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UK Communities Mobilize to Defend Themselves as Police Fail to Stop Far-Right Attacks Spurred by Viral Misinformation
  • z spellings are pretty English, fwiw. The s thing only came in pretty belatedly, from the French. Z spellings are still very common in academic writing; OUP requires it in their style guide. There's no defence of defense though.

  • Starmer kills off Rwanda plan on first day as PM
  • Right but this is an easy win for Starmer. Something very unpopular you can scrap, that is costly, that even if you're a bigot you can recognise isn't working, etc. That's something you can instantly do to create the impression you're very different to the previous party. And the impression, per your comment, is impactful. It really doesn't say much one way or the other about more important policies (e.g. like the Tory cuts that he said pre-election he would not axe).

  • Most voters in Great Britain now live in a constituency where the top two parties are not Labour and the Conservatives
  • I mean, the FPTP system is fucked – that aside... For your stat to be right, wouldn't you have to calculate it also in terms of the number of constituents to a given constituency? E.g., Constituency A has 10 constituents, Constituency B has 15 constituents, and Constituency C has 100 constituents; both A + B have a non-Lab/Cons party in first or second place; C has Lab first and Cons second. In that scenario, it wouldn't be true that "most people" live in a constituency where Lab or Cons are not both 1st or 2nd (where A-C is exhaustive).

    I don't know how that would extrapolate to the real constituencies with their varying population/electorate figures. Certainly, it's a very uneven and strange system at present, which allows for all sorts of gerrymandering. But only given the sum of 20 constituencies (per your calculation) where Lab/Cons are not the top two, I don't think you can infer the situation for most people.

    In any case: fuck this system, PR soon please.

  • Substack says it will not remove or demonetize Nazi content
  • There's a lot of empirical claims surrounding this topic, and I'm unaware who really has good evidence for them. The Substack guy e.g. is claiming that banning or demonetising would not "solve the problem" – how do we really know? At the very least, you'd think that demonetising helps to some extent, because if it's not profitable to spread certain racist ideas, that's simply less of an incentive. On the other hand, plenty of people on this thread are suggesting it does help address the problem, pointing to Reddit and other cases – but I don't think anyone really has a grip on the empirical relationship between banning/demonetising, shifting ideologues to darker corners of the internet and what impact their ideas ultimately have. And you'd think the relationship wouldn't be straightforward either – there might be some general patterns but it could vary according to so many contingent and contextual factors.

  • 9to5Google: iMessage for Android doesn't matter, just use good apps
  • So before you can message anyone you have to download whatsapp?

    I love how this seems like a near insurmountable hurdle. Install an app?? On a phone?!

    I have a relative who is ~85 years old; he uses WhatsApp. It's really not that hard.

  • 9to5Google: iMessage for Android doesn't matter, just use good apps
  • The elephant in the room, of course, is that this is literally only a problem in the United States. Everywhere else in the world, folks are totally fine using messaging apps. WhatsApp is pretty popular worldwide, and there are regional favorites too. But, the point is, it’s only in the States that people seem to be against this idea. The answer for why is very much up for debate, but the conversation is, at this point, just getting exhausting.

    Can confirm, as a Brit. We probably would have a sardonic explanation for why only people in the States are against using other messengers too...

  • Apps that shouldn't be Subscriptions
  • But loans are temporal. That's all that is happening – you're renting out software (akin to digital library borrowing), in some sense, not buying a product.

    The problem is how to do it otherwise and maintain enough income to ensure continued active development for future updates.

    I don't have a solution to it, and subscriptions aren't ideal, but that's the problem at least.

  • Fuck Subscriptions. Here is how to setup Streamio like a pro
  • Right but OP isn't talking about Stremio/Torrentio without Real Debrid, and neither is the guy in the comment chain you were replying to. I'm not sure you've a good grip on what Debrid services are by saying "just another Netflix"; it reads like you're imposing your grievance about Stremio onto a thread that mentions it but does not recommend the use case you specifically object to.

  • Fuck Subscriptions. Here is how to setup Streamio like a pro
  • That's a fair criticism, but worth noting that if you're plugging in an RD API then the vast majority of the time you're not torrenting at all (and never on your network). You're downloading from the cache. One person, one time has to request a torrent file to that cache. Which has likely always happened before you're making any requests, unless it's something very niche indeed.

  • Fuck Subscriptions. Here is how to setup Streamio like a pro
  • Many people think you do not, for the reason I just mentioned in a reply to the comment you're replying to. There are other reasons you might think it wise, but it is not true that with this setup you are torrenting on your home network.

  • Fuck Subscriptions. Here is how to setup Streamio like a pro
  • If you are using torrentio, you are downloading via torrent on your home network.

    Because you can configure Torrentio to work with an RD API, this is not true. That's the point of the setup – the end user is neither seeding nor leeching any torrent files. They are using the add-on to access a cache elsewhere, providing them with a simple and encrypted DDL.

  • Fuck Subscriptions. Here is how to setup Streamio like a pro
  • It's a question of whether they would ever get subpoenaed really, and then whether they'd comply. I'm not sure it's worth it from the copyright holders' perspective. The individual users are getting DDL links, so they're not uploading – i.e. "sharing" – anything. These days, if holders go after anyone, it's for the sharing not the downloading. As for compliance, I don't think we have any evidence one way or the other, as (afaik) they are yet to be subpoenaed (despite running for a long time).

    It's also worth noting if you do want to do this totally privately: when you buy an RD subscription, you cannot use a VPN during that process (they block known IPs). So, you would want to use a public WiFi connection somewhere, and choose an anonymous payment method like paysafecard.

  • Why does Gboard replace spaces with characters I add between words?
  • now i'm comfortable with openboard, and keeping an eye on florisboard

    Sadly, the swiping options on these ones are useless or nonexistent. I find only gboard tolerable for this form of text input now, which is really crap. Swype was king. Long live Swype.

  • Why does Gboard replace spaces with characters I add between words?
  • It's like people standing in line at the supermarket instead of using the scan-it-yourself-and-self-checkout app. Why???

    Some people like the human connection. Some are lonely. Some find the machines stressful.

    Look, I'm a consummate checkout-machine-user and always go for that option, much as I always swipe my keyboard, but still, I get it. I actually think it's a shame that ordinary parts of our human experience that used to be mediated by humans are increasingly dwindling.

  • There’s a new iMessage for Android app — and it actually works
  • The real issue here is that people in the US are tied to using SMS for real-time chat groups when so many better (and private, and well known) alternatives exist. Thankfully, in Europe, nobody so far as I know ever really uses SMS anymore – whether for single or group chats.

  • Decent IPTV apps for MacOS?

    Hey all. I'm currently trialling out IPTV providers, and one of the things that's putting me off entirely is the lack of decent Mac apps, specifically ones that allow for Xtream logins and not only m3u.

    The provider I'm testing out suggested Smarters Lite from the iPad store – it runs fine, but it fullscreens with black borders down the sides.

    Aside from that, I've tried IPTVnator (FOSS, so that's great) but doesn't actually display the content.

    The only thing that works great for individual channel viewing is using Stremio with an add-on, but there's no EPG interface there, so no channel hopping and other features.

    Any suggestions?

    ETA: compatibility with Apple Silicon (M1/M2) chips would be vital too.

    24
    InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)JA
    janguv @lemmy.dbzer0.com
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