PhilipTheBucket

joined 6 days ago

The level of the water in the dam has nothing at all to do with the dilution of what goes into the sanitary sewer.

[–] PhilipTheBucket@piefed.social 1 points 1 day ago (3 children)

more likely in the top 5

They definitely are not.

I think you don't actually have knowledge about this stuff and are just kind of spinning out theories... I mean, it's fine, I am not particularly expert and am just kind of speculating also according to my lack of knowledge. But some of the stuff you are saying is just objectively immediately visible as not true, and it makes me question your judgement about broader and more subjective conclusions.

Yes, Israel bad, nukes bad, crazy people running countries in the Mideast and getting away with mass murder is bad. We should stop having nukes, at some point; if global warming doesn't get us, something someday is going to be wrong and it's going to be real real bad.

[–] PhilipTheBucket@piefed.social 1 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Broken link

[–] PhilipTheBucket@piefed.social 1 points 1 day ago (7 children)

Just to be clear, I haven't used "thermonuclear" in any other of my responses in this post, and was only doing so in this single instance to respond directly to your text here (emphasis mine):

I think that’s true, functionally speaking, of basically any thermonuclear-armed state.

Yeah, because not every nuclear-armed state could effectively end the world if they got in an existential armed conflict. I think every thermonuclear state could (and likely would). That's what I meant by that.

Not much to add to the rest of it, but I said it in the precise way I did for a precise reason.

[–] PhilipTheBucket@piefed.social 4 points 1 day ago (4 children)

terrible for developers

He brought up specific things from the POV of working on subsurface where Linux made things a lot more difficult for them than every "consumer" operating system.

I worked on the packaging projects he is discussing.

Which packaging projects? I don't even remember him talking about particular projects (aside from Debian itself), just about the general landscape of the problem and the attitudes of distro makers that have created it.

AppImage at the time was essentially the same thing as he was aiming for, but it has some security drawbacks. He hated them. He wanted to be them.

Post this talk, Flatpak came out, which is an improvement on the AppImage premise, but has layers, so uses less disk...in theory. He hated it.

I notice neither of these has made all that much of an impact. I have never in my life used either one of them or been encouraged to by anyone else, it has always been package management, or Docker, or pick your binary tarball, or curl | sudo sh and cross fingers.

He wants the unattainable technical solution just like every other developer.

He attained two totally separate attainable technical solutions which solved massive problems in the tech ecosystem and shape the landscape of computing today (one-and-a-half, GNU deserves quite a bit of credit.) I happen to agree mostly with his judgement on this particular problem, so it's easier for me to see it that way, but I definitely would not dismiss out-of-hand his judgement on the right way to approach significant problems.

[–] PhilipTheBucket@piefed.social 9 points 1 day ago (2 children)

Steam I think is probably the closest thing to "right" for the problem he was describing. You pick your app, it downloads and then it works. There's some behind-the-scenes nonsense involved, but it is in actuality hidden from the end-user, in a way that it is not in any of the "we fixed the Linux desktop!" solutions I have seen that are in actuality just another instance of XKCD 927. I was actually really pleased that he brought up Valve since that was the example that came to mind when he was laying out the problem.

I think it is okay if Linux is bad on "the desktop," honestly. The world needs tractors and consumer-grade cars. They both have use cases. If what you need is a tractor, and you're comfortable with the fact that it's not going to work like a car, then a tractor will do things that are totally impossible with a Hyundai Elantra. That doesn't mean we need to make tractors just as user-friendly as cars are, so that people can have one vehicle that does both. It is okay for some things to have a learning curve. But I think the example of the difficulties they had with subsurface are really significant things, it's not just a question of "oh yeah it works different," there are things that are just worse.

I think something like Arch or NixOS is probably the closest to "right" at this point. There is still a learning curve, so maybe not for everyone, but it's manageable and things aren't set up in gratuitously difficult ways. Maybe Bazzite, based on what I've heard, but I have not tried it so IDK.

[–] PhilipTheBucket@piefed.social 2 points 1 day ago (6 children)

When did they break Tor? Are you sure they didn't just exploit vulnerabilities on an onion site that was hosted on Tor or something?

[–] PhilipTheBucket@piefed.social 15 points 1 day ago (9 children)

I do too, clearly as does Linus. He's just talking about some of the issues that prevent it from getting adopted by the normies.

[–] PhilipTheBucket@piefed.social 1 points 1 day ago (9 children)

I believe the difference between Israel and other thermonuclear states

Israel is not a thermonuclear state, unless I missed something very very big.

It seems pretty obvious that the western powers have yet to intervene in any meaningful way.

To me, too, I just don't think that OP's explanation is why.

My preference is that Israel's leadership grows a conscience and stops trying to bomb their neighbors into peace. However, in the absence of this, western powers should intervene. Whether it's through sanctions, embargoes, or other political red lines, steps should be taken

Completely agreed. Didn't OP say that this might result in widespread nuclear annihilation, though? That's part of why I disagree with OP on the thesis of this post.

It seems like we're kind of going in circles. The individual elements of what you're saying generally make quite a lot of sense to me and I agree, I'm just having trouble connecting it to what OP seems like they're saying. Since they don't seem really inclined to come in here and defend what they were on about, IDK how productive it is for you and me to talk about it.

[–] PhilipTheBucket@piefed.social 52 points 1 day ago (4 children)

A government lawyer conceded in court that those detained by ICE at the facility did not have access to certain services, including sleeping mats, in-person legal visits, medication and more than two meals per day.

The fuck

"Services"?

Why not just replace it with a cap that isn't a flip-top? Screw it on tight, squeeze the bottle slightly before putting the cap on so there's a slight negative pressure. That would be my first thing to try.

[–] PhilipTheBucket@piefed.social 1 points 1 day ago (11 children)

What makes the Samson option different is that Israeli leaders have expressed the intent to take out the entire world if Israel was ever facing total annihilation.

I think that's true, functionally speaking, of basically any thermonuclear-armed state.

I don't believe the OP is at all claiming that if anyone tried to enact sanctions, arms embargoes, ICC warrants against Israel, or otherwise interfere with the genocide, Israel would immediately *nuke the world. It specifically claims Israel would respond in this way "if cornered". In this context, I interpret "cornered" as in backed into a corner with no way out, by an aggressive party who seeks Israels destruction.

Read the second paragraph again. OP is claiming that Western leaders are not sanctioning Israel in the fairly mild ways described because they're afraid of nuclear war.

I do think that without Western military assistance (and more to the point deterrence), Israel with its current course of conduct might be destroyed by its neighbors. But that and "stay the course" aren't the only two options. I actually think that it would be way safer, in terms of global nuclear security, if Western countries forcibly stopped the genocide Israel is conducting. As it is, that scenario where Israel is getting overrun by regional enemies and throwing nukes (at them or at other targets) sounds not too unlikely as years go by and things change, with everyone remembering what they did. And so I interpreted OP as saying that if someone tried for the enforced peace agreement, or the war crimes trials, nukes.

I do think that fear of Israel getting overrun is the source of some of that unwavering military and deterrence assistance that keeps them alive and safe to do whatever they want. I don't think it is what is stopping Western leaders from punishing Israel for their current genocide. I think they just don't want to (or don't have the political will embedded in their systems that it would take to get it done), honestly.

 

So I was literally in the shower, thinking about the difference between the "I will diminish and go into the west" scene from the movies, and the infinitely superior version from the Ralph Bakshi version.

I realized that you just need one simple fix to make the Rings of Power make sense: It just needs to stick with its current plot and strategy, skip forward in time episode by episode, and then replay the same scene, and Galadriel takes the ring. It's an alternate history. All the same character flaws that the writers have that fucked up the show are exactly what would lead her to be the same character, just with that one tiny flaw, the right type of hubris to take the ring and start to make everything better according to her perfect vision.

And then, events play out.

 

The threat actor collective ShinyHunters has recently announced that BreachForums—one of the most prolific breeding grounds for stolen credentials and leak data—has been commandeered by international law enforcement agencies. According to Shiny from ShinyHunters, the site’s administrative controls, including the accounts “Hollow,” “ShinyHunters,” and the original “Founder,” now operate under the oversight of French authorities […]
The post ShinyHunters Unveils That BreachForums Taken by Law Enforcement Agencies, Now It Is a Honeypot appeared first on Cyber Security News.

 

Okay, so through some process, I got signed up to get emails from Chris Hedges and some other unsavory sources. They periodically come into my inbox to tell me that Ukraine is all NATO's fault or something, and I more or less ignore them as I do most of the gibberish tide that comes into my inbox, but this one drew my attention.

What do they want me to believe about Ghislaine Maxwell, I wonder?

She has given few interviews, few statements, made few attempts to interfere with the prevailing narrative that she is a monster and a predator who deserves everything she got. When you leave a lot of empty space, others fill it, project onto it their own assessments, conclusions, and theories.

Yeah, others like a jury of her peers. They projected a whole bunch of evidence into some assessments and conclusions, and that's why she's in the clink. I guess I was a little bit surprised that even they have started up with this tactic. Anyway I thought it was interesting that at least some of the propaganda brigade has taken up the mantle of "You know we shouldn't automatically assume that active predatory pedophiles are bad..."

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