lori

joined 1 year ago
[–] lori@cambrian.social 2 points 4 months ago
[–] lori@cambrian.social 2 points 7 months ago* (last edited 7 months ago) (1 children)

@uis Whose bunker is being penetrated? I'm no pacifist. There are legitimate targets.

[–] lori@cambrian.social 18 points 7 months ago (4 children)

@MicroWave I agree with President Biden. To let Putin win is to let the Republicans win. That is one thing that absolutely must not be allowed to happen.

[–] lori@cambrian.social -2 points 7 months ago (1 children)

@MicroWave I was enthusiastic about the prospects for high-speed rail, but then locomotives got the John Deere treatment (re. "intellectual" "property")...

[–] lori@cambrian.social 8 points 7 months ago (1 children)

@ZeroCool Is that an Onion-like website?

[–] lori@cambrian.social 2 points 7 months ago

@Tugboater203 Is that made from spring wheat?

[–] lori@cambrian.social 8 points 8 months ago

@ajsadauskas I mainly wanna keep Fedi mostly noncommercial and entirely nonproprietary.

[–] lori@cambrian.social 1 points 8 months ago

@MicroWave Sometimes I go off topic. Probably not the best thing for a manifesto blog. Point taken. astoundingteam.com/wordpress/a…

[–] lori@cambrian.social 2 points 8 months ago (4 children)

@MicroWave Stuff like this is why I "invented" #anagorism (anti-market anarcho-socialism).

In a #market economy, one has to market oneself.

Market economies grade on confidence, definitely at the expense of competence.

[–] lori@cambrian.social 2 points 9 months ago

@Rozauhtuno A modern website or mobile app is very intentionally designed to transmit signal (direct observations of behavior, and other actionable data) in one direction and noise (basically bloat) in the other. To forego any monetization opportunity is to leave money on the table, and of course that is a literal sin against the principal-agent principle. If we wanted search to be a utility, content to be a library, communication to be person-to-person, or platforms to come without vendor lock-in, we should have left the Internet in mostly academic hands, as it was in the early 1990s.

view more: next ›