Hate speech doesn't exist. There's only speech you hate.
Look at the very easiest example : George Soros. For some people, he's a billionaire who uses his wealth to push certain political campaigns and funds activism.
For others, it's anti-semetic to point out how you disagree with that activism because poor little Georgie also happens to be Jewish as if that has any relation to what he does with his money.
Under your rules, any criticism of George is hate speech and thus should be deleted. Because we don't get to question his activism, ever. That would be anti-semetic.
So we don't have to bake the cake ?
Cool, tell Colorado.
> Help government I don't like what I see on social media! Do something!
Sad you didn't even read the summary.
Because the literal opposite is going on. The States are imposing legislations that PREVENT REMOVAL of content, so you get to see it in all its glory, no matter how much it offends Facebook and Google et al.
> The greatest country in the world also has the highest mobile subscription fees in the world.
Thanks for the compliment, but Canada just isn't that great. And our mobile subscriptions are part of that. I'd kill to have plans as cheap as the US has.
I don't know how after seeing Google Gemini, you'd want to live in a world without "far right crazies".
It seems to me those guys are massively more sane than the world Google Gemini is hinting at.
You think closing businesses and mass putting people on government hand outs isn't harmful to mental health, on top of closing down health services (no, hospitals weren't overwhelmed more than usual, they just eliminated every non-essential services to "prevent infections").
Ultimately, it was a rushed policy to appease a few loudmouths that did more harm than it prevented. Covid ended up not being as bad as was initially believed making the whole knee jerk around it.
And the fact most people don't want to hear any criticism about it is most worrying. People just aren't opened to have their religious dogma criticized.
> What we do know throughout history is quarantining the sick when you have an outbreak of a contagious illness is a known effective and logical response.
Keywords : The sick.
Lockdowns quarantined the healthy.
> Have to give up certain rights.
You can't give up rights, they are granted to you by a higher authority and Government can't take them away for that reason.
That's the entire basis for the United States you dingo.
> Not to discredit the lockdowns and how much they helped (Am a pharmaceutics bioengi,
So you're not really an expert on lockdowns and their wide ranging impacts both on an economic and human scale.
Maybe we should question lockdowns, maybe that would be a thing we should look into instead of just repeating the religious text that say "lockdowns good".
> It then reorders the instructions accordingly.
Which would mean copying instructions in multiple place, sort of like a loop unroll, resulting in a bigger executable and thus still more memory usage.
Explain how you think this is actually implemented then if you don't think this is just memory bloat, not actually time travel.
You think they managed to create FTL travel inside your computer to have a light signal travel back and forward in time to get values in memory at different times ?
Of course not. When you say x = 1, it adds x to a hashtable in the default position. When you then say t = now, it creates a timestamp label named t. When you say "as of t, x = 2", all it does is insert 2 in the x hashtable in the t position, using the earlier created label.
Ain't no magic dude, it's computers.
> or you could live near your workplace or use clean public transport like the rest of the world is trying to do.
Yes, I too like to tack on 2 extra hours to my workday in a crowded train/bus, packed like a sardine. We have so much in common. Want to smash our bodies together in ways I don't even do with my significant other on a bus ride so we can discuss this further ?
With multiple tagged instances of a variable. Instead of a clean 64 bit int, now your "int" is a hashtable.
This isn't time travel.
> but connecting chargers to the existing electrical grid is too difficult?
Yes, because unlike Alice's Wonderland, the electrical grid in reality has a finite capacity.
Hackers of the world, unite!