Popsicles

joined 4 months ago
[–] Popsicles@lemmy.wtf 1 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Can it be done without any third party help?

[–] Popsicles@lemmy.wtf 4 points 1 week ago (6 children)

My two questions then are 1) is this even allowed, and 2) if it is, how do I access these tools?

 

I’ve been noticing this more and more in the modlogs, with it proven via the “creator” option in some instances’ modlogs that the people doing the bans were mods and not admins, and when I first joined Lemmy, one of the things that were held as a universal truth was that this absolutely could not happen.

[–] Popsicles@lemmy.wtf 1 points 1 week ago

And granddaughter? And great granddaughter?

By then, the singularity would have taken over. Yet you'd still have that one person on top of the rubble say "nope, the ban is still in effect for another ten years".

It reminds me of all those judges who sentence criminals to a thousand years in prison to show how angry they are. Though even then, their bodies are removed from prison right after they die. A Lemmy ban, on the other hand.

 

Especially for minor things, sometimes they just kind of come off as absurd. It's as if they're trying to show how uptight they can be without the full ramifications.

[–] Popsicles@lemmy.wtf 0 points 3 months ago

You're the first person to imply I did that.

[–] Popsicles@lemmy.wtf -3 points 3 months ago (3 children)

"A lie can travel half way around the world while the truth is putting on its shoes."

~ Mark Twain

Lies are improvised. Truth is prepared. I did my best with the latter.

 

If some things get downvoted way out of proportion, and those downvotes come mostly from people in certain instances, and instances have the power to block each other, it stands to reason some instance out there managed to block the instances that contribute the most downvotes, causing them to have mainly upvotes. Right?

[–] Popsicles@lemmy.wtf -3 points 3 months ago

Not a single sentence you just said reflects something that's not normal.

[–] Popsicles@lemmy.wtf -3 points 3 months ago

They aren't the ones who are dead. Jane exposed proof of Leni making a transphobic-esque remark years ago towards someone who calls themselves Eridan. Jump to two years later and Leni's accusers have pushed Eridan to harming himself. They triggered that because Eridan stood up for Leni. Because all Leni's accusers want is for the end of Leni, as in they don't actually care. When you see Jane try to defend trans people, she doesn't actually care. She's doing it just to get back at Leni.

[–] Popsicles@lemmy.wtf -2 points 3 months ago

Reading it concerns those who the feud concerns. Is there any action you took due to the feud, or any judgment you made based on it? Whoever that describes should read it.

[–] Popsicles@lemmy.wtf -5 points 3 months ago

Also, I noticed Davel just now is adding a claim to the list of slanders about ShinigamiOokamiRyuu. The claim that she is impersonating someone he claims to know. He, however, has that in reverse, and ShinigamiOokamiRyuu is the one being impersonated.

The abuse, ganging-up, and spin-doctoring here couldn't be more obvious. Sock much?

 

This will be my last post under this name for reasons, but I wanted to do a question I've been interested in asking so it can be useful in a way (inspired by the person I have interacted with the most on here who says she follows all the mentioned rules as per the new year).

Once in a blue moon, someone I know will mention they have some kind of linguistic rule they invented in order to make understanding them easier.

The four examples that come to the top of my head:

  1. A couple of people I know are on the spectrum and noticed it's sometimes difficult to tell when someone is done speaking, which makes it difficult for them to not interrupt people. To prevent people from having to experience that with them, they made a rule, which a number of us follow now, where they are officially done talking when something they're saying becomes divisible by 17 words, choosing 17 because it's the number of syllables in a haiku.
  2. Based on this, another rule was invented where, if a whole uninterrupted utterance (or, more regularly, a sentence) is divisible by 18 words, it's completely dismissible as having no correspondence with anything in reality. It allows things said, say, under duress, to be ignored based on that cue. A prerequisite though is that the person must have intended to end what they were saying.
  3. Suppose you have two or more people you're interviewing. They all want to be anonymous, which means they will just be silhouettes while on a screen, and their voices will be morphed. However, this means that when someone self-references, nobody will know which one they're talking about. For situations like this, a number of us use a grammar rule that modifies the use of words like "I", "me", "you", etc. to use accents over the first letters of each word when spelled as a distinguisher (the alphabetical order of the accents match the age order of the anonymous participants), and these manifest as the speed in which the word is said during pronunciation (the speed of the words when spoken match the age order of the anonymous participants).
  4. A few people I know have adopted this quirk one of us invented that is inspired by the fact Mandarin uses tones in words (it can be turned off though if what you are saying does not consistently use this rule). In old Mandarin, a tone in a word can completely change the word's meaning into another "word", such as "mǎi" meaning "to buy" and "mài" meaning "to sell". Inspired by this, a grammatical rule was invented where a word's tone would indicate how literal it is. For example, on the do re mi scale, mi and fa would indicate that a word or phrase spoken in it might be intended to mean a parallel for something else, such as if you said "ship" in the tone to mean "whale". A word, phrase, sentence, etc. that is spoken in so or la would mean the word is supposed to be a literary stand-in, an analogy, an allegory, a parable, etc. For example, if you said "hand" in this tone, if you were talking about a flower, you could mean "leaf", or you could say "galactus" to mean a black hole. A word spoken in doe (low doe) or re would imply something that's a "quasi" of a certain thing, something that's technically something, something that's partially something, etc. For example, if you said "adult" in doe (low doe) or re, it could mean "teen" or "kid". And anything said in ti or doe (high doe) would indicate they mean the opposite of something. For example, saying "cop" in ti or (high) doe could mean "robber". This is a rule invented for constructed languages though and isn't necessary in English, though some use it.

Sorry, I went too in-depth. What are some unofficial grammar rules you've seen people "invent" and use consistently?

[–] Popsicles@lemmy.wtf 1 points 4 months ago

The one I am using is. It's easy to get into and doesn't block everything in sight. Although let's just say I just discovered just now I mistook this one for another one and signed up for the wrong one (I went to make an account on another one for modding). Brb, will return on a new one and hope nobody tries getting the wrong idea (had a few people try speaking for my intent without my authority earlier).

[–] Popsicles@lemmy.wtf 2 points 4 months ago

Corpse flowers

view more: next ›