I Work For an Evil [Tech] Company, but Outside Work, I’m Actually a Really Good Person
I Work For an Evil Company, but Outside Work, I’m Actually a Really Good Person
I love my job. I make a great salary, there’s a clear path to promotion, and a never-ending supply of cold brew in the office. And even though my j...McSweeney's Internet Tendency
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RRF Caserta. Music. In morte di Jimmy Cliff
Surfer Blood - 1000 Palms (2015)
Molto probabilmente, se fossi nato in Florida, in particolare a Palm Beach, in questo momento non sarei qui a scrivere né tantomeno passerei il mio tempo a recensire album o a fare musica. Rifacendomi a quell’immaginario collettivo che avvolge quasi tutti noi quando pensiamo alla Florida, a quest’ora sarei uno di quegli studenti dei college americani che... Leggi e ascolta...
Dangerous Firefox WebAssembly bug went undetected for 6 months
Dangerous Firefox WebAssembly bug went undetected for 6 months
A memory corruption flaw in Firefox's WebAssembly engine went undetected for half a year, enabling potential arbitrary code execution.Bill Mann (CyberInsider)
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Ciclabile di Corso Buenos Aires a Milano: più di 100.000 passaggi al mese, con punte di 400-500 bici l’ora
Ciclabile di Corso Buenos Aires a Milano: più di 100.000 passaggi al mese, con punte di 400-500 bici l’ora
Immagine da un post su Facebook di Marco Granelli, assessore del Comune di Milano ‘La ciclabile di corso Buenos Aires sempre più utilizzata. Nel 2024 nei mesi estivi 141.000 passaggi a giugno…Benzina Zero
Self hosted Onedrive alternative
I'm looking to finally ditch Onedrive with a self hosted alternative, but I'm not sure what to go with. I want something with all of the files on a central server, with an Android client with the option to sync individual files for offline access as needed. Preferably the files should also be stored in plain format on the server to make backups easier and as a fallback if the service completely fails and I don't have time to fix it. Linux and Windows clients are a bonus but I'm happy just using a web gui if that's all that's available. These are the options I've considered so far:
Seafile - This was the one that I thought fit my needs the best until earlier but apparently it has a weird disk layout which means the files are basically inaccessible by anything else?
Nextcloud - I had originally ruled this out because I don't care about any of the additional features which people claim also slow it down and make it a bit of a resource hog, and I also don't want to deal with forced https. However I think the community image may actually be what I want as it seems to be just the file server and works with just http? I am a bit confused about the different options for the database though. hub.docker.com/_/nextcloud/
Syncthing - Not quite what I'm looking for as you need to sync the entire thing, and I don't like whatever weirdness is going on with the Android app at the moment
SAMBA share - Also not really what I'm looking for as there's no offline syncing, but very easy to set up and basically nothing to go wrong
Are there any other options I should be looking into?
Bad experience on selfhosting nextcloud
Am I the only one here that got really bad experience with nextcloud and didn't figured how to make it work correctly?
I'm talking about painfully slow login pages, ages to show files, even upgraded hardware with disk entirely capable of saturing full gig network connection and still...
Getting only about ~30ish MB/s when downloading from nextcloud.
Incredly slow document loading with collabora..
Even if my hardware is not new-gen, a app like immich works flawlessly and loads everything instantly.
Is it the fault of next cloud or am I doing something wrong?
Are alternatives like seafile or openCloud better?
Willing your help fellow selfhosters
I ran nextcloud for years on good hardware and its always been the weakest self hosted app I have. I moved to seafile for a bit and then ultimately owncloud OCIS.
OCIS is a modern app that is massively better since its written with modern languages / frameworks
I'm one of the people who is happy with my Nextcloud setup (outside of never quite getting only office to work in browser after I hooked it all up to a reverse proxy behind HTTPS), but I always try to keep my eye on developments in the space for a potential better solution. I looked at OCIS a while back, but it didn't have the quality of life features that I enjoy to make it worth me switching from a working Nextcloud deployment.
Does OCIS have a desktop client that supports on-demand file synchronization (a la OneDrive) rather than just selective folder sync? Does it support storing files as is in a natural directory structure or is everything stored as a flat file blob? Is it able to handle external storage even if that external storage is physical storage on a container mount point?
I run Nextcloud of an NAS appstore. NAS is Asustor Drivestor 4 gen2 - Realtek RTD1619B CPU with 2GB non-expandable DDR4 ram. NAS runs couple of other services like Vaultwarden, Radarr, Sonarr, Uptime Kuma and maybe something else, I dont remember. NAS runs at around 10% CPU and 50% RAM at all times.
Nextcloud isntance is AIO and I have no choice in what type it is. There also are no other good file hosting services but Nextcloud on the app store.
Now the experience: It is slow. Slower than say Google Drive. Login page loads slow but not too slow. I would describe it as sluggish. Like if you run windows 98 file manager on a 5400rpm old drive and you just want to copy couple of files. I went to admin panel and disabled all junk that I will definitely wont run in future. That made it bit faster than before. It works but could be much snappier. Maybe in near future I will move to Opencloud or Owncloud or whatever other services that are similar experience to Nextcloud are.
In my defense, I barely use Nextcloud. It is a nice-to-have option to upload any files that I may find useful to save or/and access later. Therefore, I want to note that sluggishness of Nextcloud doesn't bother me. But I wish it would be as snappy as Immich is.
Making setups resilient to outages
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Maybe you could describe what you mean by self-hosted and resilient. If you mean stuff running on a box in your house connected through a home ISP, then the home internet connection is an obvious point of failure that makes your box's internet connection way less reliable than AWS despite the occasional AWS problems. On the other hand, if you are only trying to use the box from inside your house over a LAN, then it's ok if the internet goes out.
You do need backup power. You can possibly have backup internet through a mobile phone or the like.
Next thing after that is redundant servers with failover and all that. I think once you're there and not doing an academic-style exercise, you want to host your stuff in actual data centers, preferably geo separated ones with anycast. And for that you start needing enough infrastructure like routeable IP blocks that you're not really self hosting any more.
A less hardcore approach would be use something like haproxy, maybe multiple of them on round robin DNS, to shuffle traffic between servers in case of outages of individual ones. This again gets out of self hosting territory though, I would say.
Finally, at the end of the day, you need humans (that probably means yourself) available 24/7 to handle when something inevitably breaks. There have been various products like Heroku that try to encapsulate service applications so they can reliably restart automatically, but stuff still goes wrong.
Every small but growing web site has to face these issues and it's not that easy for one person. I think the type of people who consider running self-hosted services that way, has already done it at work and gotten woken up by PagerDuty in the middle of the night so they know what it's about, and are gluttons for punishment.
I don't attempt anything like this with my own stuff. If it goes down, I sometimes get around to fixing it whenever, but not always. I do try to keep the software stable though. Avoid the latest shiny.
Next thing after that is redundant servers with failover and all that
I've been thinking about this one. I have everything on one Proxmox machine, and I could potentially have a second machine offsite for backups. If I did that I could go whole hog and just mirror my whole machine offsite for failover. Some kind of Proxmox cluster but with geographic separation.
Getting the versions of running services for Argus
Hi all, I've been looking for a solution for keeping track of the versions of my docker containers and when they might need updates. I tried cup and cupdate but I didn't feel like I had enough granular control of which docker images were showing up and it was tricky to find github release notes for each release.
I found argus which allows more control (indeed, you have to manually configure each service you add) and you essentially scrape github for version numbers and then either scrape your service webpage for a version number or use a service's api for version.
This works for a lot of services, and I really like it so far. However, I have no idea how to get version numbers for some services like karakeep or actual. My question is: are there hacky ways that I can expose version numbers from my services, or am I shit out of luck if it's not on the login page or exposed by an API?
Thanks!
Or maybe if you use docker compose, the app could get the tag from the compose file, and even check for new tagged versions based on a specific pattern.
Recommendations for an all-SSD home server?
No budget for now, and I own the SSDs already I just want to know what's out there and what other people like.
My current setup is cobbled together from random parts and the HDDs are loud in my bedroom. I want all SSD storage (at least 4x) but with enough CPU/Ram to handle a lot of apps/VMs and some above-average demanding tasks (jellyfin, syncthing) than just being a NAS.
The only other criteria is that I would prefer it to be as small as possible (not rack mount).
I have an ancient Drobo.
Believe it or not, it's only sound is the fan, which I can't hear even when it's on.
SSD will still generate heat, so will need a fan.
People using Cloudflare, are you still happy with it? Would you consider any self-hosted alternative?
cross-posted from: discuss.online/post/30840627
Genuine question, so please don't be mean to whoever responds. Better to learn than to judge.Curious if people who are on Cloudflare are considering any selfhosted alternatives? If not, interested to hear what is a deal breaker in regards to using a service besides Cloudflare. I do hear a lot of praise for Cloudflare when facing DDOS, and always happy to learn more!
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I want an internet more like it was before I was born
I'm 71, so I was virtually there when they flipped the switch, and I was, to say the least, addicted. I've had a lifelong romance with technology. Yes, it was much simpler then, not a whole lot going on really. A few BBS, ASCII porn, then Geocities...lol what was that? However, I look at what we have now, and what we had then, and personally think the things I liked about the olden days are far outweighed by what we have in 2025.
The reason I asked is because it just seemed like such an absolutist thing to say. I've rarely found life to be that absolute. Life is a series of concessions and amalgamations of compromise. Unless you're willing to go live in an isolated cabin in the woods, devoid of any technology, I don't see how you can avoid those concessions and compromises. One has their core values and beliefs yes, yet one must be flexible lest life snaps you off at the knees.
Congratulations of the local ISP collaboration. I've read some on the topic and that is way more capital than I have, and far too many aggravations than I would want to take on. Wish you the best with your endeavors.
You might be misunderstanding the value-add of a CDN to self-hosting, so here's my attempt at explaining:
I've been self-hosting things for a very long time. In the old days, we would wrangle our routers to expose port 80 for HTTP (and later, port 443 for HTTPS) and forward those connections to the self-host server and then add the appropriate DNS records to point our website domain to our home IP address (which was its own fun challenge when ISPs refused to give static IP addresses for home plans). Relatively simple.
However, in recent years (especially after the pandemic) the internet has become a much more hostile place. People find vulnerabilities in your nginx/caddy/apache or whatever reverse proxy you use (or router, or any one of the many other parts of your network/software stack) gain access to your local network and your personal data. And then there are bad actors doing DDoS attacks or AI crawlers generating DDoS levels of incoming requests to overload your hardware.
All that combined means it's very dangerous to have your home IP exposed to the internet (allowing any sort of inbound requests) at all.
So, how do we access our self-hosted stuff while we're outside of home? The safest approach is to use a VPN. Tailscale is the most popular one that I've come across. Only client devices that are connected to the VPN have access to your stuff. Random bad actors can't poke your self-hosted stack for vulnerabilities.
Okay, what if you want to share something with people publicly? I for one, use Immich for my photo libraries and it's very easy to be able to share a link to an album for friends and extended family to access without having to install and configure a VPN on their phones.
That is where cloudflare comes in. We can run cloudflared on our machine, which makes an outbound request to cloudflare and creates a tunnel to route all the incoming requests from their servers to your reverse proxy. Your network is still not exposed to the internet, and the edge nodes (the machines that actually front the incoming traffic from the clients) are not owned by you.
Now, I guess it's feasible to rent a VPS on DigitalOcean/OVH/Azure/AWS and run a Tailscale exit node there to achieve a similar result. I haven't looked too deeply into Pangolin but it looks kind of similar. Now you're adding extra work to keep those configured correctly (and up-to-date), is less secure because you're not doing that full time (unlike the engineers at cloudflare) and you're still dependent on that VPS provider to not go down, so the disaster recovery profile hasn't changed all that much.
That's why there's no self-hosted alternatives to a CDN. I guess you can go with their competitors like Fastly/Akamai/etc, but all of them are considerably more expensive. And even the ones that do have free tiers have data limits or bill per gigabyte. That's an extra headache to worry about for that one month your mother decides to take 1000 videos of your son during the family vacation and her phone automatically backed up all of them at full-quality.
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ngrok isn’t just for development.
That's news to me lol. I've personally only used them for development so I can't tell you how good they are for running production services.
I just looked at their pricing page and it looks like the Free and Hobbyist only include 1GB and 5GB of data, respectively. I've never actually measured my data usage because Cloudflare gives unlimited data, but I suspect that's nowhere near enough for a photo sharing app like Immich.
Cloudflare gives unlimited data
True. I've never measured the bandwidth, but staring at ntopng flows for a few minutes and you can kind of get the enormity of ingress/egress, which is sometimes mind blowing to me especially for a little homelab outfit like mine. I was just curious if you had a handle on other venues besides the big guys, for the 'at least it's not Cloudflare brethren in the group. I mean, I know how I am about Google in that I absolutely deny any access. They aren't on my 'I HATE' list or 'I wish they'd go tits up' list, I just don't use them for anything. Now I'm sure that periodically, during my internet travels, I inadvertently use one of their services. With a vast catalog of services that Google possesses, they've got their fingers in everybody's pie. So I can kind of understand the Anti-Cloudflare coalition.
I did it more for the security aspect, but as @MinFapper@startrek.website points out, there are many advantages. The AI crawlers, the bad actors, et al make even the free tier worth considering. Don't go in blindly tho. Do some searching and reading and make up your own mind.
US joins Saudi Arabia, Iran, and Russia in the group of countries doing the least to combat climate change
US joins Saudi Arabia, Iran, and Russia in the group of countries doing the least to combat climate change
A report ranking the international response to global warming warns of a ‘large-scale rollback of climate policies’ under TrumpManuel Planelles (Ediciones EL PAÍS S.L.)
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'I will sign anti-gay bill when Parliament passes it' — Mahama reiterates
The bill, initially approved by Parliament in February 2024 with bipartisan backing, proposed a three-year jail term for persons who identify as gay and five to 10 years for those who promote or advocate
LGBTO+ activities.
https://www.modernghana.com/news/1449550/i-will-sign-anti-gay-bill-when-parliament-passes.html
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Yet it's very much a weekly topic of conversion. The religious leaders are the ones pushing it.
The last president said the same exact "I'll sign it when it passes" thing. Parliament knows the EU ~~and the US~~ will drop funding if they pass the same draconian shit that Uganda passed.
'HANG THEM' -- Trump reacts to Democratic lawmakers' video appeal to military
'HANG THEM': Trump reacts to Democratic lawmakers' video appeal to military
President Donald Trump on Thursday called for the arrests of certain Democratic lawmakers and even expressed support for a call to hang them.WSYX
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C.D.C. Changes Website to Reflect Kennedy’s Vaccine Skepticism | A Previous version denied a link between vaccines and autism. It now echoes the doubts about that conclusion voiced by Health Secretary
"Vaccines do not cause autism" is not an evidence-based claim. Scientific studies have not ruled out the possibility that infant vaccines contribute to the development of autism.
General Relativity is not an evidence based claim. Scientific studies have not ruled out the possibility that General Relativity does not contribute to the Big Bang
When it comes to nukes and AI, people are worried about the wrong thing | It’s more subtle than Skynet.
When it comes to nukes and AI, people are worried about the wrong thing
It’s more subtle than Skynet.Joshua Keating (Vox)
Shadow navy: How China's civilian fleet could be a potent weapon in a Taiwan invasion
China is mobilizing an armada of civilian ships that could help in an invasion of Taiwan – a mission that could surpass the Second World War’s Normandy landings. Reuters used ship tracking data and satellite images to monitor the role civilian vessels played in Chinese maritime exercises this summer. The drills revealed that China is devising concrete invasion plans, naval warfare experts say, and rehearsing new techniques aimed at speeding up beach landings of troops and equipment in a bid to overwhelm Taiwan’s defenders.
Note: scroll down to see next page & image
Shadow navy: How China's civilian fleet could be a potent weapon in a Taiwan invasion
A Reuters visual investigation of China's annual naval exercises off the Chinese coast opposite Taiwan shows how Beijing's "shadow navy" of civilian ships is training to help in a mass landing of troops and materiel on the island.Allison Martell (Reuters)
Ex-Philippine mayor Alice Guo sentenced to life for human trafficking
Former Philippine mayor Alice Guo sentenced to life for human trafficking
Former Philippine mayor Alice Guo and seven others received life sentences for human trafficking in an online gambling scam. Read more at straitstimes.com.ST
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Wait did they find her?? I cannot find information on it precisely. As far as I’m concerned she managed to get away from the Philippines during her « hearings » and then managed to flee the country. This was a real embarrassment for the Philippines since, imo, the hearings in the senate were like a public display of shame where the verdict was already known but because the politicians wanted to virtue signal so bad it gave her time to escape. Anyway good on the Philippines for catching her and not wasting any moment this time around.
Edit: I forgot she was caught by Indonesian police in September 2024 so transferred soon after
I don't think I can understate just how ridiculously expensive it is to start up your own jet fighting industry from basically scratch.
In the entire world, there are only 5 countries that produce fighter jets. USA, Sweden, France, China, Russia.
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Sweden has nearly a century constant fighter aircraft making experience but by the time of the gripen it all became so costly that it's heavily made of tech from like the UK and other European countries. Engines from the US. A big problem with trying to develop a modern engine without having all the research and industrial experience transferred from another country, it would take tens of billions of USD of research to accomplish even with good industrial espionage
Like the big hiccups for Russian 5th gen fighters are the engines. 30+ years of development and it's just barely looking like it's coming to readiness and that's with decades prior of other engines developed. For today's modern engines that became competitive at the high end competition, for China, research really started in the 70s. India had been trying since the 90s. It's an insanely expensive research project. Canada would likely have a worse time funding it than India.
South Korea and Turkey are likely a good aspiration for Canada while a Sweden a model they can better emulate. Canada would be far behind those SK/T in terms of domestic technology they can draw from though. Canada has Bombadier at least
I don't think 20 years is enough especially for countries without the experience to fall back on. Not counting licensed builds. Engines and materials science. Also all the software. Digital and analog instruments. Modern fighters operate in connection with ground data links, satellite data links, other partner aircraft data links. All incredibly expensive and time consuming to develop
Countries with experience in Europe are all trying to partner up because of the financial costs and different part specialities for a 6th gen fighter and mockups make them look more like they'd be a gen 5.5 and they're pretty much all targeting ~2035 operationally when serious planning started between 2015-2020. I would not bet on any of the european gen 5+ being operationally ready for serial production by 2035.
Drone-Killer on tracks: Germany sends first Skyranger 35 to Ukraine, supply is funded by an unnamed EU country using windfall profits from frozen Russian assets
cross-posted from: mander.xyz/post/42162913
The first Skyranger 35 self-propelled air defense system mounted on a Leopard 1 tank chassis is set to arrive in Ukraine next week, Rheinmetall CEO Armin Papperger announced during the Rheinmetall CMD 2025 event, according to monitoring project German Aid to Ukraine on November 18.The system is being manufactured and integrated by Rheinmetall Italia SpA in Italy.
...
Back in September, Rheinmetall confirmed it would supply Ukraine with Skyranger systems under a contract worth several hundred million euros. The deal is funded by an unnamed European Union country using windfall profits from frozen Russian assets.
The exact number and variant of Skyranger systems destined for Ukraine have not been publicly disclosed.
Each Skyranger 35 system can secure a 4-by-4-kilometer area, creating what the manufacturer describes as a fully “drone-free” zone.
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Drone-Killer on Tracks: Germany Sends First Skyranger 35 to Ukraine
Rheinmetall will deliver the Skyranger 35 air defense system to Ukraine next week, enhancing its capabilities against aerial threats.Vlad Litnarovych (UNITED24 Media)
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I think it's Belgium. They are holding 160bln frozen assets are are scared of Russian repercussions if they were to use those. And Russia has been threatening with drones over Belgium many times now. So I'm guessing they want to be anonimous, although they aren't doing a great job.They have been discussing lending the money to Ukraine, but were not all happy to do so due to the Russian threats.
Also, Hungary is very pro Russia, anti EU and anti Ukraine
German Chancellor Merz Says Long-Range Missiles for Ukraine Coming Soon—But Keeps Details Secret as a "Degree of Ambiguity is Necessary for the Russian side"
cross-posted from: mander.xyz/post/42162217
Germany is moving toward providing Ukraine with new long-range strike capabilities, with Chancellor Friedrich Merz confirming that technical consultations with Kyiv have been underway for months and are now approaching completion....
Speaking at a press conference in Berlin, Merz said the government has agreed in principle to supply long-range missile systems to bolster Ukraine’s ability to hit Russian forces far behind the front line. He declined to reveal how many systems are being prepared or when they will arrive, framing the secrecy as a deliberate strategy.
“The Ukrainian army will be equipped with these weapons systems,” Merz said. But he added that Germany will not publicly outline timelines or quantities, arguing that “a degree of ambiguity is necessary, especially for the Russian side” to complicate Moscow’s efforts to gauge Ukraine’s battlefield reach.
German Chancellor Merz Says Long-Range Missiles for Ukraine Coming Soon—But Keeps Details Secret
Germany progresses in providing Ukraine with long-range missile systems, with Chancellor Merz emphasizing the need for tactical secrecy in military support.Vlad Litnarovych (UNITED24 Media)
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en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taurus_K…
Germany apparently has 600 Taurus air-launched cruise missiles.
They apparently have a next-gen longer-range variant coming out in 2029, and are ordering 600 of those.
If I had to make a guess, the second batch --- exactly the same size --- presumably is to replace the first, which means that they're presumably not gonna need (all?) the first batch in four years.
Ukraine apparently also requested some.
In May 2023, the German Federal Ministry of Defence said that Ukraine had requested the missile during the ongoing Russian invasion of Ukraine.[16] In interviews in June and July 2023, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and Minister of Defense Boris Pistorius said that Germany would not supply Ukraine with long-range missiles.[17][18][19] In January 2024, the German Bundestag voted against the supply of the Taurus missile to Ukraine.[20] In February 2024, the German Bundestag and Chancellor Olaf Scholz again expressly refused Ukraine's request while agreeing to deliver longer range weapons.[21][22] In May 2025 newly elected chancellor Friedrich Merz made more ambiguous statements regarding Taurus, that their delivery to Ukraine was within the 'realm of possibility' and that the discussion about their delivery to Ukraine would not be public.[23][24]
How billionaires stole America's elections
- YouTube
Profitez des vidéos et de la musique que vous aimez, mettez en ligne des contenus originaux, et partagez-les avec vos amis, vos proches et le monde entier.www.youtube.com
Two national guard members in critical condition after Washington DC shooting
Suspect in custody after two West Virginia guard members shot in ‘targeted’ incident, Washington mayor says
Two West Virginia national guardsmen shot near the White House remained in critical condition on Wednesday in an attack that rattled the country’s capital.
The incident comes amid a controversial deployment of troops to Washington DC ordered by the Trump administration. FBI director Kash Patel, Washington mayor Muriel Bowser and other officials confirmed in a press conference that both the guardsmen were in the hospital and described the shooting as “targeted”.
Officials have identified a suspect, who is currently in custody, as Rahmanullah Lakanwal, an Afghan national who entered the United States in September 2021 under a Biden-era policy allowing Afghans to enter the country after the US withdrawal from Afghanistan, according to a statement from the Department of Homeland Security.
Two US national guard soldiers reportedly shot near White House in Washington DC
Conditions of two soldiers isn’t immediately known after incident, and emergency vehicles were seen responding in the areaGuardian staff reporter (The Guardian)
Nordic countries paying most for Ukraine ‘not sustainable,’ Swedish foreign minister says
The EU must seize Russia’s frozen assets, Maria Malmer Stenergard believes, because any other solution would be unfair to Ukraine’s biggest backers.
Nordic countries can't keep taking on a disproportionate share of supporting Ukraine, Sweden's foreign minister warned in an interview with POLITICO.
"A few countries take almost all of the burden," Maria Malmer Stenergard said on her way into a gathering of foreign ministers in Brussels. "That is not fair and it's not sustainable in the long run."
She added: "The fact that the Nordic countries, with less than 30 million people, we provide for one-third of the military support that the NATO countries, with almost 1 billion people, provide this year ... This is not sustainable. It's not reasonable in any way. And it says a lot about what the Nordics do — but it says even more about what the others don't do."
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Nordic citizen here. As much as I agree with the sentiment, I'd happily pay more to have an unlubed dildo of consequence hypersonically delivered to the Kremlin.
We can tiptoe around russia, hoping they'll play nice any day now, or give a slap that won't be forgotten.
Lesson:
Russia used to do these "mistaken navigation" into Turkish airspace all the time. Until turkey shot down an encroaching aircraft. Suddenly russian pilots got a lot better at navigation.
Russia only respects force.
They will push and prod and poke and if you’re soft they get bolder and bolder. Like a school bully.
But kick them in the nuts real hard once and they’ll back down
While I gnash my teeth daily that the US isn't doing more to support Ukraine, I do not believe for a moment that Europe will allow Ukraine to fall, because if Ukraine falls to Russia, along with all its resources and production capacity, Estonia is next. Armenia is next. Georgia is next. Latvia is next and all the other former USSR territories, and then Poland and the wealth of Europe will start looking real tasty to Putin.
No NATO/EU country wants Ukraine to fall, and they will pour every resource into defending it.
They just think it would be nice if you know, the US could fucking chip in a little, being the wealthiest nation on Earth and apparently we have SOOOOO much money freed up since we decided to let poor people die and we're not funding space missions or vaccines anymore.
No NATO/EU country wants Ukraine to fall, and they will pour every resource into defending it.
They're not showing any signs of doing as such.
Honestly despite being an ocean away the united states has already chipped in a large amount of real aid. The EU, being rich countries themselves, should not be relying so heavily on a nation that was already on the brink of fascism.
Israeli air strikes pummel Gaza less than 48 hours after UN adopts Trump's plan
Israeli air strikes pummelled the besieged Gaza Strip on Wednesday, killing at least 33 Palestinians, including 20 women and children, less than 48 hours after the UN Security Council adopted US President Donald Trump's 20-point plan for the enclave.
Israeli fighter jets bombed tents sheltering displaced Palestinians in southern Gaza’s Khan Younis, as well as homes in Gaza City, with more than 70 people reported wounded.
Shelling and air strikes were also reported on Thursday morning, with most of the casualties reported in Khan Younis, local media reported.
The Palestinian group Hamas condemned the latest "massacre" and described it as "a dangerous escalation through which [Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin] Netanyahu seeks to resume the genocide."
Israeli air strikes pummel Gaza less than 48 hours after UN adopts Trump's plan
Israeli air strikes pummelled the besieged Gaza Strip on Wednesday, killing at least 33 Palestinians, including 20 women and children, less than 48 hours after the UN Security Council adopted US President Donald Trump's 20-point plan for the enclave.MEE staff (Middle East Eye)
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Quantum teleportation between photons from two distant light sources achieved
Quantum teleportation between photons from two distant light sources achieved
Everyday life on the internet is insecure. Hackers can break into bank accounts or steal digital identities. Driven by AI, attacks are becoming increasingly sophisticated. Quantum cryptography promises more effective protection.Jutta Witte (Phys.org)
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Disclaimer: it's been a decade since I did my undergrad in physics.
Its called entanglement. Meaning two things are quantum linked to be the same state. In this case the dots. This is done without any physical link between them. That's what makes this teleportation.
So what happens is both sides are in a quantum state where each dot is both 0 and 1. But importantly when measured they will produce the same result. The other effect is what you do to one dot, you do to both.
This is where I get fuzzy.
The idea here is to have one dot in the computer and one dot to observe outside. You do the physics in the computer to compute the result, then observe the dot outside to see the result.
Jellyfin Dongle
Hi guys!
I'm looking for a replacement travel dongle to play my Jellyfin movies whenever I'm traveling. My goto device up to this point has been a Chromecast (with GTV I think). But it's becoming increasingly clear its playback is very unreliable, hanging mid-playback for long periods. I blamed it initially on bandwidth issues over very long distances (the server is on a different continent at the moment!). But playing on the laptop via browser or via the jellyfin media player flatpak works just beautifully. So it clearly seems to be issues with the Chromecast as it's connected to the same Wifi and TV as the laptop.
So I am thinking...what other devices could I look into as Chromecast replacement? There's over 3yr old recommendations about a Walmart device (but I don't live anywhere near the American continent). The other go-to device would be an Nvidia Shield, the canister-looking one. But that still seems a bit hefty for traveling. After all these years, is there any device you'd recommend to use as light-to-bring dongle for traveling?
Thanks!
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What are the real advantages of using LAMP for modern application development?
I’ve been exploring how teams are using LAMP (Linux, Apache, MySQL, PHP) for application development in 2025, especially when compared with newer tech stacks.
**Some points I’ve noticed so far:
**
- LAMP is still considered stable and cost-effective.
- PHP frameworks like Laravel and Symfony have modern features.
- Many developers say LAMP remains great for scalable web apps, even today.
- The stack is open-source and easy to maintain for long-term projects.
**I’m curious to know from the community:
**
Are you still using LAMP for new application development?
If yes, what makes it your preferred choice?
If not, what stack are you switching to?
How CIA secretly triggered Sino-Indian war
How CIA secretly triggered Sino-Indian war
Decades of determined US efforts to foment antagonism between the vast neighbours have come spectacularly undone, due to the sheer weight of geopolitical reality.Kit Klarenberg (How CIA secretly triggered Sino-Indian war)
How CIA secretly triggered Sino-Indian war
How CIA secretly triggered Sino-Indian war
Decades of determined US efforts to foment antagonism between the vast neighbours have come spectacularly undone, due to the sheer weight of geopolitical reality.Kit Klarenberg (How CIA secretly triggered Sino-Indian war)
schmorp
in reply to Alphane Moon • • •like this
massive_bereavement e Get_Off_My_WLAN like this.
faltryka
in reply to schmorp • • •Joelk111
in reply to Alphane Moon • • •like this
Benign, Get_Off_My_WLAN e deliriousdreams like this.
Valmond
in reply to Alphane Moon • • •like this
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crandlecan
in reply to Valmond • • •vacuumflower
in reply to crandlecan • • •As in getting interned and working for a bowl of rice
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crandlecan
in reply to vacuumflower • • •deliriousdreams likes this.
sp3ctr4l
in reply to Valmond • • •You might try some kind of open source non profit.
No guarantees, but likely at least less evil.
AtHeartEngineer
in reply to sp3ctr4l • • •like this
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sp3ctr4l
in reply to AtHeartEngineer • • •I've done that, and found the same.
But, this person asked for less unethical.
Not 'and also, of similar competence.'
At this point I really do think we need to be forming something like Mondragon-esque, worker governed co-ops, collectives.
Unions aren't enough, back to anarcho-syndicalism, but digital this time!
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AtHeartEngineer
in reply to sp3ctr4l • • •like this
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MonkderVierte
in reply to Alphane Moon • • •like this
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eleitl
in reply to MonkderVierte • • •like this
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Dyskolos
in reply to Alphane Moon • • •Sorry, but if you know your company is evil and you still work there, you're evil too.
Once worked at a very major German donation-based organization as an it-admin. Wanted to do something valuable with my sparetime.
What I learned there made me never donate a single cent again to any organization ever. I left on the spot, knowing they would never dare to sue because they fear the truth could come out. People could literally just not show up for weeks without explanation and wouldn't even get a slap on the wrist.
Before that I donated like 50k a year to many.
Could I work there and still call myself "a good people"? Absolutely not.
Strider
in reply to Dyskolos • • •I agree and I know it's hard to swallow, but that's enabling.
Yes, life is hard and it's not easy or possible for everyone to change jobs. Still.
Dyskolos
in reply to Strider • • •Everyone has a choice. It might be harder for some, but it's still a choice. Work for the evil company or not. Noone forces me at gunpoint to go to work. I'd argue it's possible to change. Maybe not easy or fun, but possible.
There may be exceptions in uncivilized countries where it's "work or die" where it's "me or them".
I, personally, just couldn't. Working for someone that's clearly against my ethics or moral code? I would probably prefer welfare over that. Couldn't enjoy anything I would buy from that salary.
Better be poor but proud than rich and ashamed of myself.
MagicShel
in reply to Dyskolos • • •Agreed but at some point I am forced to work "at gunpoint" because I have a wife and kids who need a house and food and cars. I'm jealous of anyone in a position to simply quit.
I work for a company that works for another company in the hospitality industry. The software system is being updated (in part of a much broader system change) to no longer allow non-binary or unspecified gender. We aren't writing that part, but have to support it. I consider it a shortsighted and cruel change. But I've also spent a 7 of the last 30 months looking for work. I'm over fifty and I'm currently trying to build my retirement savings back up from zero after that.
I'm not walking away just because of this change. Instead I'm making sure our software is easy to change back when world is ready for that once again. That's the best I can do, and I've worked for companies engaged in much greater evil.
When I got hired on a contract for Uline I'd never heard of them. Then I found out that are huge contributors to the Republican Party and I was glad when they decided to replace me on that contract, but I couldn't just walk away. That was the most morally conflicted I've ever been at a job. But it gave my family the means to thrive, and that is my first goal.
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Strider
in reply to MagicShel • • •like this
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anomnom
in reply to Strider • • •panda_abyss
in reply to MagicShel • • •It’s fair to acknowledge the reality that it’s not easy or even instant and the market sucks at the moment. I’d say even looking for work would be better than nothing. You have to do what you have to do.
I don’t think the gender thing is being evil. You’re literally required to support that and you’re doing your best. That’s not really in your or your companies control.
Dyskolos
in reply to MagicShel • • •Yeah sure, i hear you.
Though one could argue if having the (silly) opinion to scratch modern gendering off the agenda is actually "evil". It's stupid, but it's just a political opinion one is allowed to have and share. And fully live out in one's company.
So, quitting here just because they're narrow-minded and stupid would be a bit overkill. But just staying there until you find something better: Totally acceptable I'd say.
I might've sound very harsh and black/white-ish, but i often talk in principles, not in simple 100%-always-appliable-rules-for-everybody.
And kudos that you do your protest in the means possible 😀
sp3ctr4l
in reply to Dyskolos • • •Correct.
A person who knows about evil and continues to participate in perpetuating it?
That is the definition of complicit.
You either quit, become a hypocrite and coward, or embrace and justify the evil.
Left, liberal, conservative.
Thats pretty much how USAmerican terminology for politics/society works.
panda_abyss
in reply to Dyskolos • • •This.
I worked for one evil company and I left fairly quickly. They added features that were basically designed to funnel money from gambling addicts and people were even joking about it internally. It felt so gross. I just couldn’t in good conscience stay around.
Dyskolos
in reply to panda_abyss • • •frog_brawler
in reply to Dyskolos • • •like this
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Dyskolos
in reply to frog_brawler • • •frog_brawler
in reply to Dyskolos • • •idiomaddict
in reply to Alphane Moon • • •I used to work in long-tailed litigated liability insurance claims. Think asbestos, lead paint, toxic exposures, etc. Insurance comes into play for defending companies against lawsuits made by people suffering from those exposures. I rationalized it to myself for a year and a half (if we don’t pay for the company’s defense attorneys, we couldn’t pay the claimants their settlements; we’re just following the contract; at this point, the big players are bankrupt, so the claimants are just going after easy targets; etc.), but it makes the world worse and I eventually quit.
I looked at other aspects of the industry, but there really wasn’t a role that I could feel totally comfortable with. At best, I felt like I I worked for the organization which gave earth “adequate notice” for the hyperspace bypass in hitchhikers guide.
I went back to school and now I teach new immigrants the local language. It took a lot of work and I make less money, but holy shit was it worth it.
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sp3ctr4l
in reply to idiomaddict • • •IronBird
in reply to sp3ctr4l • • •sp3ctr4l
in reply to IronBird • • •No.
We won't.
We will get movies designed as either patriotic/honorable, wildly unrealistic, aspirational lifestyle glamorization ... pure cope/hopium, saccharine, hero/success fantasies for adult children to live vicariously through... and warrior hero stories where the plot is incited by external or seditious threats.
That's very roughly what happened to German cinema when the Nazis took over.
We will just have machines making the slop, instead of demented sycophants.
... there won't be any money for things that cause people to maybe actually think!
You want to program compliance and shame into people, not curiosity, not disobedience.
Fight Club was not an initial success, and it largely tricked people via its marketing, into making people think it was going to be something closer to Rocky, but edgier... than a psycho-social critique of basically all of society.
Fight Club is an anomaly.
7rokhym
in reply to sp3ctr4l • • •Fight Club was Chuck saying fuck you to publishers for rejecting his work was too edgy etc. So he went all out, and not only becomes a published book, but a movie.
"Under Spanbauer's influence, Palahniuk produced an early draft of what would later become his novel Invisible Monsters (1999), but it was rejected by all publishers he submitted it to. Palahniuk then wrote a second novel, expanding on his short story, "Fight Club".[9] Initially, Fight Club was published as a seven-page short story in the compilation Pursuit of Happiness (1995),[10] but Palahniuk expanded it to novel length (in which the original short story became chapter six); Fight Club: A Novel was published in 1996.[11]"
1999 novel by Chuck Palahniuk
Contributors to Wikimedia projects (Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.)IWW4
in reply to Alphane Moon • • •The sad reality is, name a company that isn’t evil to someone and a blessing to someone else.
People love shopping at that shithole Walmart, the convenience and costs, the company’s business practices are fucking ruthless.
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Alphane Moon
in reply to IWW4 • • •There are specialized niche services/domains in B2B professional services and engineering where it's honestly difficult to be evil due to the nature of the domain and because it's B2B.
One could argue you are are still enabling evil companies, which is fair, but at least you're not really harming anyone.
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acosmichippo
in reply to IWW4 • • •3abas
in reply to acosmichippo • • •Capitalism is inherently evil... it's built on exploiting workers through economic coercion by rich capital owners who don't, the labor is not rewarded as much as the hoarding of capital.
Still, we live in a capitalist society, and businesses can be not objectively evil, and we have to support those business and boycott objectively evil ones.
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melsaskca
in reply to Alphane Moon • • •CerebralHawks
in reply to Alphane Moon • • •So do we really think that everyone who works at Google or Microsoft is a bad person? Let me remind you that Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates has given billions to charity. He's probably not a saint, but is he a net positive or a net negative to the world?
Net positive and net negative... there are 8 billion people and that in and of itself is a problem. Should we fault every human on the planet for being part of the problem? "I was just following orders," someone in the comments said. Biological directives to mate and reproduce and raise a family. Two people having more than two children between them are increasing the population. If you have three kids, and you're the father, if there are two different mothers, it's the same equation. Three adults replaced by three children (after so many years). But population is increasing, not decreasing. We're all part of the problem. Are we all evil?
That's not the way I see it. I don't think it's fair to judge the individual by the group. I think a person can still be a good person even if they're part of something that is not good. If you agree with me on overpopulation but not the company in OP's post, do you draw the line at being able to help it? Like if you're one of 12 kids you can't help that, so maybe you adopt when you're ready to have kids, instead of actually bringing more into the world? So most people can't help where they work on account of your hopes and wishes won't pay their bills. You can will them to do the right thing, but you're not the one responsible for paying their bills, and if they get their lights shut off, their car taken, or evicted, you can draw the shades and say "that's not my problem." So why should you get a say? Are you willing to support their families? No, you are not.
But at the same time, I also recognise that some organisations are evil, some governments are evil, and those who enable them do own some responsibility for that. I just don't think it's the final say in who a person is.
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MagicShel
in reply to CerebralHawks • • •Bill Gates is a bad example. That motherfucker was the most evil corporate asshole in the 90's. He has rehabilitated his image, but net positive is a bridge too far.
As for the rest, I appreciate the nuance. But Bill Gates can go fuck himself. It's easy to be generous with money stolen from somewhere else.
AbidanYre
in reply to CerebralHawks • • •Most of the big tech companies have enough stuff going on that there are non-evil groups within it doing non-evil and it's a judgment call for each person. I worked at an Amazon contractor for a little while and it didn't feel right to me so I moved on pretty quickly.
Places like flock and palantir though? Yes, almost certainly.
pandapoo
in reply to CerebralHawks • • •Started off fine for roughly a dozen words, then you jump right into Bill Gates.
Bill Gates who was great friends with Jeffrey Epstein, a monopolist, and most recently, worked tirelessly to prevent the sharing of the covid vaccine technology, during the pandemic, because it would harm the profits of his friends in big pharma.
I think your world view needs adjusting.
5too
in reply to pandapoo • • •I think their world view just needs more information. Bill Gates is a horrible person, who has had an excellent PR team whitewashing his name for at least a decade. And unlike Elon Musk, he doesn't step out from behind the PR team's cover.
We just need to keep bringing it to people's attention.
Alphane Moon
in reply to CerebralHawks • • •Bill Gates is a horrible person, he is a criminal.
Microsoft's oligopoly (officially sanctioned and enabled by US society) has cost the world hundreds of billions of dollars if not more.
Not to mention his committed support for the current oligarch regime and global corporate criminality more broadly.
That being said, I don't think everyone at Microsoft or Google is evil, but a far larger percent of their employees are evil than one would think (i.e. it's not only the senior executives).
vacuumflower
in reply to Alphane Moon • • •It has cost everything the tech industry made since then and everything it could have made if MS and its helpers hadn't killed most of the interesting companies, from DEC to Nokia. I'm not naming Sun, because honestly they are seen through rosy glasses by many today, they were the dotcom bubble locomotive and in general had that weird authoritarian vision of future tech which is similar to what we are getting, but without cool industrial design of Sun. They were not the corporation of good.
Microsoft's oligopoly is a device of fate for the world similar to what tech monopolies were for Japan, leading it into recession, or to China's isolation policies that led to its 200 years old catastrophes. It's not something that will be hidden by bigger events or undone. It has defined our world for many decades.
Perhaps it will be named in the future as one of the main reasons for WWIII.
Not even evil, just spineless apes who shouldn't have civil rights (it's not a dog whistle, I mean independently of race, such people actually tend to be racist when they can get away with it).
sp3ctr4l
in reply to CerebralHawks • • •I literally quit Microsoft in large part because I could not morally myself justify working for such a manipulative, lying, exploitative company.
And that was a decade ago.
Yeah, yeah if you work MSFT, you have less moral character than I do, you are certainly aiding and abetting evil; even if you're not directly doing the super evil shit, you're helping the gears keep grinding along.
tburkhol
in reply to CerebralHawks • • •Delascas
in reply to Alphane Moon • • •Everything is relative to your prospective.
I worked 10 years for a major EU defense contractor. Mostly on civilian projects, but not exclusively. For many years, I hid my employer from acquaintances & friends - when asked, I would just say "I work in software". After I left that company, one of the anti-tank missile systems I had a very (very) small part developing started to tear the fuck up Russian tanks across Ukrainian farm lands.
I don't hide that history today.
VeganBtw
in reply to Delascas • • •like this
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Alaknár
in reply to VeganBtw • • •Calling any form of military "unethical" is the absolute peak level of clueless wishful thinking.
VeganBtw
in reply to Alaknár • • •Alaknár
in reply to VeganBtw • • •OBJECTION!
in reply to Alaknár • • •Alaknár
in reply to OBJECTION! • • •OBJECTION!
in reply to Alaknár • • •Alaknár
in reply to OBJECTION! • • •OBJECTION!
in reply to Alaknár • • •Or I'd have to support people who actually fight for my interests instead of blindly licking boots and rallying around a flag while dismissing all criticism because "the military is inherently moral."
Your position can't withstand even the slightest degree of scrutiny, lol. As expected of a bootlicker.
Alaknár
in reply to OBJECTION! • • •OBJECTION!
in reply to Alaknár • • •Right, you only said it was "idiotic" to claim that any military was anything but moral, my mistake, that's extremely different from saying that the military is inherently moral.
Spend a month helping out with natural disasters, but then you go and murder one bunch of kids and everybody just remembers you as a child-murderer 😔
Alaknár
in reply to OBJECTION! • • •Umm... Can you not read? Like, do you actually just see the letters and then just assume something about what they mean?
Yes, because that's exclusively what soldiers do when on deployments. They literally only shoot children.
EOT on my end. You're just shouting naive platitudes from an imagined moral high ground, when in reality you're just ignorant. No point continuing this thread.
OBJECTION!
in reply to Alaknár • • •I literally just acknowledged that they do things other than shoot children. The problem is, "I don't just murder children, I also do other stuff" is not any kind of defense whatsoever.
And you're just blindly licking the boots of your oppressors.
Lumisal
in reply to VeganBtw • • •I think it depends on whether you work on actual defense systems rather than assault systems.
Anti missile systems for example.
OBJECTION!
in reply to Lumisal • • •Delascas
in reply to VeganBtw • • •You rather made my point - everything about morality is relative. There are no moral absolutes - it is up to your (and my) prospective. For the record, I do wrestle with my employment there . . . yes, we did stop many, many Russian tanks. But I also suspect other systems have been used in Gaza by the IDF.
As for speeding and taking out Musk - 100%, sign me up for that moral tradeoff right now!!!
VeganBtw
in reply to Delascas • • •I do not adhere to moral relativity at all. It is, I think, an untenable position that makes pedophiles and genocides as valid as charity work and kids' hospitals.
Also, how can you believe absolutely that there are no moral absolutes? It was pointed as illogical more than a couple millennia ago.
FauxLiving
in reply to VeganBtw • • •Ok sure, then what is the source of this moral authority which defines all morality?
Morality is a social construct, not an immutable part of the universe, and there are many societies on Earth so what is 'moral' completely depends on where you are.
VeganBtw
in reply to FauxLiving • • •Delascas
in reply to VeganBtw • • •VeganBtw
in reply to Delascas • • •ShinkanTrain
in reply to Alphane Moon • • •sp3ctr4l
in reply to ShinkanTrain • • •"I'm just a willing cog in the machine that produces death and destruction, for my own personal benefit."
"I'm just doing what I have to do to get by."
I very much hope you are joking / doing this as a bit, because if you are serious, you are a hypocrite and a coward.
ShinkanTrain
in reply to sp3ctr4l • • •sp3ctr4l
in reply to ShinkanTrain • • •Yeah I mean, at this point, I can very easily see someone saying that either very genuienly, or very sarcastically.
Hence why I asked / phrased it as a two pronged response.
Glad to know you were indeed doing a bit, but uh yeah, I'm autistic enough that I just ask, because I have encountered a large number of people who would just ssy things like that, entirely seriously.
FauxLiving
in reply to ShinkanTrain • • •sp3ctr4l
in reply to Alphane Moon • • •Oh look, its literally everyone who works in HR and Marketing, tech industry or not!
HR: You gaslight workers.
Marketing: You gaslight consumers.
ceoofanarchism
in reply to Alphane Moon • • •jjjalljs
in reply to Alphane Moon • • •like this
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mlg
in reply to jjjalljs • • •Seriously for all the protests and walkouts over Gaza last year, my main thought was "didn't you know MSFT/Google/Meta is literally evil?"
I can't blame anyone for wanting a stable income, but you might as well be working for Lockheed Martin. There's a reason why these megacorps stay in an oligopoly at the top, and it has nothing to do with talent or quality solutions.
boonhet
in reply to mlg • • •15 years ago Google was a cool tech company that open sourced a lot of their projects.
That was no longer the case long before Gaza though
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moonshadow
in reply to boonhet • • •frog_brawler
in reply to jjjalljs • • •jjjalljs
in reply to frog_brawler • • •I'm sure there are companies that are at least more good than bad. Teachers pay teachers. Meetup. Bandcamp before they sold. That's all I have off the top of my head. But even so capitalism invites cruelty, and the best intentions can easily wither under the pressure to make more money.
I work for a very large company involved in medicine. They make machines to do like blood work. That's fine. People need that. But they treat many of their workers like trash. I don't get paid for holidays and get the legal minimum sick leave per year. Their mission isn't especially evil , but their behavior sucks.
frog_brawler
in reply to jjjalljs • • •I’m really only familiar with Meetup from that list, and yea, I agree. I think they inherently aren’t intending to do harm as a company, but what if domestic terrorists / cultists were to use meetup to find other likeminded individuals? Meetup may be in part responsible for getting harmful people together and they may never be aware of it. Sure, it’s a hypothetical, but not entirely outside the realm of possibility.
IMO, mistreating and underpaying people does make the world worse. It’s not the company mission, but yea… the whole capitalist machine thing. It’s hard to escape the output, which tends to harm at least someone.
handsoffmydata
in reply to Alphane Moon • • •TheObviousSolution
in reply to Alphane Moon • • •I don't know of anyone who isn't in some way contributing some way or form to some rather dystopian practices, intentionally or not. This is not a justification, just an observation. Just by being part of any society and filing your taxes people can be "working for evil".
The real crux of the matter is what you consider acceptable evil. The people who tell themselves they don't accept any are usually the most intolerant. AI is a buzzword, but engineered intelligent systems are inevitable. We decide whether we want to let it be part of our society or whether we allow it to topple it. Either way, at the end of the day to most of us it won't really matter if at the top is a silicon mind or a meat one.
Sir_Kevin
in reply to Alphane Moon • • •goatinspace
in reply to Sir_Kevin • • •network_switch
in reply to Alphane Moon • • •Practically everyone I'm friends with hates imperialism and colonialism but loves the benefits of visiting poor countries that were victims of imperialism/colonialism and feeling special because of the money they bring and the lack of developed domestic entertainment/art industries so that theirs and their countries artist/entertainers are way more competitive there. Wonderful leftist communities are like damn history of what we've done here is terrible now let me enjoy the fruits of our forefathers atrocities as I partake in poverty tourism and try to attention seek and sell my wares to those I had born advantages against. Maybe I'll find cheap labor for this documentary I've been working on. I may be able to sleep with some of these young girls too that find my back home working class pay as great personality. But of course not saying out loud
Everyone's pretty hypocritical. People that get mad at other people for working for Google are extra and easily ignored. Damn all those Boeing and Airbus employees for working for huge military contractors. When a company gets big enough, I wouldn't be surprised if they're lobbying for something terrible to benefit themselves.
I'm continuously confused how these standards don't seem to apply to bank tellers, finance in general, large chain retail, fast food, large agriculture companies, fashion industry, film industry, music industry, alcohol, pharmaceutical, ... etc
Some people fight the most inconsequential battles. If you work for JP Morgan Chase and someone gives you the cold shoulder or lectures you because so, ignore them. It's such a small crowd that's like that that it won't change your lifestyle. It's not like if you quit and struggled to find work and started to teeter on ruin that they'd be there for you. And someone like that probably fights so many small inconsequence battles that they'd be exhausting to be around anyways. They're self-inflicting themselves to be politically inconsequential. And fighting such small inconsequential battles produces so little. Tagging, down with the oligarchy in a bathroom stall or sidewalk day to day. It's small bubble activism
nondescripthandle
in reply to Alphane Moon • • •