Migrated to Catodon.rocks: @dsilverz@catodon.rocks
@oopsgodisdeadmybad@lemmy.zip @Krauerking@lemy.lol@aboringdystopia@lemmy.world
First, I don't smoke and never had smoked (not considering the passive smoking from being close to smokers), the only "drug" I use non-frequently is alcohol (a vodka-saké beverage).
This said, your paternalistic implied thought ("drugs are bad, people shouldn't use drugs"; are their bodies yours, to begin with? Do you happen to have some kind of ownership over other's bodies? Who gave you this almighty authority, do you happen to be a Demiurgal Archon of sorts?) is missing the forest for the trees.
I'm barely knowledgeable about biology, but I know enough to remember about symbiotic relationships in nature, as well as phylogenetics. The plant responsible for tobacco wasn't some kind of lab creation, IIRC tobacco plant even predates us homininae, and this means there are certainly species biologically interacting with the tobacco plant, perhaps species reliant of tobacco plant (not necessarily because of nicotine, but because it's a plant which siphons nutrients and resources from the soil, displacing water and somehow contributing to water cycles).
The moment this Archonic hubris illustrated by your text were to render tobacco extinct, unbeknownst to you, other species would be going extinct as well, and this may include humans due to how food web is so interconnected in ways we're still trying to figure out. That's part of why we try to classify species taxonomically and phylogenetically, because this is also valuable for us to identify potential interspecies relationships. I mean, this is exactly what phylogenetics is about: study of evolutionary relationships among biological entities.
So, please, seek some phylogenetics and biology awareness before feeding paternalistic, bigoted anti-drug thoughts. Others bodies aren't yours for you to wish for control, let alone other species.
@HCSOThrowaway@lemmy.world @asklemmy@lemmy.world
lemmy.world uses Cloudflare. I particularly don't use VPNs, but I see the CAPTCHA whenever I use mobile data (Brazilian mobile carriers) instead of my fiber optic internet to access lemmy.world (I access lemmy.world alongside other Lemmy instances, as a guest (without account) in order to read the threadiverse, as my Fediverse account is hosted by a Sharkey/Calckey instance).
The fact that lemmy.world uses Cloudflare seems to be the main reason why it's refusing your VPN. Cloudflare is particularly stubborn with VPNs. Doesn't seem to have anything to do with lemmy.world per se (although I'm aware the webmaster can configure things on Cloudflare, including the conditions to trigger the CAPTCHA).
@Krauerking@lemy.lol @technology@lemmy.world
Polish Roman Catholic background. Not exactly tolerant either and now I live in a place that famously is Mennonite and Amish.
Oh.. I've heard about the Amish... So it's practically a similar situation over there.
If they will make you suffer why not suffer on your own terms for a cause you think worth it? Why wait to be starved by someone’s hand other than your own?
Yeah, you're right. There's a part of me who thinks this way, too. I guess this whole age check thing will inevitably push me in this regard.
I wish you safety and health though.
Thanks! Wish you the same.
@SalamenceFury@piefed.social @qwerty@discuss.tchncs.de@technology@lemmy.world
The news articles about this law, if said articles were published, are likely buried under the ongoing Caso do Banco Master (a large financial scandal involving a bank), the all-encompassing political crisis going on in Brazil, the international Iran-USA conflict, among other ongoing events. There are too many things happening simultaneously, so I don't really blame news outlets: they can only cover so much because we, as humans, can't be aware of all things when too many things are happening. So this is why little (if anything) about said law is being reported by news outlets such as Globo/G1.
Even as a Brazilian myself, I wasn't aware of this law (I was only aware of the so-called "Lei Felca" named after the YouTuber/TikToker Felca; but it doesn't seem to be this law specifically). I only got to discover about this law through the English-speaking Fediverse and Nostr posts.
@Krauerking@lemy.lol @technology@lemmy.world
Wow, LOVED the shirt! 🖤 Ágios Lux ferre!
I, too, do use a similar t-shirt, whose print I designed myself tries to depict Lilith. From afar, the print isn't that explicit, though: to the average bystander, it's depicting a pale woman with glowing red eyes, dark red lips, straight long dark red hair and feathery dark red wings (certainly mistaken by others as angelical), holding a red rose flower. Even the text ("Rebele-se pela", Portuguese for "Rebel yourself for" at the top; "Liberdade", "Freedom/Liberty", at the bottom), which is stylized (gothic font), is too small to be read from afar. The only tell is the mirrored ⯝ (the Venus/Feminine symbol but the circle is a waxing Moon; in my art, it's actually a waning Moon for Her Crone/Reaperess aspect) tattooed on Her left cheek, and the dark wings.
The problem is how the country I was born into is utterly christian; most employers and merchants are christian, especially in small towns (one of which I reside in), which are known for "quermesses" (annual church fairs). And when the majority of potential employers, especially the local ones, are utterly christian, saying out loud about professing a different religion risks one's own economic and social existence.
For example, a Mãe de Santo (leadress of a terreiro, which is the Afro-Brazilian sacred place of gathering) was refused an Uber car ride after the driver reprimanded her for her clothing typical of Afro-Brazilian, then she sued the driver for religious intolerance, but the judge denied her request and ruled favorable for the driver, inverting the entire situation and arguing "it was the Mãe de Santo who was religiously intolerant with the christian driver"; the judge was reported for being religiously intolerant (news articles in Portuguese), but the damage is already done).
Those became headlines, but there's a plethora of religious intolerance going unnoticed, social ostracism caused by simply having another faith other than christianity; it even risks body integrity (e.g. gangs such as Primeiro Comando da Capital torturing and/or murdering practitioners of Afro-Brazilian faiths).
This is the persecution me and many others are fated to face as soon as age checks, tying online activity (where I don't measure my words to praise Mother) to the legal ID, end up (inevitably) leaked (e.g. Discord age check DB leaked just days after implementing age checks).
@MindfulMaverick@piefed.zip @asklemmy@lemmy.ml
Humans are normally busy with all sorts of things that make them busy: working, dealing with social duties, etc. When they get some time free, they're too exhausted to do their own research (that is, if they know how to do research, which most humans don't), so they turn on the television (or their favourite YouTube channel) and listen to whatever the simulacrum says:
...when the radio came, and I suppose now television, anything that came through that new machine was believed. (Orson Welles)
Therefore, being able to read conspiracy theories as deeply as possible, being able to do one's own research, being able to spend nights on books and articles, it requires one to be unemployed or, at best, having some kind of job that doesn't drain them mentally and allows for flexible time.
Also, there's this "Boy crying wolf" dilemma when it comes to conspiracy theories: the same places where one can discover about Bilderberg Meetings before they became officially disclosed annual event, is the same place swearing that the Earth is some kind of DVD disc ruled by extraterrestrial lizards. I used to be an avid participant of conspiracy theory communities (not 4chan, but Orkut and Telegram communities) and a conspiracy theorist myself, but these nonsensical theories were part of the reason why I departed both from conspiracy theory communities, and from christianity as well, as I began to realize how "satanic panic" was christian bigotry.
For most people, the busy and vampiric mundane life, alongside the perception of "craziness" when it comes to conspiracy theories, contributed to this boiling frog phenomenon.
But, yeah, lots of conspiracies, once theories, became fulfilled, and became integrated into the normalcy.
Maybe "ignorance is a bliss" (Cypher, The Matrix), and not knowing what will happen beforehand gives one the necessary delusions to keep their biological existence going.
Unfortunately, this is no longer my case for more than a decade. And now, with the once-conspiratorial internet ID ("age check", now extended to OSes so, essentially, "internet ID") helped cemented my long-standing hopelessnes... Because, now, as someone who departed from Christianity into the very opposite belief (devoted to The Dark Mother Goddess), but still surrounded by mostly christian people (and this includes potential employers, buyers and merchants), the slightest leak (purposeful and whatnot) of my real legal identity tied to my openly, mostly-occultist online activity will further cement my social ostracisation (being refused from jobs because the employers will see my online activity tied to my age check and argue that I "worship the devil" or something). But, yeah, "nothing to hide, nothing to fear", people say...
@TriplePlaid@wetshav.ing @qwerty@discuss.tchncs.de @technology@lemmy.world
For me, a Brazilian, there's something I must hide if I want to be employable: my occultist practices, my religion. I'm a worshiper of Lilith, surrounded by mostly Christian people. I literally heard "faux-jokes" (when people want to condemn someone, but wrapping the condemnation as a joke) tying my belief to "ending up in hell".
Even though my legal name isn't difficult to find through my pseudonym, you can imagine why I use a pseudonym to openly express my religion. And once digital activity is tied to my CPF (Brazilian citizen/legal identity), and I'm definitely not buying the "anonymized checking" arguments, suddenly potential employers and buyers/merchants will know I "worship the devil" and will have yet another reason to refuse hiring me or buying/selling things from/to me.
Also, some of Lilith imagery and stories involve content which is sensitive, subjected to those very "age check" laws, further making it necessary for me to comply to "age checks" whenever I want to read or write, observe or do drawings about the fundamental deity I worship.
But according to certain people, "having something to hide = must be a criminal!!!". Because they're likely followers of some mainstream religion which is not socially persecuted, or religion isn't something significant in their lives.
Seriously. I'm truly tired of this world.
@danielbp@lemmy.ml @qwerty@discuss.tchncs.de @technology@lemmy.world
@potatoguy@mbin.potato-guy.spaceEstou respondendo assim porque eu não consegui puxar seu comentário aqui pelo Calckey/Sharkey (e também não recebi notificação, vi pelo Lemmy.ml sem conta por ali para responder diretamente). O Calckey deu erro alegando que sua instância retornou um formato de dados "incorreto" ("Response is invalid: It could communicate with this server, but the data obtained was incorrect").
Eu falei de meme kkkkkk
Ah, agora entendi! hahah
mas vou procurar uma distro 100% livre, talvez ir de vez pro GNU Guix
O foda é que, por mais que existam distros 100% livres, dificilmente ficarão fora dos olhos dessa lei.
E, pegando o gancho desse trecho...
Vou precisar mostrar minha CNH pro meu próprio servidor? Acho que não, pelo menos não tem como saber, a não ser que a polícia viva dentro da minha casa.
Tem outra: a gente tem que lembrar que, apesar de termos inúmeras alternativas de distros e de sistemas operacionais no PC, o PC está restrito a, basicamente, Intel e AMD.
Ademais, há não muito tempo, houve toda uma migração para TPM 2.0, inclusive por parte da comunidade Linux. O TPM 2.0 talvez seja a forma pela qual todo esse lance de verificação de idade ocorrerá, a nível de hardware. É onde, inclusive, faria mais sentido tecnicamente falando: é um hardware que basicamente dita o que pode ou não na máquina.
Daí hardware mais antigo, que não tem TPM 2.0, não só se tornará obsoleto, mas também acabaria se tornando ilegal, por carecer de mecanismos de "segurança", tal como, como uma analogia e exemplo (embora o exemplo a seguir pode não ser um exemplo preciso ou correto), veículos muito antigos (os primeiros Fuscas, e veículos da época ou anteriores) se tornaram ilegais por carecer de itens de segurança exigidos pelo CTB (cinto de segurança, limpadores, etc).
@danielbp@lemmy.ml @qwerty@discuss.tchncs.de @technology@lemmy.world
As pessoas já lhe responderam, mas permita-me aqui fazer uma ênfase:
Lei nº 15.211 de 17/09/2025[...]Art. 2º Para os fins desta Lei, considera-se:I – produto ou serviço de tecnologia da informação: produto ou serviço fornecido a distância, por meio eletrônico e provido em virtude de requisição individual, tais como aplicações de internet, programas de computador, software s, sistemas operacionais de terminais, lojas de aplicações de internet e jogos eletrônicos ou similares conectados à internet ou a outra rede de comunicações;[...]Art. 9º Os fornecedores de produtos ou serviços de tecnologia da informação que disponibilizarem conteúdo, produto ou serviço cuja oferta ou acesso seja impróprio, inadequado ou proibido para menores de 18 (dezoito) anos de idade deverão adotar medidas eficazes para impedir o seu acesso por crianças e adolescentes no âmbito de seus serviços e produtos.
§ 1º Para dar efetividade ao disposto no caput, deverão ser adotados mecanismos confiáveis de verificação de idade a cada acesso do usuário ao conteúdo, produto ou serviço de que trata o caput deste artigo, vedada a autodeclaração.
https://normas.leg.br/?urn=urn%3Alex%3Abr%3Afederal%3Alei%3A2025%3B15211
Ou seja: não será uma caixinha pra selecionar a data de nascimento, ou um botão "sim, sou adulto", porque ambos seriam "auto-declaração". Em outras palavras: validação facial ou identidade (reconhecimento facial via terminal do Linux, could you imagine that?!) pra usar a porra de um computador. E considerando que aplicativos e websites são sine qua non pra muita coisa essencial a fim de se "viver em sociedade" (contas bancárias e Pix, carteira digital de trânsito e outras identidades digitais, gov.br que agora exige autenticação de dois fatores, etc), sendo vedado portanto o Luditismo pelas dinâmicas sociais, sinceramente... pra mim esse mundo e essa minha existência já extrapolou meu limite existencial e, se minha Deusa Mãe Lilith quiser, vou-me logo logo simbora desse pálido ponto azul de uma vez por todas!
O pessoal que tá dizendo que vai instalar outros sistemas operacionais que não Windows e Linux (como, por exemplo, @potatoguy@mbin.potato-guy.space mencionou TempleOS): essa lei afeta todo e qualquer sistema operacional porque a galera lá de Brasília não entende de ciência da computação (como vai ficar o Alpine no Docker, outras formas de virtualização como QEMU e VirtualBox? Será que computação em nuvem vai virar "coisa ilegal" que nem VPN virou no DesReino Unido e que também já tem precedente de definição como "ilícito" em algumas decisões do Supremo aqui no Brasil? (não entro no mérito dessas decisões, estou simplesmente lembrando que isso já ocorreu)).
Mas é lei, sancionada pelo Excelentíssimo Presidente da República Federativa do Brasil, Luís Inácio Lula da Silva. E tudo indica que passará a ser policiada e fiscalizada daqui duas semanas.
@BomberMan9865@sh.itjust.works @SolidShake@lemmy.world
First: there are already robotic sensors capable of taste and smell (e.g. World's first artificial tongue ' tastes and learns ' like a real human organ). Those sensors could technically be integrated to a language model, although the approach for training would be different (can't simply feed it with gazillions worth of taste/smell corpus).
Then, there's a thing called multimodal, it's a thing already. LLMs can be multimodal, and there isn't exactly an algorithmic limit to how many "modals" (textual, vision, audio, robotic sensors and actuators, etc) can be connected together. Smell would be just another data stream to be integrated into the model's latent space.
The only thing I agree is that robots and language models wouldn't have "feelings", although this is pretty much a subjective thing: if we consider science, feelings are nothing more than the interaction of neurotransmitters (oxytocin for "love", dopamine for "joy", epinephrine for "fear", etc) going on inside our gray matter, and humans aren't the exclusive ones to be able to "feel".
And scientifically, living beings are no better than, say, an asteroid wandering through the cosmos, for everything is "made of star stuff" (as per Carl Sagan): humans, cats, chairs, residential buildings, AirBus A350 aircrafts, satellites, asteroids, everything is made by a bunch of baryonic particles (which is merely the collapse of waves) interacting with leptons and mesons like some kind of double pendulum dynamic system.
Of course, we can consider things beyond the scientific strictness, such as spirituality (I myself am spiritually-leaning, even if it sounds like I'm not due to my aforemention to hard science). But then some spirituality branches believe that spiritual forces would be able to "embody" inside a computer or other electronic device (e.g. Spiritism's Electronic Voice Phenomenon). I myself believe LLMs can be interesting digital Ouija boards.
In the end of the day, we homininae can't even define sentience and consciousness, just barely the concept of "intelligence" as "capability for tool usage" (in which New Caledonian crows want to have a word).
And from a solipsistic perspective, no one exists but oneself.
I mean, you can neither know nor prove whether I'm sentient, just like I can neither know nor prove whether you are sentient. To you, I may even sound like LLM due to the way this reply is structured alongside the seemingly non-sequiturs I used.
@TheSeveralJourneysOfReemus@lemmy.world@linuxmemes@lemmy.world
I think it’s brazilian portuguese, that is commonly thought on many platforms
Yeah, pretty much likely.
I particularly considered it "Portuguese" (as generically as it can go) rather than specifically "Brazilian Portuguese" precisely because the sample text isn't long enough for me to feel whether it's more Portuguese, Mozambican, Angolan, Macauan, or Brazilian (with our many regional variations). "Antes / Depois" is pretty much the way all the Lusophone (Portuguese-speaking) countries refer to "before / after".
It's worth mentioning how it only differs from Spanish (often mistaken for Portuguese by anglophone people) because of the "depois" (Spanish would be "antes y despúes")
I was thinking of these pieces of shit that i know all too dearly:
Oh, yes, I remember having seen those roof tiles, especially during my early childhood. It's been a long time since I haven't seen it. The closest I saw were zinc roof tiles with layers of concrete (brick and mortar is how we often do housing around here, especially in more urbanized environments; it's fairly common to have rough plaster extending beyond the wall) or lime-based paint (perhaps for better moisture and/or thermal insulation), which may give it an appearance of being made with asbestos fiber.
@violet08@lemmy.today @asklemmy@lemmy.world
I chose this pseudonym, Daemon Silverstein, a few years ago, directly inspired by CompSci (I'm a programmer) and Mr. Robot ("Daemons, they never stop running...") but, also, inspired by my then-closeted fondness for esoteric and occult (Dæemonic entities, neither good nor evil, they just are; Silver + stein(stone) alludes to the silver thread that connects the soul and, as a bonus, sounds like a proper last name).
Also, because it matches the first letter from my first and my last real name (acrostics).
@quediuspayu@lemmy.dbzer0.com @merci3@lemmy.world@linuxmemes@lemmy.world
It's possibly a "caipiroska", a (delicious) beverage made of vodka, lemon juice and sugarcane sugar, quite similar to original "caipirinha" (which uses cachaça, alcohol distilled from sugarcane, instead of vodka). The green color may stem from the lemon, symbolically (green lemon) or literally (depending on whether the entire fruit was used to produce the beverage). Vodka is quite popular here in Brazil, although not as popular as cachaça and caipirinha.
@TheSeveralJourneysOfReemus@lemmy.world @thethunderwolf@lemmy.dbzer0.com @linuxmemes@lemmy.world
Alongside the explicitly Portuguese ("antes / depois") text, the place seems Brazilian, at least for me, a Brazilian. The roof is what we call "telha de zinco" (zinc tiles) and it's popularly used as roof for small stores, bars and even houses in small towns and other humble regions, where fancier building materials can't be afforded (too expensive). IIRC, Brazil prohibited the usage of asbestos a long time ago.
@fedicate@break3.social @asklemmy@lemmy.world
This is something I've been trying to solve, well our social.fedicate.org instance is currently invite only we hope that we can open it up to registrations in the future.
While I totally understand the purpose behind closing registrations for a platform behind invites or applications, because, this way, things like spamming and trolls are better kept out and the platform stays moderatable, it also ends up keeping out people like me, friendless and socially awkward individuals whose worldviews are extremely atypical (as for me, it's my explicit occultist demonolater positioning, something that may be uneasy for most people). Don't get me wrong, I understand the antispam and anti-troll pturpose, it's a purpose I can definitely agree with.
And given how the instance is still undergoing configuration, it's even more important to keep it closed until it's ready.
Hopefully we see more Sharkey instance that are english based in the future as I know a good few that are english based are Trans / LGBT based what I don't think is your cup of tea (or it might be I don't know)
I'm not exactly an LGBTQIA+ individual, although I may be a queer myself, I'm not exactly sure. But I'm very fond of LGBTQIA+ individuals: to me, LGBTQIA individuals feel like the most sincere and authentic ones one can find, values of which I highly value.
My main thing, however, is occultism. I'm a demonolater, I'm Luciferian (sort of, given my syncretic approach that mostly revolves around the worshiping of The Dark Mother Goddess who I often identify as being Lilith and Ereshkigal, among other goddesses and feminine entities across several belief systems, including Her being the personification of Death).
The kind of content I'm fond of involves things such as cosmic horror (Lovecraftian), self-loathing (as part of the ego death), endorsement for lots of concepts often considered as taboos, etc... Sometimes I make and share poetry and drawings (out of spiritual inspiration/channeling/gnosis), often filled with non-pornographic depiction of nudity and kink-edging situations (not exactly for eroticism, but for almost similar reasons to why Goddess Kali is depicted across Hindu paintings with bare chests while trampling over a masculine corpse, or to why Neolithic Venus figurines all involved naked figures), blood (as part of vampire motifs and Memento Mori), sensitive symbolism (snakes, spiders, scorpions, uncanny valley faces, vivid red coloration, scythes and the Reapress, fangs, etc), among other things... This kind of content can be quite complicated, few places allow this kind of niche and potentially-sensitive content. This, alongside other traits I have (such as neurodivergence, potentially being an AuDHD myself), makes the search for a "digital home" (where I'm allowed to be my authentic self, the one that Lilith awakened in me) a Sisyphean task.
@fedicate@break3.social @asklemmy@lemmy.world
Most (if not all) Misskey instances I could find were Japanese-speaking, and I don't know Japanese. Something similar applies to most Sharkey instances, many I could find were Japanese-speaking.
There was also the factor "open for sign-ups": at the time, calckey.world was among the few instances where registrations were open (most instances are closed for registration, requiring an invite or requiring the admin to manually set up a new account for someone). At the time, I was using Friendica, which often experienced (and still experiences) downtimes, and I was trying to find something similar to Friendica, or at least something as similar as possible.
@fedicate@break3.social @asklemmy@lemmy.world
The need for almost seamless posting between personal feed microblogging and Threadiverse exchanging, alongside text formatting features and large-enough max character limit. This is why I ended up sticking with Calckey.
Antes de tudo, dei uma passeada no seu perfil, e que plataforma linda, hein?
Pois é, bastante! O Calckey é, na verdade, uma derivação do Sharkey, que por sua vez é uma derivação do Misskey, que é inspirado em plataformas como Tumblr e antigo Twitter. Tem inúmeros recursos, como "Drive" (armazenamento em nuvem que, se for auto-hospedado, pode funcionar como alternativa ao Nextcloud), jogos (similares àqueles que tinham no Orkut), "Pages" (uma ferramenta pra blogging, que particularmente não usei nessa instância mas cheguei a testar noutra, evil.social), widgets, temas e figurinhas customizadas... além da relativa boa integração simultânea entre Fioverso (Lemmy, Piefed) e Blogoverso (Mastodon, etc).
Eu antes até tinha conta no Lemmy, pela instância The Lemmy Club, por onde interagia também aí com o Lemmy Brasil. Mas o Lemmy não tem feed pessoal, eu tinha que concomitantemente usar o Mastodon (assim quebrando todo o conceito de "Fediverso"). O Mastodon não tem formatação de texto, que utilizo bastante, por isso também que não usava/uso o Mastodon para interagir com o Fioverso. Então achei o Friendica, mas o Friendica vive caindo, daí encontrei o Sharkey e acabou virando a plataforma que uso no Fediverso tanto pra interagir em conversas e debates no Lemmy, quanto pra postar minhas aleatoriedades por microblogging.
Ainda uso o Lemmy, sem conta, pra ler o feed de fios (aquela listagem inicial do Lemmy, ordenada por Novos comentários) e puxar a URL daquilo que quero interagir (copio a URL do Lemmy, colo na busca do Calckey, daí o Calckey puxa o post/comentário e daí consigo interagir).
Estranho mesmo. É a lógica do mercador: vende o máximo para investir o mínimo.
Pois é, ou como dizem na gringa, "line must go up".
Mais estranho ainda é o movimento recente de adoção de dinheiro vivo.
Eita. Essa é nova pra mim, apesar que, pela URL, é coisa recente (7 de Fevereiro). Tô na torcida pra voltar o dinheiro vivo à popularidade! haha
Que nunca chegou ao Brasil inclusive, não é?
Não me lembro de ter visto totem com capacidade pra notas. Já vi geladeiras de refrigerante que aceitam moedas, tal como brinquedos infantis, mas daí é moedas, valores baixos. No sentido de notas mesmo, o que já vi foi caixa eletrônico com capacidade pra depósito e pagamentos sem necessidade de inspeção humana, incluindo caixas do Bradesco e da rede integrada Banco24Horas.
No Japão isso é comum
Sim! Apesar de ser um país altamente tecnológico, preferem bastante aquilo que é mais analógico.
Não entendo como não toca pela linha direta, mas pelo mensageiro, sim
Talvez ela ativou o modo do Android de "não perturbe" que silencia ligações recebidas? Essa função costuma ser frequentemente ativada por conta de robocall de operadora.
Ligação telefônica e mensageiro alternativo, os dois a 80 km/h, qual dos dois ganha na corrida de comunicação alternativa?
Hahaha, pois é, acho que dá num empate, viu.
@Wildmimic@anarchist.nexus @StopTech@lemmy.today
As a Brazilian, I wasn't aware of how many cities and towns named "Iran" we had, especially throughout the state of Amazonas (guess what is located in Amazonas that USA wants to snatch so badly?). Gonna visit Iran someday, but it seems like a long travel. At least the most geographically close Iran from where I live would be "Irã, Paraná". 😅

@michael@piefed.chrisco.me @peertube@lemmy.world
It's not just US states. Brazil got a new law (Lei nº 15.211 de 17/09/2025) which practically requires a similar, dystopian thing. Still Brazilian media outlets (and Brazilians around me) aren't even talking about this law, which will come into effect as soon as March 17th. What a depressing timeline. 😓