bigfoot

joined 1 year ago
[–] bigfoot@lemm.ee 11 points 3 months ago

"Money as a vestigial cultural relic" is a great concept. You're right, Latinum doesn't provide the Ferengi with anything but status.

[–] bigfoot@lemm.ee 7 points 3 months ago (1 children)

I think about this exact topic a lot and I think you are mostly right, but I also think that open source replicators would be an agent of change, especially if one could be used to manufacture parts to make another. Of course, without land to make things on conflicts will arise. But once the need for money is removed some people will choose to "opt out" of society and start building a parallel one similar to how the open source community exists alongside closed source software.

[–] bigfoot@lemm.ee 2 points 3 months ago

Nerds like to argue but this the easiest set-it-and-forget it way is to get a raspi or old PC and put some home server OS on it like CasaOS, Umbrel, or TrueNAS. Then get the following apps:

  • Torrent app like Deluge or qBittorrent
  • Prowlarr - Searches torrent sites
  • Radar - Manages movies
  • Sonarr - Manages television shows
  • Plex - organizes downloaded media and streams to your devices
  • Overserr (optional) a friendly GUI for requesting media.

Trash guides are useful for getting it all set up. There is a learning curve but once it's up and running you don't need to think about it.

[–] bigfoot@lemm.ee 11 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) (2 children)

Oster Fast Feed is not a "budget" pick, but then again, few BIFL options are.

Edit: 76023-510 is the corded model.

[–] bigfoot@lemm.ee 1 points 4 months ago
[–] bigfoot@lemm.ee 1 points 4 months ago

Yes, strong moderation by members of the community is sufficient to recognize and remove bad (human) actors. The question is one of volume and overwhelming those human mods. GPT can create hundreds of bad-faith accounts.

[–] bigfoot@lemm.ee 1 points 4 months ago (1 children)

It's theirs. They can do whatever they want. Any limits their power within the instance/community is purely voluntary on the part of the owner.

[–] bigfoot@lemm.ee -1 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) (2 children)

Mods and admins on the Fediverse are not democratically elected, they have complete control. Accusing one of "power tripping", in their own community, on the instance they presumably pay for, is not a rational accusation, since they definitionally cannot exist in a state of less power. What that community is trying to do is use the threat of public shaming to influence behavior. It's how you get weak moderation and generic communities where bad actors can thrive. A community dedicated to "Stopping bad mods" sounds good on the surface, but it's an argument made in bad faith.

[–] bigfoot@lemm.ee -1 points 4 months ago (2 children)

Why are you putting up with a "shitty" mod? Are you trying to force your speech in a community who has asked you not to?

[–] bigfoot@lemm.ee 9 points 4 months ago (1 children)

Great response, thank you. My concern is more so focused on future measures; what happens if/when registration applications are answerable by a bot? It's not hard to imagine. What happens when a GPT powered bot leaves totally "normal" unique comments 90% of the time, but occasionally recommends a product or pushes a political agenda?

[–] bigfoot@lemm.ee 1 points 4 months ago

Further, there’s nothing that states an interest-based instance needs any registration. One could imagine a world where local instances have all the users and identities, and the interest based instances simply provide communities to the larger fediverse with no users of their own.

Yes, I've had this same thought and I think it's a great model! If it comes to pass or not remains to be seen. But the concept is good!

[–] bigfoot@lemm.ee 1 points 4 months ago (7 children)

"Power tripping mods" definitionally cannot exist on the fediverse where anyone can create an instance or community. Even on Reddit, 99% of the time someone said a mod was "power tripping" it was just a right winger upset that the mod removed their disruptive nonsense.

The purpose of communities like the one you linked to is to shame mods into employing a passive, generic bare-minimum style of moderation, when we should be encouraging the opposite if we want diversity in the fediverse.

 

From Trekmovie:

David Ajala: A moment I wanted to share is something that happens in season 5. I remember speaking to Alex Kurtzman about this at the end of shooting season 4 and it was an idea that he shared with me and I think Michelle Paradise was the only other person that knew about this thing at the time. Then cut to season 5… we get to come back to Toronto and create something so very special. [Sonequa interjects “We did”] I’m so proud and happy that we got to do that because you know how amazing that was to do. And I can’t wait for you guys to experience the very secretive thing which I can’t talk about which we got to do.

 

Lets just hope they don't mean the "I liked it before it got woke" jerkwads.

 

I have a few shows like the Daily Show I'll sometimes watch the monologue but not the full episode.

Plex has a setting to "Keep unwatched episodes" which will delete never-watched episodes, and another to "delete X days after viewing" for fully-watched episodes. But if an episode is partially watched, neither applies and it just sits there.

This seems like a weird oversight and I am wondering if there's a setting I'm missing. I can't be the first person who wants "delete 7 days after adding regardless of anything else"

 

I have a few shows like the Daily Show I'll sometimes watch the monologue but not the full episode.

Plex has a setting to "Keep unwatched episodes" which will delete never-watched episodes, and another to "delete X days after viewing" for fully-watched episodes. But if an episode is partially watched, neither applies and it just sits there.

This seems like a weird oversight and I am wondering if there's a setting I'm missing. I can't be the first person who wants "delete 7 days after adding regardless of anything else"

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