MissGutsy

joined 1 month ago
[–] MissGutsy@lemmy.blahaj.zone 4 points 5 hours ago

Der war dann ja auch noch in Begleitung seiner 41 jährigen Tochter. Ich dachte mir den ganzen Artikel lang was die eigentlich dazu gesagt hat oder warum sie ihn nicht gestoppt hat. Stellt sich raus: sie wurde am Ende, nachdem die Polizei das Auto gestoppt hat, ins Krankenhaus gebracht weil sie einen "stark desorientierten Eindruck" gemacht hat (unter Drogen?)

[–] MissGutsy@lemmy.blahaj.zone 36 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Additional context: every time he points to the side hes talking directly to the politicians of the AFD, a far right, russia aligned party which heavily profited off of russian disinformation campaigns in the last election cycle

[–] MissGutsy@lemmy.blahaj.zone 16 points 1 week ago (2 children)

Who wants to bet how long they last before they get paused again?

[–] MissGutsy@lemmy.blahaj.zone 4 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Don't do this too often though! Prolonged dilation (>2 hours) can damage your sphincter and give you incontinence in the long run. Probably not a problem if done rarely, but if it happens regularly it can become a problem

[–] MissGutsy@lemmy.blahaj.zone 9 points 1 week ago (2 children)

Honest question: why can't both communities just exist separately? Isn't this the magic of the Fediverse?

Your biggest point is that the communities are identical in content and I disagree. Just looking at the top posts of the week, the feddit.uk version has a bunch of memes, while feddid.org seems more news focused. The Fediverse allows us to moderate these communities differently and to have different styles of communities, perfectly shown with this example. They are not identical.

We shouldn't build up just one community all the time. That just runs into the same problem why people disliked reddit: centralized moderation. It's not a problem now, but if it ever will be, why can't there be alternatives. Let's not try to become the next reddit, but become something better.

Also some people left reddit because it all became to big, they want small groups that actually feel like a community. If people prefer a smaller lemmy community, let them have it. They voted against merging, so let them have it. !buyeuropean@feddit.uk is already linked in their sidebar. Everybody that wants to can switch the community or subscribe to both (which is a possibility!!).

I think you're in the wrong here, at least on trying to grow the uk community over the org one.

[–] MissGutsy@lemmy.blahaj.zone 38 points 1 week ago (3 children)

Just so you know, "Bild" is a german right wing magazine. Imagine fox news as a newspaper. They are well known to report false information to smear left wing initiatives and further hurt victims if they are left wing. Since the victims of police brutality here are apparently pro-palastine, Bild cannot be trusted to report accurately

[–] MissGutsy@lemmy.blahaj.zone 8 points 1 week ago (1 children)

It also doesn't specify how often/quick you can do it, so you could still move at breakneck speeds, 7 inches at a time

[–] MissGutsy@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

Let's just make a new text standard, call it "tinychar" or something. You don't need any personal notes when it's a known concept

[–] MissGutsy@lemmy.blahaj.zone 2 points 2 weeks ago (3 children)

We should all make up our personal character systems so we won't have to worry about this situation /s

[–] MissGutsy@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 points 2 weeks ago

I agree, but it's also not surprising. I think somebody else posted the article about kenyan Facebook moderators in this comment section somewhere if you want to know more

[–] MissGutsy@lemmy.blahaj.zone 3 points 2 weeks ago (4 children)

Interesting fact: many bigger Lemmy instances are already using AI systems to filter out dangerous content in pictures before they even get uploaded.

Context: Last year there was a big spam attack of CSAM and gore on multiple instances. Some had to shut down temporarily because they couldn't keep up with moderation. I don't remember the name of the tool, but some people made a program that uses AI to try and recognize these types of images and filter them out. This heavily reduced the amount of moderation needed during these attacks.

Early AI moderation systems are actually something more platforms should use. Human moderators, even paid ones, shouldn't need to go though large amounts of violent content every day. Moderators at Facebook have been arguing these points for a while now, many of which have gotten mental issues though their work and don't get any medical support. So no matter what you think of AI and if it's moral, this is actually one of the few good applications in my opinion

[–] MissGutsy@lemmy.blahaj.zone 5 points 2 weeks ago (5 children)

Also, 1024 characters assumes you are just using ASCII, which has a bunch of control codes and characters of other languages you won't use. If you trim these and remove uppercase letters you could probably make your own custom letter set that fits 2 characters in a byte, doubling your information to make it 2048 chars

 

Esolangs.org Link

In Mazerunner, your code is a maze which is traversed by a rat that always walks along the left wall. If you don't feed the rat enough cheese, it dies from starvation. If you feed it too quickly, it dies from overfeeding.

The rat starts at 'S', eats cheese at 'c' and finishes the program at 'C' (the big cheese pile). Everytime it runs over 'a' or 'b' it adds 1 to the A or B accumulator. 'A' and 'B' do the same for subtracting. 'T' only allows turning left if the B accumulator is 0. 'P' places the A accumulator onto the stack, 'R' outputs the entire stack. There's a few more instructions that are not quite as important.

It's quite a fun and simplistic language (not turing complete in my opinion, due to lacking stack manipulation) that has a few more tricks to it than you might expect at first sight. The challenge of keeping the rat fed is pretty funny and learning how to golf your code is super interesting.

Review: 8/10 you should give it a try at least once (but I'm biased for 2D languages)

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