Comment Re:WhatsApp? (Score 1) 68
>"We are clearly different then. I always log in, but i have a major incentive due to wanting to squash ads with youtube premium
There are other options. I also have no ads.
>"We are clearly different then. I always log in, but i have a major incentive due to wanting to squash ads with youtube premium
There are other options. I also have no ads.
>"I'd say the same for YouTube. It's used to watch videos. The number of people who comment on them is minimal compared to the userbase."
That is exactly what I came to post. I use YouTube all the time. I have *never* logged into it. So for tons of people, it is not "social media".
Facebook, on the other hand, is mostly useless without a login. You can see a bit of it, then it stops.
>"I'd be very curious to the exact definition of "social media" they use is. I don't think it's what most people consider to be social media."
Bingo. Plays right into my comments last week about the stupid Virginia law trying to force "age checking" for "social media" and they don't even define what "social media" is or is not. As if everyone knows exactly what it is. Yet, somehow, stripping adults of their privacy and rights will save children (since parents refuse to restrict or withhold internet-connected devices from their children).
Is Slashdot "social media"? How about my local LUG's forum? What about the comments section on Amazon or Walmart product pages? Or reviews of apps on Google Play? A USENET group? Chat sessions in online games? If just watching videos is "social media" does that make broadcast TV or cable TV or a movie theater "social media"?
The capacity of the government of a large jurisdiction like California, or more particularly the US, could bankrupt someone like Musk, so I say, bring it on. Within a decade Musk would have abandoned all efforts, or, even better, be stone cold broke (frankly billionaires shouldn't exist at all, and we should tax the living fuck out of them down to their last $200 million).
We're too afraid of these modern day Bond villains when we should be aiming every financial, and probably every real, cannon straight at them and putting them in a sense of mortal danger every minute of their waking lives, so that they literally piss themselves in terror at the though that "we the people" might decide to wipe them out for good.
Sam D is very good, and I think his analysis is broadly correct, but I would be wary of treating him as apolitical. He's a leading thinker for the centre-right, along with Sam Bowman (Sam Freedman completes the clever-Sam-centrist trifecta, but is on the left rather than right).
We need it? Why? We have flights that do the job better - they dont require massive amounts of land seizure
They are so impractical to build given the geographically distributed nature of the American population. It would require trillions of dollars just to acquire the land needed to build practical routes of track.
>"but really HSR should be focused on interstates. "
Exactly. That is about all we can expect would be workable/affordable. Otherwise it requires extremely expensive elevated tracks. The problem with many Interstates is that some of them now are nearly "full", having expanded multiple times for more lanes. There isn't an usable center area and sides are pinned in.
I'll put my knowledge of this sphere up against that of anybody who isn't actively a student of the subject, and odds are pretty close good I do well.
Christian churches lag in moral evolution. They don't lead. And often they are antagonistic to moral change, until they have little choice.
"Why waste negative entropy on comments, when you could use the same entropy to create bugs instead?" -- Steve Elias