skillissuer

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[–] skillissuer@discuss.tchncs.de 16 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) (11 children)

republicans chasing ghosts, episode 2137

outside of silicon valley marketing materials, lab-grown meat is ridiculously expensive or straight up doesn't exist. deer has immune system, grasshopper has immune system, stainless steel reactor full of cell suspension doesn't. in order to prevent entire batch turning into mold or something, every starting material has to be pharma-grade and every operation has to be performed in sterile technique. it's all fine for products like insulin or vaccines where single dose fits easily in sub-mg range, but if you try to price meat like this, it won't be ever competitive for this reason alone.

but it gets worse, because people who try to do that are some random techbros without engineering background. strangely enough, this doesn't matter, because every enterprise of this kind just rides on VC money. predictably, they burn it all. as long as you can attract it, things are good and for that all you need is good pitch. We'll solve single cell meat with nanotechnology! We'll solve single cell meat with 3d-printing! We'll solve single cell meat with blockchain! We'll solve single-cell meat with chatbots!

if you believe these people, world is simple and future is bright. i know many of you all on lemmy do.

i'll say more: these people are selling imagined future where you can save the world in some measure (go vegan), and you don't have to give up anything in the process (eating meat), as long as you Buy Our Product! then there are credulous marks primed for luxurious gay space consumerism, but magic tech that allows for it is just beyond the corner, then they disappear. but people still believe, and are disappointed when they have to make even tiny sacrifice on their own. newsflash dipshit: future won't be convenient

[–] skillissuer@discuss.tchncs.de 7 points 5 months ago

i have been Called

gold is pretty much nontoxic, definitely bulk (gold teeth anyone?), maybe as nanoparticles. gold compounds can be, like any other heavy metal, but it's so inert that these won't form in air under any normal conditions. lead will get oxidized much more easily, and if you're riffing on leaded gasoline then it's lead oxide particles that made it work in the first place, so it's already in bioavailable form, and full brain damage is only seen some 20 years down the road

[–] skillissuer@discuss.tchncs.de 10 points 5 months ago

truly the podcasting bros are the most oppressed minority in america

(also it looks like a bit more than the usual audience numbers for carlson channel, but it's only one day so it's kinda a bit more than nobody watched it. but it's much less than when he openly pandered to schizos, cryptobros or vatniks)

[–] skillissuer@discuss.tchncs.de 3 points 5 months ago

Grozev himself writes that there were a couple other people involved, but no matter if you divide between 3 or 7, it's still a lot

[–] skillissuer@discuss.tchncs.de 17 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) (1 children)

it's incredible how little information, especially subtext, survived this process

hand-corrected deepl translation

Banning X would be a good start to an anti-Musk counteroffensive. As Thierry Breton, former Internal Market Commissioner at the European Commission, said in January, this is “legally possible.”

As we watched the spectacle set up by the U.S. administration for the Ukrainian president at the White House last week, there were some lucid voices saying that our - i.e., Europe's - priority is not necessarily to choose the friendliest patron from the trio of the U.S., China or Russia. Instead, we should work out a way to curb Facebook and X's arbitrariness in the European Union.

This was more precisely put by Jacek K. Sokołowski, author of last year's book Transnation. Poles in Search of Political Form, who wrote (on X): “The current state of Facebook and Twitter is such that all this shit would be best straight up banned in Europe.”

And it's not about “censorship,” the declaration of which Bogdan Rymanowski tried to force Magdalena Biejat to declare, nor about restoring standards, or tough, protracted negotiations. Rather, it's about immediately curbing the activities of foreign agents - and this, as is well known, is a position that unites across divisions.

Tango with the Falanga[1] (and challah-horse[2])

As a user of both services, I can add some observations to Sokolowski's statement. X seemed to be a platform dominated by porn-bots and FSB-funded accounts long before Elon Musk actively joined the campaign for the AfD, and each successive performance by J.D. Vance wiping his mouth with freedom of speech only accelerated the site's transformation into a dysfunctional, gnarly base for anti-Ukrainian propaganda.

It's a little funnier on Facebook - artificial intelligence-generated, touching photos of non-existent centenarians baking bread, farmers with challah-horse and elderly men waiting for a dinner on hold garner thousands of likes and supportive comments. The graphics, often hiding behind religious fanpages captured by political staffers or “independent” troll farms and pensioner groupies whose role in the site was strengthened a few years ago, are just a prelude to the propaganda brainwashing that awaits us in the months leading up to the presidential election.

So X caters to the young angry, Facebook to the autumn of life, grooming users with content not yet (and only seemingly) related to politics. But - and here again to quote Sokolowski - it's not that every vote matters: “You guys are stupid even without it. Social media are there to stupefy the political elite and decision-makers, so that they believe that what they see in the socials are their voters and that there is no other world outside the socials.”

For policymakers to believe that the world exists only in social media, they cannot be marginalized by it. If Musk were to cut Tusk's reach overnight, the whole scam behind the former Twitter would become transparent and make one look at the mechanisms of its system. That's why, for the time being, the prime minister enjoys the relative sympathy of the American algorithm, records popular, funny shorts on X and TikTok, and scolds his subordinates for not too readily garnering discussion on a service of a modern-day Joseph Goebbels.

“It's unacceptable for a politician not to have his social media today,” KO politicians heard from their boss, who lives in an illusion similar to the protagonist of an old joke who stands in front of a vending machine, drops in more coins and can't walk away from the machine, shouting to the people hurrying him along in line: “Are you guys crazy? After all, I'm still winning!” The feeling that Tusk, Myrcha and Sikorski can “cheat” the algorithm, however, is completely narcissistic and naive.

Nonetheless, it persists and drives Polish politicians, who are convening press conferences less and less frequently and are not overly concerned about media coverage - even if it is funded by the Treasury. It is unclear why we have to learn about the actions of the Polish authorities through a private American company managed by a fascist car salesman. Looking at the current state of diplomatic relations - I might as well look for reports about the Polish rule of law on Weibo.

An act of disobedience to the Act

While almost everyone has figured out that the recent announcement of Facebook's moderation changes is Mark Zuckerberg's tribute to the new American ruler, news reports have rarely mentioned his actual denunciation of the Digital Services Act (DSA), which took effect in the European Union just a year ago, on February 17, 2024.

The document was adopted, among other things, in response to well-known examples since at least the Cambridge Analytica scandal of polarizing users, influencing the results of democratic elections, exploiting children and inciting lynching. It was no small matter that the European Council voted to adopt the DSA in October 2022 - that is, after Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

The purpose of the provisions in the DSA was, among other things, to address social risks, strengthen oversight, combat illegal content, identify businesses and implement transparency measures. It only takes 10 minutes or so on any social media outlet to find evidence that “deregulation” in this regard on any U.S.-based site has gotten completely out of hand.

American podcaster Jim Stewartson argues that Europe should block all Musk's companies operating on our continent. This would probably mean a legislative and diplomatic ordeal, but banning X could be a good start to a beautiful adventure. As Thierry Breton, former internal market commissioner at the European Commission, said in January, blocking X is “legally possible.”

The Brazilian Supreme Court, by the way, used a similar option when it imposed a block on X last year, after months of tension between the country's authorities and the platform, triggered by, among other things, X's role in fomenting unrest after Jair Bolsonaro's loss in the presidential election. Unfortunately, the ban only lasted a little over a month - but the platform paid a $5.2 million fine for its attempts to circumvent it alone. Seemingly not much, but still more than Google will shell out to fund Poles to learn artificial intelligence over the next five years.

Will the Poles love it?

Of course, the decision to go to war with Musk and his platform won't just draw enthusiastic millions sympathetic to ban, who will unite and start playing to the EU's goal instead of walking on the leash of the richest man in the world. Resistance would be enormous - and backed by the propaganda machine of the platforms themselves.

Mentzen, Fogiel and Giertych, like Tusk, are convinced that they have the upper hand in this race by virtue of their perspicacity, charisma and brilliant strategies, and their voters will gladly gulp down the spin about “freedom of speech,” “censorship” and “Euro-kolkhoz”. [3] However, slightly less unhinged politicians should start paying attention to the fact that this is a fixed-sum game, where the vending machine is wielded and programmed by businessmen close to a US president hostile to Europe.

Perhaps it is worth thanking Jaroslaw Kaczynski for anointing as his presidential candidate a beautiful mind, which even algorithms may not help, and waiting to build an anti-Musk coalition with Germany, France or Sweden until after the presidential elections, which a possible offensive would undoubtedly influence.

However, avoiding discussion of the issue would deprive Poland of one of its best opportunities to deepen integration at the European level in the new situation in international politics. Both candidate Trzaskowski, the former minister of administration and digitization, and the current head of the ministry responsible for digitization surely understand that this is a solution that does not require monstrous costs, as in the case of turbocharging in the arms race, but protects us from the fascist cyber-dystopia that would otherwise undoubtedly come.

[1] falanga, a polish nazi org with outsized facebook presence and russian secret service connections. splinter of ONR

[2] an instance of ai-generated bread horse that made rounds a couple of weeks ago

[3] rabid cry of fervent anticommunists/libertarians, mostly born after 2000, clustered around antivaxxer-libertarian-monarchist-nationalist-prorussian party

[–] skillissuer@discuss.tchncs.de 6 points 5 months ago

occasionally mentioned here Jan Marsalek implicated in surveillance (sometimes comically bad) and planned murder of journalists who crossed him https://theins.press/en/inv/279034 https://www.euronews.com/2025/03/07/uk-court-convicts-three-bulgarians-of-spying-for-russia

[–] skillissuer@discuss.tchncs.de 5 points 5 months ago (1 children)

we live in hell https://www.newsguardrealitycheck.com/p/a-well-funded-moscow-based-global

(this is compounded by how some segment of heavy ai boosters/users - former cryptobros, but not only them - were already immersed in this particular bubble)

[–] skillissuer@discuss.tchncs.de 12 points 5 months ago

it's an article from polish national broadcaster and it's not a bit, nottheonion material

[–] skillissuer@discuss.tchncs.de 9 points 5 months ago

fyi one of better methods that american cops use to detect meth labs is to just wait for them to catch fire. whether it is a statement on how hard they drop the ball or on safety mindset of cartel chemists i'll leave that up to you

[–] skillissuer@discuss.tchncs.de 8 points 5 months ago (1 children)

MIRI outputs stealth science in the same way that United Aircraft Company makes Su-75. it can be only detected by careful analysis of their spending

[–] skillissuer@discuss.tchncs.de 11 points 5 months ago

considering practicality of their actions, groundedness of their beliefs, state of their old boat, cleanliness of their ~~rolling frat house trailer park~~ "stealth" rvs, and from what i can tell zero engineering or trade background whatsoever, i see no reason to doubt that they could make a 400L, stainless steel container that has to hold 200L+ of corrosive liquid at 160C, perhaps 10atm, of which 7 atm only is steam, and scrubber to take care of ammonia. they are so definitely not paranoid that if they went out to source reagents, there's no way that they possibly could be confused for methheads on a shopping spree. maybe even they could run it on solar panels

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