[-] Kichae@kbin.social 60 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

People keep claiming this this, and yet it does little to explain hmthr large number of smaller companies that have no real estate holdings.

Also, it totally overlooks what the actual purpose of money is to the wealthy, namely control. It's not money for money's sake, nor is it control for money's sake, but rather money for control's sake.

Meanwhile, WFH is a big shift in worker autonomy. Many employers have treated employees working from home with extreme suspicion, going so far as to accuse us of theft just because they can't directly watch us sit at a desk. They installed computer input trackers on remote hardware, they got belligerent over the idea that people maybe - just maybe - they were doing laundry or soemthing on company time, and they're nettled over the idea that people were sitting on their couches.

This isn't the behaviour of people concerned about their stock portfolios, or of landlords upset that their renters may not renew their lease in 5 years. These are not rational actors making rational decisions about long term consequences. These are people who have lost their fucking minds over having given up just the slightest, insignificant amount of control over their employees lives and, importantly, having handed it over to those employees.

They'll happily take a productivity hit, a revenue decline, or even a massive loss in institutional knowledge if it means clawing back these miniscule gains in worker power.

And if we're lucky, it'll cost them significantly more control over workers in the long run.

[-] Kichae@kbin.social 50 points 1 year ago

If they existed to feed people, not to maximize profits, there'd be no issue. But like so much else that has emerged in the last 15 years, they came to be because money was free and the people with it were taking bets on "disrupting" technologies. Now that money has a cost again, investors are unwilling to wait on the tech to mature, or on the existing markets to crumble.

[-] Kichae@kbin.social 56 points 1 year ago

They make it obtuse on purpose, both to prop up the tax return industry, and to make it both possible to create loopholes for the rich to avoid taxes, and make it so that the rest of us can't really benefit from those loopholes.

It's Byzantine on purpose. They could simplify it any time they wanted to.

[-] Kichae@kbin.social 50 points 1 year ago

Wait, this is a Bethesda game. I assumed that that was the explanation.

[-] Kichae@kbin.social 49 points 1 year ago

I wonder how much Putin paid for Elon. I can't help but imagine it was as little as a scratch behind the ear and telling him that "he's a good boy, yes he is! Yes he is!"

[-] Kichae@kbin.social 59 points 1 year ago

Save scumming is natural, and normal, and nothing to be ashamed of.

It does make hair grow on your palms, though.

[-] Kichae@kbin.social 46 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

D&D is also as big as its ever been, especially with a latent audience of viewers who maybe don't play very often, and at a time when there aren't enough DMs for everyone who wants to play to find a table. Plus, Baldur's Gate is prime 30-year-nostalgia-cycle bait for millennial+ PC gamers.

[-] Kichae@kbin.social 56 points 1 year ago

"Legal and final" are weasel words. Plenty of things that are rigged are legal. Take, uh, the law for a gazillion examples.

This comes off as continuing to fuel the narrative while also trying to slap a "please don't sue us again" sticker on it.

[-] Kichae@kbin.social 46 points 1 year ago

Have you considered just forcing everyone to access your sites via Internet Explorer 5.5?

[-] Kichae@kbin.social 49 points 1 year ago

Make default programs support JPEG XL and the problem goes away, too, all with less Google.

[-] Kichae@kbin.social 47 points 1 year ago

This will be a huge selling point for the Teamsters of they're serious about trying to unionize Amazon.

[-] Kichae@kbin.social 46 points 1 year ago

Wow, you're running lemmy.world, mastodon.world, and calckey.world for 1200 EUR/month? Thtat's kind of incredible. Lemmy.world says you have about 28k MAU (I assume that's posting/commenting, not just logged-in users?), and mastodon.world says 37k active users (is that daily, weekly, or monthly?) So, that's 65k active users (out of 200k-300k accounts) at 1.8 cents/month each.

The costs of community owned social media are even less than I had pictured.

view more: ‹ prev next ›

Kichae

joined 1 year ago