Ex-mil, ex-sec, ex-treme, & ex-plosive.
Go ahead. Squeeze me. Crack that vial and watch the fireworks erupt.

Ditching Windows as it has become spyware and adware.
Flipping to Linux.

#defenestrate
#defenestrating
#defenestration
#defenestratewindows
#linux

  • 0 Posts
  • 15 Comments
Joined 7 months ago
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Cake day: November 19th, 2024

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  • @shirro

    The ‘ID is required for beer and smokes’ example is misleading.

    Most adults are NOT required to provide ID to purchase such items. Only those who look “Under 25 years” *may* be required to produce ID, and even then, that ID is NOT recorded. (An exception may the the NT for alcohol sales.)

    Requiring the citizenry to provide ID to either a social media entity OR via a government controlled gateway is something that must NOT be tolerated.

    A requirement such as this will ‘chill’ free speech, weaken our democracy, and undoubtedly expose our personal information to hackers.

    It’s akin to allowing a person to purchase a pen, paper, envelope, and stamps - but then demanding the writer present both their ID and the unsealed letter at a Post Office, so that one’s written words may be recorded against one’s name.

    To paraphrase Robert Bolt, it’s akin to “cutting down privacy to protect children from the devil”.

    If you wish to argue in favour of this incoming law, do so *after* you’ve sent a copy of your ID to me.



  • @ada

    Methinks Zag was suggesting (possibly) that ‘age verification’ should be a *device* and *operating system* (& platform) feature that would be *inactive* by default.

    In other words, there should be nothing for an adult (without kids) to do in order for their devices to function as they do now.

    A parent would be required to activate a ‘child lock’ feature on a device before handing it to their kids.

    Unfortunately, all governments are too chicken-shit scared to compel parents to do this small thing.

    Governments *prefer* the option of compelling ALL users to provide ‘age verification’ (possibly Gov’t issued ID) to the relevant platforms.

    For the ‘Liberals’ this would be a natural extension of their right wing fascism.

    For the Labor party, it’s merely a reflection of their general incompetence.

    @Zagorath

    #auspol


  • @brucethemoose

    Yeah, cool!

    I know nothing about radioactive contamination in the environment.

    I was merely commenting on the ‘fearmongering’ aspect.

    It should (hopefully) be uncommon to see ‘fearmongering’ or ‘click bait’ from The Guardian, but everyone should be alert to ‘alarmist’ language.

    The Guardian was perhaps unclear that:
    Some sites have 4x the ‘nominal background radiation’, and
    Some sites have up to 4500x the ‘nominal background radiation’.

    But, I don’t think The Guardian was ‘fearmongering’…
    😁

    I’m going to continue to stay away from all radioactive sources while preparing my banana smoothies on a granite bench top, and smoking the odd cigarette!

    I couldn’t possibly be exposed to any form of radiation from those activities!
    ☢️





  • @princessnorah

    No. Not really.

    If ‘crap’ is made, it won’t be sold unless people wish to buy ‘crap’.

    My point is that the quality of goods made in China has got *nothing* to do with racism and *everything* to do with buyers’ price expectations, buyers’ notions of acceptable quality, and market forces.

    In this instance, the buyer (not the OP) ‘took a chance’ with a cheaper product which failed immediately. If sufficient buyers of this product demand and obtain refunds, the manufacturer would be forced to either stop making them or possibly increase their unit price with a concomitant increase in quality.

    The reason that smartphones of high quality come out of China is because that is what is demanded by the buyers and with regard to the price they are willing to pay.