no form of activism that does not harm the reputation of those who are being protested.

I would argue that a lot of the right kind of activism against the genocide in Gaza will in the long run actually help the reputation of the Democrats, because it'll involve educating the public about what is actually going on, at which point the Democrats supporting it will be unpopular, at which point they'll (hopefully 😐) stop doing it and lose this persistent stench of death about them that they currently have to a certain activist population that actually knows what's going on.

I mean I do get your point. My counter-point would be that not everything that harms the reputation of the people being protested is productive activism. It seems like you're persistently not grasping the point that I'm making here.

And since it seems we're choosing to be vague about who it is who is supposedly crossing this imaginary boundary between good and bad faith protest, I'm going to assume it's arbitrary, based on what you personally find uncomfortable.

return2ozma, Linkerbaan, and jimmydoreisalefty I think are crossing this imaginary boundary, because they're not helping the situation or trying to educate anyone about what's going on, just persistently trying to damage the reputation of the people in the best position to do something positive, using attacks both true and false. Ralph Nader and the "uncommitted" voters in Michigan are examples of people who are not crossing the boundary; they are trying to help the Palestinians by putting pressure on the Democrats in ways that are specifically goal oriented and productive. I'm not real concerned about their actions "hurting" the Democrats, or not severely enough concerned to oppose it, because as you said, protesting against someone does (I would add sometimes) harm their reputation, and them's the breaks. Does that help make it more concrete?

IDK why you're saying I'm being vague. I'm being very specific about what behavior I do and don't support. If you want me to pick out particular people or explain what of their behavior I do and don't support, if that's helpful, I'm fine doing that too.

[–] mozz@mbin.grits.dev 127 points 1 year ago (63 children)

Your votes are already public. It’s a matter of (a) do we want to make it slightly easier for the people who aren’t technically inclined to see them too (b) do we want people acting with the awareness that they’re public.

(a) doesn’t have a clear answer to me. The answer to (b), though, is clearly yes.

 

There's also an alternate script if you want to talk with a Republican senator, and you don't feel they'll be swayed by the language in the linked site.

 

There's also an alternate script if you want to talk with a Republican senator, and you don't feel they'll be swayed by the language in the linked site.

 

Via @GottaLaff@mastodon.social mostly sourced from Inner City Press. Errors or omissions / scrambling of the order or anything, are probably mine. This is not a verbatim transcript, just an initial partial summary of some of the exchanges based on press reports.

https://mastodon.social/@GottaLaff/111818115089134672


(Jury is not present at this point)

Judge Kaplan: Ms. Habba, do you have any other witnesses?

Habba: Yes. President Trump.

Judge Kaplan: I have a few things to say.

Judge Kaplan: There was a trial last year about the truth or falsity of Ms. Carroll claims. Mr. Trump was listed as a witness but did not testify. The jury found for Ms. Carroll. There are no do-overs, it's called issue preclusion or collateral estoppel.

Judge Kaplan: The jury found that Mr. Trump inserted his fingers into her vagina. And that Ms. Carroll did not make up her claim. And that Mr. Trump's June 11 and June 22 statements were defamatory. Now Mr. Trump may not make any argument against this.

Judge Kaplan: Ms. Carroll adhered to the Court's rulings. Ms. Kaplan on behalf of Ms. Carroll questioned if Mr. Trump could offer any admissible testimony. Ms. Habba, you said he could testify about the reporters' questions, and if he was acting with ill will.

Judge Kaplan: A judge must seek to exclude inadmissible evidence. Concerns exist here, as including in Ms. Kaplan's letter. I want to confirm a few things. Ms. Habba, what would he testify to?

Habba: I have only three questions for my client.

Judge Kaplan: We're going to do it my way.

Habba: He's going to stand by his deposition. That he had to respond to accusation and deny them.

Judge Kaplan: That's 100%?

Habba: I'm not testifying for my client.

(She says he'll also claim that he didn't mean to harm her, but had to respond to the claims.)

...

Judge Kaplan: Let me hear from the other side.

Roberta Kaplan: Just now, Mr. Trump said under his breath he's going to say he never did it.

Judge Kaplan: He will not testify about questions asked of him by reporters?

Habba: No. If I may your Honor--

Judge Kaplan: No.

Judge Kaplan: What are your questions?

Habba: That he stands behind his deposition. I'll ask about his state of mind, he'll say he was defending himself --

Judge Kaplan: And that's it?

Habba: Yes. And that he never intended to hurt Ms. Carroll.

...

Roberta Kaplan: He had an opportunity to participate in a trial--

Judge Kaplan: And he lost. I will so instruct the jury. More than once.

Trump: I wasn't at the trial, I never met this woman.

Judge Kaplan: Mr. Trump, keep your voice down.

...

Judge Kaplan: Will your client abide?

Habba: Absent having a glass ball--

(Trump is speaking)

Judge Kaplan: Mr. Trump, that is not allowed... I will permit him to get on the stand. You ask if he stands by it. That's it.

Habba: Only one question?

Judge Kaplan: You can ask the 2d question.

Habba: Why did you make the statements--

Judge Kaplan: No.

Habba: I have a right to ask about intent.

Judge Kaplan: I will decide what he has a right to do here. That's my job, not yours.

...

(That was before the jury came back in. Once the jury reenters:)

Judge Kaplan: I hope lunch was better than the cafeteria usually is. Ms. Habba, you may call your witness.

Habba: Defense calls President Donald Trump.

Trump: Donald John Trump.

Habba: You viewed your deposition?

Trump: I stand by it 100%, yes.

Trump: She said something I considered a false accusation--

Roberta Kaplan: Objection!

Judge Kaplan: Sustained.

Habba: I have no further questions.

Judge Kaplan: Cross examination.

Roberta Kaplan: There was a trial here, correct?

Trump: Yes.

Roberta Kaplan: Mr. Trump, is this the 1st trial between you and Ms. Carroll you've attended?

Trump: Yes.

Roberta Kaplan: No further questions.

Habba: Did you have counsel at the previous trial & follow their advice?

Trump: Yes.

Roberta Kaplan: Objection

Judge Kaplan: Sustained

Habba: No further questions.

Judge Kaplan: Jurors, you may go until tomorrow morning, closing arguments.

...

(Alternate source for part of the direct examination)

Habba: Did you deny the allegation to defend yourself?

Trump: Yes, I did. That’s exactly right. She said something i considered a false accusation...

Kaplan instructed to jury to disregard everything after "Yes, I did."

Habba: Did you instruct anyone to hurt Ms. Carroll?

Trump: No, I just wanted to defend myself, my family and frankly, the presidency...

Kaplan instructed the jury to disregard everything after "No."

 

Hello! I'm making changes to a web app that involves some aria classes, and I read the docs about how they work, but I'm not real confident in my ability to construct them into something that produces a well-usable experience for someone who's using the app. Is there a good way to get direct feedback from someone who uses a screenreader, or otherwise get some evaluation on whether what I've fumbled together is actually functioning well?

 

Hello! I'm making changes to a web app that involves some aria classes, and I read the docs about how they work, but I'm not real confident in my ability to construct them into something that produces a well-usable experience for someone who's using the app. Is there a good way to get direct feedback from someone who uses a screenreader, or otherwise get some evaluation on whether what I've fumbled together is actually functioning well?

 

Hello! I'm making changes to a web app that involves some aria classes, and I read the docs about how they work, but I'm not real confident in my ability to construct them into something that produces a well-usable experience for someone who's using the app. Is there a good way to get direct feedback from someone who uses a screenreader, or otherwise get some evaluation on whether what I've fumbled together is actually functioning well?

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