ksynwa

joined 4 years ago
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[–] ksynwa@lemmygrad.ml 4 points 1 week ago

What EU wants is irrelevant though

[–] ksynwa@lemmygrad.ml 4 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

what are you gonna do now? i might switch to keepassxc but i don't wanna learn new stuff.

[–] ksynwa@lemmygrad.ml 4 points 4 weeks ago

side-tracking

Out of the 800,000 people each year who committed suicide, on average perhaps more capable than the rest of us, what if a few would have been instrumental in developing fusion power?

I don't like arguments like this. Especially when it comes from someone in the tech field. It seems to imply that climate change is a technical problem and that some silver bullet solution from a savant will solve it. Meanwhile in the real world, the economic and political system has been blowing all the increasing energy capacity on useless stuff like cryptocurrency and now AI.

[–] ksynwa@lemmygrad.ml 3 points 1 month ago

Maybe rocket.chat?

[–] ksynwa@lemmygrad.ml 12 points 1 month ago

I'll relay this to Xi Jinping immediately he'll be glad to know of your approval

[–] ksynwa@lemmygrad.ml 5 points 1 month ago (2 children)

How do the SaaS AI code assistants work? I am guessing they have to send the entire file or the codebase to their datacenter. Won't this be a problem for corporations who want to protect their codebase?

[–] ksynwa@lemmygrad.ml 9 points 1 month ago (3 children)

we maintain the same goal – to build digital advertising solutions that respect individuals’ rights

Does it include the right to be able to choose not to be advertised to?

Yes, advertising enables free access to most of what the internet provides

What does this even mean?

I don't read their blog posts but seems like they have fully embraced startup lingo.

[–] ksynwa@lemmygrad.ml 5 points 1 month ago

It's not how open source works but how venture funding works which is boggling minds here

[–] ksynwa@lemmygrad.ml 3 points 1 month ago

Git is decentralised by nature. It's what allows mirroring the repo on other forges even when git repos are hosted on proprietary platforms like GitHub.

[–] ksynwa@lemmygrad.ml 38 points 1 month ago

They have always equated sovereignty with instability

 

Poverty is taken to be a homogeneous phenomenon irrespective of the mode of production that is under consideration. Even reputed economists believe in this homogeneous conception of poverty.

In fact, however, poverty under capitalism is entirely different from poverty in pre-capitalist times. Even if for statistical purposes poverty is defined as lack of access to a set of use-values that are essential for living irrespective of the mode of production, the fact remains that this lack is enmeshed under capitalism within a set of social relationships that are [unique] and different from earlier. Poverty under capitalism thus takes a specific form associated with insecurity and indignity that makes it particularly unbearable.

There are roughly four proximate features of capitalist poverty.

The first arises from the inviolability of contracts, which means that irrespective of their conditions, the poor have to pay whatever they are contracted to pay; this leads to a loss of assets or destitution.

In pre-capitalist times, for instance in Mughal India, [the tax was levied on produce rather than the land. In years of poor harvest, the taxation was scaled down accordingly]. Put differently, the burden of the poor harvest got shared among the producers and the overlord.

But, in colonial India, reflecting its capitalist ethos, the tax got levied on land; the contract between the producer and the overlord changed: the producer would be allowed to cultivate a plot of land provided he paid a certain amount of revenue to the State. This meant that in a poor harvest year, the burden of the poor harvest [...] fell exclusively on the producer. The destitution of the peasantry, that is, the transfer of peasants’ assets to money lenders followed from this. Poverty, in short, was associated with destitution which, therefore, tended to have a cumulative impact on the producers.

Put differently, [the producers' lack of access ro use-value (good, services) lead to a deprivation of their assets], which meant an increase in their vulnerability over time. There was thus a dynamic introduced into poverty.

The second feature of capitalist poverty is that it is experienced by individuals, whether individual persons or households. In a pre-capitalist society where people lived in communities, other members of the community, whether belonging to the same caste-group or simply to the same village, came to the help of the poor in particular years of bad harvests or natural calamities. Privations, in other, words were not suffered in isolation.

Under capitalism, however, when the communities are broken up because of the inexorable logic of the system, and the individual emerges as the primary economic category, this individual also suffers privations in isolation.

Non-Marxist traditions in economic theory fail to see this basic change because they are bereft of any sense of history. Marx had accused classical economics of this blindness toward history: the individual that emerged only at a certain point in history, was taken by it as having existed all along.

Neo-classical economics [therefore] missed the contrast between capitalist poverty and pre-capitalist poverty, the former experienced by isolated and alienated individuals and the latter referring only to the deprivation suffered within a community and hence to a sharing of deprivation.

The fact that capitalism is characterised by alienated individuals (until they form “combinations” or trade unions which bring them together in common struggles against the system) and that it is these individuals who experience poverty, gives poverty an additional dimension; it is not just the lack of access to a set of use-values that constitutes capitalist poverty, but also a psychological trauma that goes with this lack of access.

This becomes clearer when we look at the third feature of capitalist poverty. It arises for two reasons: one is the low wages of those employed, and the other is the absence of employment. It is the reserve army of labour that is particularly afflicted by poverty.

In fact, in economies like ours, where the “employed” and the “unemployed” are not two distinct categories, but most workers barring a tiny minority are unemployed for several days in a week or several hours in a day, the psychological trauma associated with poverty arising from the inability to find employment, is all the more pervasive. The lack of employment appears as a personal failure on the part of the individual, as something that saps the individual’s self-worth, apart from causing lack of access to a given set of use-values.

The fourth feature of capitalist poverty is the opacity to those afflicted by it of the factors causing it. Poverty in the sense of a lack of access to a given set of use-values in a pre-capitalist society is palpably rooted in the size of what is produced, and in the share taken from it by the overlord. Indeed, this is visible to everyone: a bad harvest may reduce the size of the produce and hence accentuate poverty (even when the reduction in output is shared); likewise, a rapacious overlord may snatch so much from the producers that many of them are reduced to poverty even in normal harvest years. But why a person remains unemployed and hence poor under capitalist conditions, remains a mystery to the person himself. Likewise, why prices suddenly rise, pushing more people into poverty, remains a mystery to those afflicted.

[...] The war in Ukraine today certainly contributes to the world-wide rise in food prices that accentuates poverty even in a remote African or Indian village. The apparent opacity of the roots of capitalist poverty is linked to the phenomenon of global inter-connectedness under capitalism; that is, to the fact that global developments, developments in distant lands, have an impact on every village, no matter how remote.

These specific features of capitalist poverty have important implications, of which I shall draw attention to only one. Many well-intentioned persons, who would like to reduce or eliminate poverty, suggest [universal basic income]. This, of course, has not happened on the requisite scale anywhere, so that poverty continues as a social phenomenon [...]. Even suggestions for transfers are invariably for somewhat paltry transfers. But all this refers to poverty in the sense of inadequate access to a set of use-values, that is, poverty that does not refer specifically to capitalist poverty.

Even if sufficient transfers could be made and poverty in the sense of lack of access to use-values could be overcome, that still would not overcome capitalist poverty which also entails a psychological trauma, a robbing of self-worth through unemployment.

What is required is the universal provision of employment, education, healthcare, old-age security, and food, that would restore to people the dignity of being citizens of a democratic society; but this would involve going beyond neo-liberal capitalism.

 

I wanna host something like Invidious/Piped on my SBC which can allow me to consume YouTube slop without ads.

Normally my flow for consuming YouTube slop is to download the video using yt-dlp which is then made available via jellyfin. Sometimes I view YouTube videos from my computer's Firefox but today I was shown ads despite uBlock Origin which has left me scarred and deformed (metaphorically).

I would like to run a YouTube frontend on my SBC as a backup. Public instances have not performed well for me. It would also be good for devices that don't let you use adblockers in some capacity.

I have looked at Invidious and Piped. While they are great to use, I found that their stack has a lot of components which I am hoping to avoid since they can be hard to manage.

So I'm wondering if someone here runs something like this locally for private use. Any input is appreciated.

 
 

I bought a small, inexpensive, indie game and liked it. I couldn't find it anywhere else so I am sharing it with you all. Since we are in a commie cesspool, instead of Steam keys I will share a cracked copy of the game.

If you like the game and if it's possible for you, please try and support the devs.

Steam link

SynopsisGood news: magic is real! Bad news: magic is highly illegal. Star Seeker is a wizard and you must solve a wizard crime or else get thrown in wizard jail by wizard- I mean, just regular police. In this short point 'n' click adventure, collect evidence and use it to clear up the useless detective's many confusions- and don't worry about getting it wrong. Every hare-brained idea you can possibly pitch to the detective prompts unique dialogue!

Links

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submitted 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago) by ksynwa@lemmygrad.ml to c/comradeship@lemmygrad.ml
 

Today is the consecration of the Ram Mandir in Ayodhya. It is supposedly built on the place of birth of Ram (the protagonist of the Hindu epic Ramayana).

Even more significantly, where it is built used to stand a mosque called Babrei Masjid. It was built in 16th century and was razed by Hindu faacist by mobs in 1992.

The consecration ceremony will be attended by big names like the Prime Minister.

 

For example, I would like whether countries like China, India are self-sufficient when it comes foods. For example, if some country produces the wheat it if not, how much is imported and other stuff like that.

 

WeWork was a company that made the news because it's propagandists turned out to be frauds and it went bust despite massive overhype.

But I don't know the details. What I don't understand is how it was so hyped in the first place. From my understanding they rented out office spaces. But is that really that revolutionary? What was their value proposition?

 

Lenin in Imperialism talks about the emergence of finance capital as the major driver of imperial conquests. These days we have seen trends of "financialisation" of western economies coupled with deindustrialisation.

I guess what confuses me is why this trend towards financialisation is a thing where you cede real material industrial power in favour of large banks.

 

The ICJ case filed by South Africa I feel is the only concerted campaign I am seeing that pressuring Israel against committing genocidal settler colonialism (outside of the resistance by some Arab countries).

If ICJ is not a kangaroo court they will end up ruling their actions as genocide. The evidence is plenty.

Can any good come out of it? Or is it hot air?

 

Steam link

Has anyone played this? You play an enby wizard trying to solve a murder in a world where magic is illegal. Thinking of getting it this weekend. The playtime is less than 5 hours so I should be able to finish it in a day.

 

Nooooooo

 

The game is sitting at 90 on Metacritic at the moment which I think is overrated.

First things first, there are some things that the game does great. Traversal feels great. The game on a technical level performs excellent and instantaneous fast travel feels like magic. Stealth gameplay is very fun too though it does not get much focus.

On the other hand, the most important aspects of the game--story and combat--are underwhelming.

The story is standard capeshit so not much to say there. I liked Miles ascendancy to the status of the primary Spider-Man but Peter's struggle seemed a bit forced. There are some heartfelt moments. Other than that it's just them fighting the Bad Guys (TM). There are zero criticisms of class structure and NY is portrayed as being a free reforms away from paradise. At least the voice acting is passable.

Combat is really boring. Mostly involves spamming attack button, press the Dodge button when the indicator comes up and spamming abilities on cooldown. Boss fights are so goddamned boring.

So yeah that's why I think the game was just alright. Also it's budget was a bewildering $300 million.

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