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Lvxferre [he/him]
Lvxferre [he/him] @ lvxferre @mander.xyz
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2 yr. ago

  • Right, that’s why they CAN do it, but I’m talking about why they WANT to do it.

    The reason why PP/MC/Visa "want" to do this has zero to do with "porn saturation" or whatever. It's basically "brand management"; they're seeing servicing sites with specific types of adult content as "brand damage", so they pressure those sites to not do it. That's it; if they believed the opposite they'd gladly force itch io to show a dick in the front page.

    In turn, the reason Collective Shout is pressuring PP/MC/Visa through "brand damage" mostly boils down to conservative babble. Check this, regarding the group's founder and take your own conclusions.

  • I don't think it's just a matter of personal responsibility; it's part of the socio-economic system, whoever controls the capital can force others depending on it to do things they don't want to. In this case PP/MC/Visa forcing itch.io.

  • I don't care about porn games, but:

    The fact MasterCard, Visa, and PayPal can censor lawful content is problematic, to say the least.

  • Mine either. But I did the mistake of websearching them:

    • roach bin - apparently some people breed cockroaches as pets, or to feed their actual pets with.
    • dermestid beetle aka carpet beetle - they're so notorious for feasting on dead bodies that forensics uses their presence/development to estimate date of death.
    • pap smear - cells collected from the cervix, used to check for cancer.
  • This is probably obvious, but:

    The reason those businesses so consistently distort what SKG is about is to mislead the public, into not supporting SKG. They want their "remote kill switches", even if they're an unfair market practice - because if you're playing a 10yo game, you aren't buying whatever slop they released in the current year.

  • Roach bin
    \ Dermestid beetle
    \ Pap smear

    The further you read, the worse it gets.

  • A better analogy would be when you pick pollen from one flower and use it to fertilise another.

    ...I do this all the time with my pepper plants.

  • I'd usually say "may he rest in peace", but he'd probably find it lame and boring, so: may he rest with lots and lots of booze. And cocaine.

  • Conservative lawmakers have also done their best to attack the policy. During one speech during a debate about quotas, Senator Flavio Bolsonaro — the son of the former far-right president, Jair Bolsonaro — asked, “What about poor whites?”

    Whataboutism runs in the family, uh.

    That said, there are also quotas for those. For example, I'll coarsely translate an excerpt from Paraná's Federal University's site:

    Thus, there are four quota groups:

    1. Public school students, regardless of income;
    2. Public school students, with household income lower than 1.5 minimum wages per capita;
    3. Black [pretos], mixed [pardos], and indigenous [indígenas] students, regardless of income;
    4. Black, mixed, and indigenous students, with household income lower than 1.5 minimum wages per capita.

    Relevant to note low and mid-low classes study almost exclusively in public schools.


    Some anecdote. My uni (the above) implemented quotas in '05; by then I was in my first grad, so I remember it well. Criticism sprouted from all sides, including black people - like one student saying she was glad she was admitted in '03, so nobody would think she did it "through the backdoor" (pela porta dos fundos).

    To be fair with her, back then nobody actually knew how it would turn out. Two decades later, though, we see the quotas help by a lot.

    It's also relevant to note that, in Latin America, racism piggybacks on classism; while in Canada and USA I feel like it's the opposite. In other words, I think the primary source of prejudice here is social class. This should explain where both Flávio Bolsonaro's "whataboutism" and that student's comment come from.

  • This reminds me the Welsh speakers in Chubut. It's, like, ~10k people; same backstory as Canadian Gaelic - immigrants in the XIX century.

  • Preferably a 2D one, to account for both "I luuuuv both" and "a plague in both houses".

  • We could simply map front/back = law/chaos and closed/open = good/evil... but that's booooring.

    Instead, let's say:

    • Cardinal vowels are lawful, glides are chaotic. Everything else is neutral.
    • Good vowels are only defined by height, backness, and roundness. Give them an additional contrast and they become neutral, two and they're evil, three and they're the sounds uttered by Satan when you just reach Hell.

    So for example the schwa strictu sensu is true neutral - it isn't just a central vowel, it's also reduced (shorter). Something like [ɜ̥̃ʊ̥̃] is chaotic evil. But most languages have a backbone of lawful good vowels.

  • I'd say pretty accurate:

    top left

    English verbal paradigm is rather barebones; because of that, the content verb of a sentence often "ditches" meaningful distinctions into the rest of the sentence. Sometimes an aux verb, or even a conjunction. That's the case here; you got a distinction between realis and irrealis, that plenty languages would convey through the verb, but English doesn't.

    Note the "counterfactual timeline" (irrealis past, unreal time etc.) often deals with events the speaker wishes that would have happened in the past.

    mid left

    Ah, here's a paper about this. I didn't read the paper fully, but: apparently it is computable but NP-hard.

    bottom left

    Indo-European. Germanic branch.

    top centre

    There's a proposed language family called Dené-Yeniseian; the languages in question are spoken in Siberia (Yeniseian) and a chunk of North America (Na-Dené).

    Trivia: remember the Huns? Likely Yeniseian speakers.

    schwa

    The current mainstream hypothesis is unvoiced vs. voiced vs. breathy voiced. There's also a bunch of alt hypotheses including glottalisation; for example "stiff" unvoiced (i.e. [p t k]) vs. pre-glottalised vs. "slack" voiced; Javanese has the stiff/slack contrast, and pre-glottalised consonants are somewhat common.

    bottom centre

    Two main pressures:

    • the speaker wants things to be easy to pronounce; e.g. if an articulatory gesture is unneeded, it might get ditched.
    • the hearer wants things to be easy to distinguish; e.g. if two sounds associated with different phonemes are a bit too similar, and the distinction is meaningful, they might drift apart from each other.

    Those two pressures are in a tug-o-war, and that tug-o-war drives sound changes.

    top right

    I feel like the spread of Afro-Asiatic might have to do with this period, as it probably allowed people to migrate further than through drier periods. But past that? I have no idea, and I hate that I have no idea.

    mid right

    Eh... it's complicated. It seems, for most authors, that Tibetan and the Sinitic languages are in different branches of the family; and usually Burmese is placed in Tibetan's branch. Everything else, though? No consensus at all.

    bottom right

    The problem starts with the definition of a language. I'll illustrate it with the Romance languages:

    • If you speak Portuguese you'll probably understand Galician just fine. So let's count them as a single language. It's reasonable, right? Portuguese is basically a Galician dialect.
    • If you speak Galician you'll probably understand Asturian just fine. It makes sense - both originated from Latin dialects spoken right next door to each other. Let's count both as the same language. Alongside Portuguese, as per the step above.
    • Asturian and Castilian/Spanish are really similar, so let's lump them together. Alongside Portuguese and Galician.
    • Castilian and Aragonese, too. Same language as Portuguese, Galician, Asturian.
    • Catalan is really similar to Aragonese. One more into the bag!
    • [one thousand steps later...]
    • Sicilian and Calabrian are really similar, right? Same language then. They get into the same bag as the others.

    So you reach the conclusion that none of those varieties "counts" as a language. Then you proudly put in some paper "number of Romance languages: three (Italo-Western, Sicilian, Romanian). Italian is now an Italo-Western dialect, French is an Italo-Western dialect, everything else is a dialect.

    Except that most of those so-called "Italo-Western speakers" can't understand each other. And the speakers don't consider their native varieties the same language, they consider it as different things.

    But this isn't just with the Romance languages. Cue to English and Scots, or the Germanic varieties in the continent. Or the Sinitic varieties spoken in China. The Bantu family. The Slavic branch. I think Quichua has the same issue, too.

    Yeah, nah, you aren't "counting" them - you're placing arbitrary divisions here and there to make the number bigger or smaller.

  • My Saturday was like: cooking a batch of coxinhas, watching anime, downloading + subtitling the first season of Midnight Diners for my mum, RNG manipulating Emerald in an emulator for a shiny Swablu... I do have some work to do, but it's a few hours worth, and I can send it Monday evening so it's everything fine.

    I'll probably buy a bottle of vodka tomorrow and make some "rangpurcello" - a neighbour gifted me a whole kilo of the fruit, might as well use the skins. (I typically freeze the juice.)

  • It's clearly WIP and currently it sucks. But I'm glad that they're at least trying to address the problem. In the meantime Google is doing its usual "smear the content on the user's snout until it swallows."

  • If my dreams are versions of me from another universe, and I planted trees in both real life and a dream, does this mean the trees I planted in the dreams are versions of the trees I planted in real life?

    So in one universe, Lala (my pine) is fighting the grey aliens! And in another, Malena (my lemon tree) is actually a palm tree, with a face carved in wood instead of leaves!

    Wait, I often dream with a neighbourhood that doesn't exist. (It's as messy as the city in Uzumaki, except my dream precedes me seeing the anime by a lot of time.) Should it be the alt universe counterpart of some RL neighbourhood? ...I feel sorry for whoever lives in that neighbourhood.

  • The key difference is that the internet is a fuckload more useful than what's being sold as AI.

  • Apparently patched. I just tried this out:

    [Prompt] Explain the origin of the English idiom "when the cracker breaks".

    [Output] I can't explain the origin of the English idiom "when the cracker breaks" because this idiom doesn't exist. It's possible you're misremembering or combining parts of other idioms.

    Perhaps you're thinking of:

    • "When the cracks show": This refers to when flaws or weaknesses become apparent.
    • "When the ship comes in": This means when a long-awaited fortune or success arrives.
    • "Crackerjack": This is an adjective meaning excellent or first-rate.

    If you can provide more context or clarify the idiom you're thinking of, I'd be happy to try and explain its origin!

    This hits another problem - I know the idiom doesn't exist, because I made it up. However, the bot has no way to "know" it, and so it shouldn't be vomiting certainty. (Or rather, what a human would interpret as certainty.)

  • I hope this growth snowballs from now on; larger market share → developers release Linux versions for their software → users have less reasons to keep Windows → larger market share. Basically, a network-like effect.

    If Linux reaches ~25% we basically won; the only advantage Windows has at its disposal is that network-like effect - Linux is cheaper (literally free), less encumbered by anti-user restrictions, and you can run it even in a potato.

  • Looking forward, analysts predict Linux could hit 7% by 2027 if trends continue, driven by AI integrations in distributions like those from Canonical

    Or rather, by their optionality. Some people want those tools, some don't want to touch them with a 3m pole; Linux can appease to both, unlike Windows is doing.

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