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66
Joined
4 mo. ago

  • I was hoping we wouldn't have to deal with another summer of this bullshit.

    What's the best response to this? Put up flags of other countries alongside? Use their move against them and see if they take yours down?

    I'm wary of taking them down because 1) you get assaulted and used for content and 2) I feel they're looking for a provocation and an excuse to dog whistle "I'm being censored and can't even be proud of my country anymore". But then maybe you should just take them down anyway because you can't win either way.

  • NHS England is demanding that data workers across the NHS, from local hospitals to national teams, put huge amounts of sensitive health data into Palantir's FDP. Meanwhile, Palantir's UK CEO, Louis Mosley, publicly confirmed that if Reform UK wins the next election with a “clear public mandate” to share health data for the purposes of mass deportation efforts, the company will adhere to this.

  • There have been multiple front page articles on the BBC, Guardian, etc. covering that. There was intense scrutiny on Angela Rayner when she didn't pay council tax as well. To me, a double standard would be not applying the same level of treatment to Polanski.

  • UK Politics @feddit.uk

    Lib Dems offer alternative to extremes of Reform and Greens, Ed Davey says

    www.bbc.co.uk /news/articles/c2029ljyq25o
  • Climate @slrpnk.net

    A new international coalition aims to speed up the phase-out of oil

    www.opendemocracy.net /colombia-oil-fossil-fuels-netherlands-energy-transition-strait-of-hormuz-petro-climate-change/
  • United Kingdom @feddit.uk

    UK immigration officer among two men guilty of working for Chinese intelligence

    www.bbc.co.uk /news/articles/c0m2wjlkzplo
  • For me, the worst part is:

    The research agency was explicitly designed to be free from “red tape.” At Cummings’ behest, the Conservative government made the new agency exempt from the Freedom of Information Act. Last year, Democracy for Sale won a legal challenge, which found ARIA must still respond to environmental transparency requests.

  • United Kingdom @feddit.uk

    Dominic Cummings’ "moonshot" agency awarded £52m to US tech firms

    democracyforsale.substack.com /p/dominic-cummings-moonshot-agency-aria-big-tech-52m-google-open-ai
  • Time and again it seems that the entire purpose of the royal family is to seem a bit mystical and special to the Americans.

    I'd like their constitutional role to be completely removed from the UK, but we should just not tell the Americans them and keep sending them over.

  • United Kingdom @feddit.uk

    Trump to remove whisky tariffs after King's visit

    www.bbc.co.uk /news/articles/cjrp3pew2d5o
  • Technology @lemmy.world

    Dispute over fate of Kenyan workers who saw Meta AI glasses films

    www.bbc.co.uk /news/articles/c5y7yvgy0w6o
  • Finance @beehaw.org

    A financial crisis may be coming - it won't be like last time

    www.bbc.co.uk /news/articles/cp3p5l0nyevo
  • Casual UK @feddit.uk

    What do you think about voice notes?

    www.bbc.co.uk /news/articles/cn7kpyye4y0o
  • United Kingdom @feddit.uk

    Palantir under fire for X 'manifesto' from co-founder Alex Karp

    www.bbc.co.uk /news/articles/c4gjkj7975po
  • There's also YaCy, which is a peer-to-peer search engine. You index whatever you want, and when you search, you connect to lots of other indices as well as your own.

    I want to set up my own node at some point. My understanding is that the search results are hit and miss, but you have the power to improve things by building your own index of pages you want to search regularly. And this benefits everyone else too.

    Since search indexing is so intensive, I think it's the right technical solution if you want a truly open and independent alternative.

  • This looks cool! I don't want to check another website each day though, I would love to have a Lemmy community with the main feed, similar to the hacker news communities.

  • The idealistic approach would be: all content freely available, and ask readers to donate if they value it, to fund continual production of more work. E.g. Democracy for Sale. Even better if it's under a free content license.

    The practical approach would be: make some content freely available, and put the rest behind a paywall. But the content should still be available in open formats like RSS, via a private feed. E.g. LWN, Stratechery.

  • Deleted

    Permanently Deleted

    Jump
  • Because they're probably doing ok, and they don't want to think about how much is out of their control, and how easily they could be in the same situation.

    The idea that success is just down to hard work is comforting, because they think "if I just keep working hard then I'll be ok", and "I'm deserving of this lifestyle". It also lets them not feel any guilt or spend time thinking about those less fortunate - they can simply say "well it must be their fault".

  • I use taskwarrior for this. For example:

     shell
        
    task add recur:monthly due:eom wait:due-3weeks clean mesh filter
    task add recur:quarterly due:eoq wait:due-3weeks replace charcoal filter
    
      

    There are quite a few web frontends to it too, although I haven't tried these out so not sure which to recommend.

  • There were many crazy things, but the one that affected me the most was my RE teacher's insistence that all non-Catholics would go to hell. My best friend's dad, who was an atheist and a very kind person, had died a few days before and it made me really upset. My parents complained to the school about it.

  • Thanks for the comment, for me the article doesn't show that explanation about EOTs and I didn't really look into it. It certainly adds some caveats to the good news story!

    The trustees have a fiduciary duty to act in the interests of the employees, but of course reality could differ. According to companies house, there are 5 officers of which 2 are the founders mentioned in the article. Apparently, EOTs are the most common form of employee ownership in the UK and encouraged by the government.

    There is some risk of abuse it seems, it would definitely certainly be nicer if the employees directly owned the shares.

  • Good News Everyone @piefed.social

    Lanarkshire bakery taken over by employees

    www.bbc.co.uk /news/articles/czx9e4k517vo
  • I'd quit my job, buy a small house for my partner and I and give enough to my family that they wouldn't have to worry about money again.

    With the rest, I'd set up a trust that donates 1% per year in microgrants to free software maintainers who apply to it. Similar to NLnet, but with no strings attached beyond continuing to maintain the project.

    Then, with all my free time, I'd also work on free software.

  • UK Politics @feddit.uk

    Davey vows to fix communities at Lib Dem election campaign launch

    www.bbc.co.uk /news/articles/cn4v2epyln7o
  • Good News Everyone @piefed.social

    World's longest coastal path opens in England to the public

    www.bbc.co.uk /news/articles/cy0dxexdd8xo
  • United Kingdom @feddit.uk

    BBC World Service: Government to increase funding by £33m over next three years

    www.bbc.co.uk /news/articles/cn0z0k7wdleo
  • Formula 1 @lemmy.world

    Chinese Grand Prix: 'Best racing ever' or 'a joke'? Lewis Hamilton, Max Verstappen and Fernando Alonso on new rules

    www.bbc.co.uk /sport/formula1/articles/c620y1q4djpo
  • For me, it's more that he very confidently and bald-faced lied about saying that he immediately apologised.

    I know all politicians lie. But it's still unacceptable and we should keep calling it out when it happens.

  • Will you be allowed to lie about the age? If yes, then it's a pointless law. If no, then whoever is checking needs to have more control over your device than you do, DRM style. That's gives them an entry point through which they can put whatever they want without you being able to control it.

  • My partner, dad's partner, and so many colleagues at my job, wasted so many weeks cramming for this stupid, irrelevant test. If you add up all the people who have to take this, how many person hours have we wasted as a society, all to be forgotten anyway, because it's useless information.

    We really need to get rid of this test, or at a minimum strip it down and make it about how to vote and access public services. But even then, if someone wants to learn that, they will of their own accord and in their own time anyway.

  • 67% for me, looks like I'm getting kicked out

  • Good News Everyone @piefed.social

    Life-saving train driver honoured with railway star

    www.bbc.com /news/articles/cn0zy7qvxrqo
  • Fuck Cars @lemmy.world

    Cycle lane paused after thousands of locals object

    www.bbc.com /news/articles/c3ewwpk5yxjo
  • I'm quite crazy:

    • Marginalia with the no JavaScript filter, then with that filter turned off
      • Good for finding technical stuff, and sometimes recipes! I often find cool blogs this way.
    • SearxNG via farside.link
      • Unfortunately (and understandably) many of these sites use Anubis now, so I have to turn on JavaScript, and thanks to Google's ratelimits the results are either fantastic or not helpful at all
      • But, the public instances can work, so I try with 3 instances before moving on

    Depending on the thing I'm searching for, I have search shortcuts set up. These shortcuts are really handy. It seems much easier to get good results on dedicated search engines for each task, than finding another general purpose search engine that's as good:

    • Wikipedia, Wiktionary and Wikidata
    • Some other wikis
    • Lemmy (of course!)
    • Peertube and podcast indexes
    • Websites of grocery shops near me

    Finally, if all else has failed, I use Google (which still unfortunately happens at least a couple of times per day 🙁). Although, reading the posts now, I should switch this stage to DuckDuckGo instead.

    I'd quite like to set up my own instance of SearxNG + YaCy at some point. It'd be nice to configure SearxNG to basically do all of these steps at once that I'm doing manually, prioritise my YaCy index, but use other engines to fill in the gaps, and then gradually fill in the gaps in my YaCy index.

  • Personally, I donate less to more projects. But, if you don't have a strong opinion of what to donate to, you can get the best of both worlds by donating to NLnet.

    They fund open source projects up and down the stack, from open source CPUs all the way up to applications like Lemmy, and everything in between. Some are quite speculative and others are tangible improvements to existing projects.

  • UK Politics @feddit.uk

    Police framed man for murder, new evidence suggests

    www.bbc.co.uk /news/articles/cvg36pknpl5o