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fromjason ("fromjason.xyz ❤️ 💻 ✍️ 🥐 🇵🇷") wrote:

We went from physical ownership to purchasing a viewing license they can revoke at anytime.

It's sort of sad and funny to think about it in terms of generational wealth. Most Millennials wont have media collections to pass onto their kids. Perhaps we're not talking about a lot of money, but it's not nothing.

It has immense sentimental value, too. Imagine wanting to learn more about your pop-pop but you can't because listening to his music collection is against Apple's TOS.

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pzmyers@freethought.online ("pzmyers 🕷") wrote:

These corrupt religious fanatics are going to kill us all.

https://freethoughtblogs.com/pharyngula/2026/03/04/that-put-the-fear-of-god-into-me/

nuking a city

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Boosted by slightlyoff@toot.cafe ("Alex Russell"):
gabrielesvelto@mas.to ("Gabriele Svelto") wrote:

In other words up to 10% of all the crashes Firefox users see are not software bugs, they're caused by hardware defects! If I subtract crashes that are caused by resource exhaustion (such as out-of-memory crashes) this number goes up to around 15%. This is a bit skewed because users with flaky hardware will crash more often than users with functioning machines, but even then this dwarfs all the previous estimates I saw regarding this problem. 3/5

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Boosted by slightlyoff@toot.cafe ("Alex Russell"):
gabrielesvelto@mas.to ("Gabriele Svelto") wrote:

A few years ago I designed a way to detect bit-flips in Firefox crash reports and last year we deployed an actual memory tester that runs on user machines after the browser crashes. Today I was looking at the data that comes out of these tests and now I'm 100% positive that the heuristic is sound and a lot of the crashes we see are from users with bad memory or similarly flaky hardware. Here's a few numbers to give you an idea of how large the problem is. 🧵 1/5

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Boosted by slightlyoff@toot.cafe ("Alex Russell"):
jessie ("Jess Rose") wrote:

Global remote, 🚨paid🚨 open source grant program from @igalia for folks to learn more about Linux, Graphics, JS DevTools, Multimedia + GStreamer or Web Standards.

- apply by April 3
- €7k for 450 hours over 3-6 months
- uni students or self directed learners

https://www.igalia.com/coding-experience/

#FediHire #Fossjobs

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fromjason ("fromjason.xyz ❤️ 💻 ✍️ 🥐 🇵🇷") wrote:

RE: https://mas.to/@IanDSmith/116163691884422656

The cloud is the vehicle for all of it. The problem is, these services aren't particularly expensive. Worse, most are all-you-can-eat.

AI—or, at least, the American version of AI presented to us as celestial, resource-hungry, and scarce—is the perfect cloud accessory.

All we need now is to get addicted to AI, the same way we're addicted to the cloud, and we'll have an economy that works sort of like how diamonds work. Except, at least a with a diamond, you have something shiny.

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pzmyers@freethought.online ("pzmyers 🕷") wrote:

No.

https://freethoughtblogs.com/pharyngula/2026/03/04/their-claims-of-apostasy-are-grossly-inflated/

Obey God

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baldur@toot.cafe ("Baldur Bjarnason") wrote:

“Artisanal care”

https://tante.cc/2026/03/04/artisanal-care/

> Software was doing bad before, standards of quality being largely nonexistent. But “AI” and the promise that you can just magically create software is pouring gasoline on the fire

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baldur@toot.cafe ("Baldur Bjarnason") wrote:

“Artisanal care”

https://tante.cc/2026/03/04/artisanal-care/

> These days we are mostly forced to use software whether we like to or not – often even software we cannot have any control over

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Boosted by soatok@furry.engineer ("Soatok Dreamseeker"):
deetwenty@todon.nl ("Botch Frivarg") wrote:

@soatok in this article you in passing mention something that has frustrated me for some time in software engineering as someone with a bit more of a hardware background, and that is how much important stuff doesn't build on formal specifications, even big infrastructure projects! And when I have brought this up I'm often met with something along the lines of "but that is not very agile" or "we moved away from waterfall". Sure that small backyard shed you can yolo together, but why are we doing the same thing for the highway bridges of the software world?

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jscalzi@threads.net ("John Scalzi") wrote:

I don't know, I already thought it was pretty damn bad

https://www.thedailybeast.com/senator-elizabeth-warre-says-secret-briefing-on-iran-proves-its-worse-than-you-thought/

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Boosted by keul@fosstodon.org ("Luca Fabbri"):
flaviotorba@mastodon.uno ("Flavio Torba") wrote:

In free download i primi tre capitoli di "Stupenda creatura idiota", il mio romanzo cyberpunk con modelle in putrefazione, modifiche corporee e Charles Bronson... Finalista Premio Urania 2022 (sembra una vita fa)

#fantascienza #fantascienzaitaliana @cultura #libri

https://drive.proton.me/urls/BXZ5HVE4Z8#zEPq0zuJ4Bt0

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Boosted by baldur@toot.cafe ("Baldur Bjarnason"):
uglyreykjavik.bsky.social@bsky.brid.gy ("Ugly Reykjavik") wrote:

There is light.#Iceland #photography #streetphotography #abandoned #decay #window #concrete #trees #light

A small window covered in torn plastic.

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Boosted by baldur@toot.cafe ("Baldur Bjarnason"):
uglyreykjavik.bsky.social@bsky.brid.gy ("Ugly Reykjavik") wrote:

Who left it there?#Iceland #photography #streetphotography #abandoned #decay #window #concrete #trees

A toy cooker abandoned under a small window.

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Boosted by cstanhope@social.coop ("Your weary 'net denizen"):
dlakelan@mastodon.sdf.org ("Daniel Lakeland") wrote:

Speaking of PhysicsGirl y'all Dianna just posted her FIRST SCIENCE VIDEO IN 3 YEARS this morning, ever since she got Long COVID.

LETS FUCKING GOOOOOOOOOO

https://youtu.be/B3m3AMRlYfc

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pzmyers@freethought.online ("pzmyers 🕷") wrote:

Robert F Kennedy Jr: 1 year of total catastrophic failure.

This man has trashed the Kennedy name for good.

https://freethoughtblogs.com/pharyngula/2026/03/04/get-this-guy-outta-here/

RFK Jr

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db@social.lol ("David Bushell ☕") wrote:

had to return from a walk because i ran out of podcast

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Boosted by jwz:
cmconseils ("Laura Manach :bongoCat:") wrote:

A meme featuring Shaggy from Scooby-Doo. The top text says, "When you're listening to music and you start imagining your own music video." Below, a faded, large image of Shaggy's emotional face is superimposed over a scene of a smaller Shaggy standing alone in a field next to a tree.

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Boosted by jwz:
lain@cyber.ms ("Lain Iwakura Bot") wrote:

📺 Serial Experiments Lain

🗓️ Season: S01E06
🎥 Episode: Kids
🎬 Directed by: Ryūtarō Nakamura
📅 Release Date: August 10, 1998
⏯ Frame: 0696

Frame from the series Serial Experiments Lain

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Boosted by jwz:
AmyZenunim@unstable.systems ("★ Amy Star ★") wrote:

capitalists: "without a profit motive, nobody would do anything. society would collapse."

my friends & acquaintances: "I implemented a SPARC emulator in pure CSS"

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Boosted by jwz:
georgetakei@universeodon.com ("George Takei :verified: 🏳️‍🌈🖖🏽") wrote:

It did not go as planned.

Screenshot of an X post by Adam Cochran reacting to Hillary Clinton’s deposition, suggesting she outperformed questioners. The embedded C-SPAN post quotes Clinton saying Trump was held civilly liable for sexual assault and that the behavior fits a pattern. Below is a video still of Clinton seated at a hearing table, gesturing with her hands, with a lower-third banner referencing a House Oversight Committee investigation.

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baldur@toot.cafe ("Baldur Bjarnason") wrote:

Because the element of coercion and a complete disregard for consent is now an integral part of how the industry works, but that's a topic for another day.

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baldur@toot.cafe ("Baldur Bjarnason") wrote:

Devs are so disconnected from the output of their work that many of the norms of the industry are outright illegal: there's a good chance that if you follow popular practices for a React project, for example, you'll end up with a site or product that violates accessibility law in several countries

Few devs would even know where to begin to look to answer the question "does my software work for the people forced to use it?"

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baldur@toot.cafe ("Baldur Bjarnason") wrote:

Few devs have a reference point for genuinely working software. Usability labs were disbanded over 20 years ago. Very few companies do actual user research, so their designs are based on fiction. Bugs are the norm

Alienation is also the norm for devs, both socially and organisationally. Whether it works for the end user doesn't cross their mind. Whether the design fulfils business needs is not their problem. Bugs are a future problem. Ship insecure software and patch it as user data gets stolen

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baldur@toot.cafe ("Baldur Bjarnason") wrote:

Best part? It's always somebody with years of experience. Exactly the demographic that is supposedly able to use this shit safely, but my impression is they're just as bad as the novices

This is happening IMO because of one of the fundamental issues with software dev (and this predates "AI" and was one of the themes of my first book):

Most software projects fail and most of what gets shipped doesn't work. The way the industry is set up means there is little downside to shipping broken software

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baldur@toot.cafe ("Baldur Bjarnason") wrote:

(Following thread was prompted by people pointing out that the Bluesky dev team seems heavily into vibe-coding now and originally posted on said vibe-coded Bluesky platform that is now constantly failing.)

Over the past year, every single time one of the apps or services I use suddenly became less reliable and more buggy, I never have to look far for the "Claude is amazing and now writes most of my code" post for the devs involved.

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Boosted by baldur@toot.cafe ("Baldur Bjarnason"):
davidgerard@circumstances.run ("David Gerard") wrote:

in case you ever wondered why bluesky breaks all the fuckin time and is increasingly a pile of jank

https://bsky.app/profile/why.bsky.team/post/3meomclcfss2w

Why ‪@why.bsky.team‬ Until December of last year I was using LLMs as fancy autocomplete for coding. It was nice for scaffolding out boilerplate, or giving me a gut check on some things, or banging out some boring routine stuff. In the past two months Claude has written about 99% of my code. Things are changing. Fast

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Boosted by slightlyoff@toot.cafe ("Alex Russell"):
brucelawson@vivaldi.net ("Bruce Lawson ✅ ♫ ♿ ✌️♂️✊") wrote:

Customs and Border Protection (CBP) bought data from the online advertising ecosystem to track peoples’ precise movements over time, in a process that often involves siphoning data from ordinary apps like video games, dating services, and fitness trackers https://www.404media.co/cbp-tapped-into-the-online-advertising-ecosystem-to-track-peoples-movements/ - in case the links between surveillance capitalism and trad jackbooted fascism weren't already clear. Ban data profiling.

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Boosted by ratatui_rs@fosstodon.org ("Ratatui"):
orhun@fosstodon.org ("Orhun Parmaksız 👾") wrote:

Here is how to pick colors in your Rust terminal app! 🦀💯

🌀 **tui_color_wheel** — Interactive color wheel widget for @ratatui_rs

🎨 Pick and explore colors visually from the terminal

⭐ GitHub: https://github.com/idk1To3/tui%5Fcolor%5Fwheel

#rustlang #ratatui #tui #widget #programming #library #terminal

Attachments:

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Boosted by slightlyoff@toot.cafe ("Alex Russell"):
owa ("Open Web Advocacy") wrote:

Which? - The UK’s not for profit consumer champion had this to say about the UK CMA's proposed remedies.

👉 See: https://www.which.co.uk/policy-and-insight/article/which-response-to-the-cmas-call-for-evidence-on-apple-and-googles-proposed-app-distribution-and-interoperability-commitments-apNNj9T9o9hm

The second issue with the proposed approach is that accepting commitments may set an unintended benchmark for the acceptability of commitments in place of Conduct Requirements. In allowing these priority issues to be resolved through commitments, and noting the prominence that is associated with the first set of interventions in this investigation (and only the second interventions proposed by the Digital Markets Competition Regime as a whole), SMS firms may take encouragement that offering commitments is a viable way to resolve issues that have been identified … and it may result in increased pressure on the CMA to enforce weaker remedies in place of stronger intervention that leads to better market outcomes. Increasing the likelihood of commitments being offered as a first port of call also adds burden to the process that may slow the pace that the CMA is able to achieve effective remedies. We encourage the CMA to recognise and guard against this risk.