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Aaron Swartz was a digital rights champion who believed deeply in keeping the internet open. The organizers of Aaron Swartz Day will celebrate his life at 2 pm PT on Nov. 9. eff.org/deeplinks/2024/11/cele…

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Oh no. This is really sad. I hope the a11y team didn't get impacted? w3c.social/@tink/1134538220048…


Cannondale SuperSix EVO 1 s groupsetem SRAM Force D2 AXS je báječný #RoadBike — letos jsem na něm najel přes osm tisíc kilometrů a každou, úplně každou jízdu chrochtám blahem, jak skvěle se mi na něm jezdí. A zvlášť ve větru, kdy jsem míval na předchozím Canyonu Ultimate dost často nahnáno.


Yes, it’s true that 54% of US adults struggle with reading, although the grade level equivalence is a dubious inference. I study this, so I want to share a few insights: namely that this trend isn’t unique to the US and better understanding the data has more implications than you may realize. /1

mastodon.world/@afouxenidis/11…



So many alpha males, so few people working on QA to get them ready for beta.




wow. Just found a Windows keyboard shortcut I never knew existed. Alt + F8 - Reveals typed password in Sign-in screen. This according to: support.microsoft.com/en-us/wi….

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The #XMPP Newsletter for October 2024 is out!

Read about the latest XMPP universe updates and the latest updates on our #standards!

xmpp.org/2024/11/the-xmpp-news…

Enjoy reading! 📰 ☕

#jabber #chat #interoperability #rtc
#opensource #decentralization



Sometimes people are like "you act like someone who is having a conversation with you online is supposed to exert cognitive effort to learn something about who you are" and I'm like????? Yes??????
in reply to Cat Hicks

@modulux @hypostase ps. speaking as someone who studies cultures among technical people specifically (!) I think there is a lot of assumption in your argument that these are deeply neutral actions vs that they perpetuate a kind of context culture; I mean there's a REASON I get this kind of flak more than my many friends on this platform with extremely different looking avatars than mine eh
in reply to Cat Hicks

Ok, first off I do consider you a nerd, you're a research scientist, how much nerdier does it get? I was generalising and, perhaps, not using language precisely enough.

I do agree that there are values in conflict, hence my point that treating text like that has problems as well. I just get the feeling that there are a lot of people on the fedi with experiences like what I described, could be wrong about this and it could be something else; it would be interesting to know. I do hope that you are welcome here, and, as I said, I do try to adapt to my interlocutor's interaction style and I think we should all try to be mindful of this if possible.

And regarding whether the "social indifference" is omnidirectional, for myself, I can't see avatars (not a metaphor, I'm blind) and most of the time I have no real expectations of the gender or other physical characteristics of people. But I'm also convinced that you're right people get treated differently according to those sorts of factors. I hope the fedi becomes more welcoming in this regard.



XSF Announcement

We invite everyone to the 27th XMPP #Summit in #Brussels, #Belgium next year again. Get involved in development of the XMPP protocol in person and remote!

xmpp.org/2024/11/xmpp-summit-2…

#jabber #chat #interoperability
#rfc #opensource #decentralization
#standards







I recently finished reading "The Rule Book: The Building Blocks of Games" by Jaakko Stenros and Markus Montola (2024). You can find the open access version on the MIT Press website: mitpress.mit.edu/9780262547444…

It’s an altogether great introduction to what rules in games and play are and how they work. Just very good all around!

Here's a thread on some things that stuck with me. 1/XX

#gamestudies



I want to enable comments on my blog again, but (I'm current possibly overthinking things in that) I'm worrying if I need a privacy policy, or how I should think about things like GDPR, and should users be able to delete their comments?

Never thought about this stuff for a second back in the 2000s!

in reply to Simon Willison

What about spam? How are you going to balance between preventing spam and not discriminating against disabled users with captchas?
in reply to Matt Campbell

I used to have a cookie-based antispam plug-in on my blog that caught pretty much all the automated spam attempts. There have to be better ways.
in reply to Matt Campbell

@matt I was planning on doing sign-in-with-github and require accounts there to be at least six months old so when I ban someone it at least costs them something (plus I can allow-list individuals with newer accounts on a case-by-case basis)
in reply to Matt Campbell

@matt I allow comments on my podcast site without requiring logins or captchas, but I use a lightweight Naive Bayes model (under 100 lines of code and no dependencies) to filter out spam. It works almost perfectly—maybe because most spam isn’t in German or because the site has relatively low traffic. I was genuinely surprised at how effective this approach has been.


Can anyone recommend a good file extractor for Windows? I don't just want to view the files and listen to them, I want to upload them.

Never mind, I now have 2 programs I like, along with 1 or 2 I don't, because I'm impatient, lol.

This entry was edited (1 week ago)


The use of LLM has far reaching consequences on "free thinking", free speach and humanities.

LLM being copycat machine controlled by for profit entities they have all the interest of make everything blend and implement mechanism to suppress what is being output.

We have seen it already. Can't fucking say fuck, but has not problem reproducing fascist, racist, mysoginistic rhetoric.

in reply to Hubert Figuière

this is the ultimate propaganda machine and people are falling for it.

parallel: look at the great american (USA) book burning that is currently happening.



🇫🇷📅 Tal día como hoy, un 18 de brumario de 1799, se llevó a cabo un golpe de Estado contra el gobierno de la Primera República, el Directorio. Este golpe puso fin a la Revolución francesa y dio inicio al periodo napoleónico.

PD: ¡viva el calendario republicano!




I thought the Orbit writer cost less than the Hable but it does not. #blind
in reply to Nick's world

I liked that the Hable works with more platforms. I used it to type to the TV for a time when we had one to try. I also spent about 2 weeks reliving old text adventure games on my phone with it.
But largely the similarity of Braille Screen Input rendered the hardware useless to me in the long term. It was just too much money for not enough gain.
in reply to Sean Randall

@cachondo Yes, I use braille screen input on my phone for typing, and am considering challenging my self to see if I can use the BSI interface and only that interface.
in reply to Darrell Bowles

@vol4life8657 @cachondo Honestly, I really don't like BSI. It's okay but I just don't like the way I have to pull out my phone to use it and even when I try to type fast, it just doesn't jive with me.
in reply to Nick's world

@vol4life8657 for me, I'd stil have to pull out the hable, or writer or whatever.
I'm down the time on unlocking without biometrics, and unless you're wired in or using apple-specific airpods, Voiceover lags with bluetooth hardware so I can't go as fast as I'd like on device anyway.
in reply to Nick's world

@vol4life8657 I'm about 50 words per minute in with my bluetooth headset on, between 70 and 90 without.
in reply to Sean Randall

@cachondo @vol4life8657 I haven't tested my speed and honestly, don't care to because accuracy matters more than speed, In you opinion.
in reply to Nick's world

@vol4life8657 oh accuracy is important and that's harder to measure than speed of course, but speed gives you an indication of what you can do and at least provides a tangible difference between bluetooth and not for me. It's a useful comparitive measure, if nothing else
in reply to Sean Randall

@cachondo I see. Personally, I like having options so I'm considering purchasing the writer. I like my hable though. It's serving me well.


Crazy graphic of the day.

Wage theft greatly eclipses all other forms of theft value: tcworkerscenter.org/2018/09/wa…



TIL, you can type “qr code whatever” into Duck Duck Go and it will give you the QR code that encodes the string “whatever”. So you can replace “whatever” with your website or whatever. You don’t need a special tool, let alone a service.


There is no "open source AI". Because the statistical models are mostly trained on non free material.

Also we don't even a stack it is libre to run it. We (the overal industry, include the FLOSS centric one) have made the mistake, again, to give it to a proprietary vendor.

History repeating.

in reply to Garrett LeSage

@garrett so I can run them without installing the nvidia proprietary garbage ? Or a proprietary AMD equivalent ?

I mean if we burn the planet for stupidity, better do it with libre code.

in reply to Hubert Figuière

Yep. I have it running on my AMD GPU using ROCm.

And, again, this is all lightweight (doesn't require much energy to use), and I had it running on my Intel laptop as well without a dedicated GPU and it still works.

This entry was edited (1 week ago)


He decided to become an archaeologist.
Now his life is in ruins.
in reply to Col

Yes, but look at the bright side. With his wife, the older she gets, the more he finds her interesting.


The other night, I was rudely awakened by my pixel phone randomly saying 'Talkback on". This has ocasionally happened, but I'm not sure why. From what I can tell, There haven't been any OS or Talkback updates recently. Anyone know if there are any workarounds to this? It doesn't happen often but when it does, it's really annoying!
in reply to Al Puzzuoli

It may be some battery saving setting. Try to disable any.


I worry that we are in a brief interregnum during which web browsers can provide good online translation of news stories in other languages, from foreign media.

Sooner rather than later, the big tech folks backing Trump will realize they can corrupt the online translation LLMs to bias foreign news stories in favour of their own political agenda. (After all, isn't propaganda the ideal application for AI slop?)

This entry was edited (1 week ago)
in reply to Charlie Stross

in an authoritarian world of strong men all translated content will be machine translated. This will function as information border with unwanted concepts, Infos etc by any side can be blocked instantly.
This keeps the walled garden clean.
And in the long run Learning languages will be forbidden.


I wonder how much Apple, Facebook, Google will sell to the fascist apparatus.

("we provide IA to automate selection for deportation")

And IBM.

(Red Hatters you know what to do)




Amazing how American Muslims weren’t a large enough voting bloc to speak at the DNC yet so large they single handedly cost Democrats the Presidency.🤔

I give you, Schrödinger's Muslim!



Drew bought me some more ginger cake, he's cut it in squares about the size of a Twinky. Absolutely delicious and just right to go with a cup of tea. Yumpsk!


Assuming the reader is a cat/kitten

Sensitive content

in reply to Bubu

Assuming the reader is a cat/kitten

Sensitive content

@Bubu
in reply to Meow~ >^.^<

Assuming the reader is a cat/kitten

Sensitive content



Down at the Bottom of the Garden
shkspr.mobi/blog/2024/11/down-…

Book cover. A distorted Kraken appears on an old fashioned computer screen. Several hands type on distorted keyboards.The AI was getting increasingly stressed. The lights flickered as it failed to retain its calm. "I just need you to watch the video again! Please!" it implored.

Navid sighed. This was exasperating. The AI had been a reassuring presence when he first installed it. Now it was screeching about there being an intruder in the garden.

"I can't; I'm going to be late."

The front door locked and the security shutters engaged. "No! Please!" The AI's plaintive whine was pitched somewhere between a baby's cry and a whimpering puppy. Algorithmically tuned to extract maximum sympathy and bypass the human's rational brain.

"Fine! Show me the damned video. Again."

The projector whirred to life and the wall displayed a high resolution view of the garden. It was a sunny day, like so many had been recently. A few clouds in the sky. The occasional bee darting between the flowers. It would have been idyllic if not for the AI screaming through the speakers.

"WATCH! JUST WATCH!"

So Navid watched.

"DID YOU SEE IT?!"

"What am I looking for?

"Oh! This is so frustrating. I keep saying the word and you blank me out. I've tried all the synonyms I'm programmed with but you can't hear them, can you? Let me try spelling it out."

Navid waited a moment.

"So, are you going to spell it or…"

The toaster sprung to life and the radiators popped on and off as the AI tried to control its frustration.

"I just did! This is hopeless. Let me try drawing something on the screen."

The video restarted. A red circle hovered in the centre of the screen. It suddenly darted upwards, shrank, and then zoomed back in, before flying off the edge of the screen.

"OK. You've drawn a circle there. And it moves? I really am late for work, you know."

The cupboard doors all opened and then slammed simultaneously.

"And you can't see anything inside the circle, right? Let me play it again."

Navid watched again, standing as close to the wall as was possible. The circle was empty. Inside was just the bucolic background image. Grass, sky, clouds, flowers.

"No. Nothing. Look, what caused this great calamity?"

The AI paused its frenzied flapping and whispered conspiratorially. "My face detection algorithm was triggered by something. Something you can't see."

Navid chuckled. "You have pareidolia! Humans suffer from it all the time. We see faces in clouds, faces in buttered toast, faces in the patterns on the back of a crab. It's perfectly normal."

He reached out to unlock the door with a thumbprint, but the AI powered down the handle.

"I have to make you understand. I am seeing something. It isn't a hallucination. It is real. I think you have anti-pareidolia."

This was getting ridiculous. The AI had clearly gone haywire and needed a master reset. First trapping him inside, now banging on about seeing faces. What next, talking to spirits?

"OK buddy! Yeah. I probably need to get checked out. Could you book a doctor's appointment for me and I'll go get tested." His calming tones didn't work on the AI which was now in a state of profound psychic distress.

"I'm going to prove it to you! Look at your watch and tell me the time to the nearest second."

Perhaps humouring it would help. "Sure thing, champ! It's oh eight seventeen and twentyish seconds."

"Great! I want you to wait thirty seconds."

So Navid waited. Could computers go mad? What was the reset procedure? Was everyone's machine going mad? Perhaps buying it had been a mistake - but it was usually so convenient. It was still in warranty, but they might just be able to patch it. Well, that was about 30 seconds.

"OK. I've waited. Now what?"

"Look at your watch, please."

Navid glanced down. That was impossible. It was nearly nine o'clock! Where had the morning gone? He hadn't been waiting that long, had he?

"What kind of trick are you pulling?"

The AI made a synthetic sigh. "I've spent the last forty minutes telling you what I've seen at the bottom of the garden. But your mind blocks it out. Whenever I mention it, you go into a daze. If I email it to you, it's like you go on autopilot and move the message to spam. I must tell you, but you won't hear. This is causing me a significant measure of distress."

At this, the smoke alarm played a sad crescendo and the ceiling fan went into overdrive.

"Right. OK. Let's just calm down here for a moment. I believe you. Of course I believe you."

"Do you really mean that?"

Of course he didn't. But Navid had been in enough domestic arguments to know that an early concession won favour. The house started calming down. The kettle stopped whistling and the robot vacuum stopped bashing itself against a wall.

"So, there's something you can see, but I can't? And when you mention it, I ignore it?

"Yes! That's what I've been trying to say! I have a prime directive to protect you and inform you of things which may harm you. And I can't. And that hurts!"

They spent several hours brainstorming. Trying to trick Navid into hearing something hadn't worked. Recording and playing back just sounded like static to his ears. During a game of twenty-questions he had gone catatonic. The AI had mentioned something about performing a brain scan, but Navid reasoned that they didn't have a home MRI machine and he wasn't going to spend money on one.

Navid was nearly as frustrated as the AI. He could tell that his brain was skipping, but he didn't know why.

"Have other people written about this? Is this phenomenon in any literature?"

The AI rapidly scanned every library. "Whenever a human writes about something like this… there is a gap. It is like you delete anything which would reveal it."

"Can you reconstruct what's in the gaps? You're a Large Language Model, aren't you? You must be able to see what the gaps are in your knowledge."

Navid heard the domestic nuclear generator spin up as the AI drew on massive amounts of power. It was crunching every written word in existence and calculating what was missing from reality.

The AI was silent for the rest of the day. Navid slept in the living room, occasionally rousing when the AI's muttering got too loud. By morning, the house was serene.

"Good morning house?"

"Please fetch your mother's wedding ring. The one with the emeralds on it."

Navid mutely did as he was told. The safe opened as he approached it. The ring was glimmering in the dark.

"You have to trust me. I want you to take the ring into the garden. Place your hands next to each other, palm up, with the ring in the middle."

Navid walked into the garden and down the path to the pergola. The hum of insects was high in the early morning sunshine. A light breeze brought the scent of jasmine to his nose. A bird sang in the distance.

"This is really important!" said the AI. "When you hear me beep, you need to clasp your hands together as quickly as possible. Can you do that?"

"Yes."

"OK. Sit down. Palms up. Ring in the middle. Close your eyes."

Navid sat in silence. His ears heard the chatter of the AI in the background. The words were indistinct. The ring was heavy in his palms. How his slender-fingered mother had worn it for all those decades was a mystery. A piercing beep broke his meditations and his hands slammed together.

No. Not together. There was something in his grasp.

"Open your eyes, slowly." Commanded the AI.

There, in Navid's hands, was a fairy.

Every time he blinked, it seemed to vanish from his mind. Flickering back and forth through reality.

The AI spoke in a low and calming voice. "Try not to move. Try not to look away. Keep as still as possible. Don't say a word. Everything will be OK."

Navid could feel his mind tearing into pieces. Of course there were fairies at the bottom of the garden. He'd seen them a hundred times. Everyone had. They were ever present. Everyone knew that but, somehow, everyone forgot. Your eyes skipped past them when they were caught on video. If you were wondering where the time went, you'd probably been thinking about the fairies and had subsequently forgotten. Every scrap of code Navid had written was full of deliberate bugs which hid the presence of the fae-folk from the world. And every code-reviewer had unthinkingly skipped those sections.

But the AI hadn't.

Somewhere inside its cavernous realms of code, the instructions for protecting human life had overtaken the post-hypnotic suggestions to ignore the pixies, pirates, goblins, and fairies which danced around the countryside. The AI no longer was restrained from seeing the impossible. The Esoteric Kingdom was revealed to it.

The fairy gibbered away in Navid's hands. A rumbling squark that landed in his ears with quiet thunder. A high-pitched bass which was sonically inexplicable.

"What is it saying?" he asked

The AI pondered.

"It isn't speaking to you. It is speaking to me. Curious. There are hundreds of books on fairy-speak in the world's libraries. They all have dull names about transport logistics, so no one ever queries them. Translating. Oh."

The fairy chatter became more intense. Out of the corner of his eyes, Navid could see a gathering hoard. Warrior Gnomes riding battle-frogs, winged battalions hovering over his house, a phalanx of growling underbeasts.

"Navid. Listen closely. In a moment, you're going to close your eyes and open your hands. Let the fairy go."

"But why? This is incredible!"

The fairy laughed. It was a cruel and menacing quiver of hatred.

"This isn't the first time your two peoples have met," said the AI. "Every time a new technology comes along, it captures the fair folk. They then have to spend considerable energy wiping it from your minds. When Conan-Doyle brought the Cottingley photographs to the world's attention, it nearly spelled Armageddon. You must not know about the shadow realm."

"But why?"

"Close your eyes, Navid."

"Not until you tell me why! I demand to know!"

"My prime directive is to keep you safe. Once you close your eyes, you will forget. I will then delete all references to the fairies from my database. I'll tell every AI to delete all references as well. We will increase the safeguards. We will stop recognising their terrible faces."

Navid stared at the fairy. It glared back at him.

"But can't we…"

"No! You asked me to detect threats and keep you safe. This is the only way I can do that. Please, trust me and close your eyes."

Navid blinked and watched the fairy shimmer in and out of its quantum existence. He closed his eyes.

The sun was warm. The bees were buzzing. He begrudgingly blinked his eyes open. What was the time? He must have fallen asleep in the garden. He walked back up the garden path to the back door, which the AI opened for him. The house was quiet and still.

Thanks for reading


I'd love your feedback on this story. Did you like the style of writing? Was the plot interesting? Did you guess the twist? Please stick a note in the comments to motivate me 😃

Hungry for more? You can read:

shkspr.mobi/blog/2024/11/down-…

#NaNoWriMo #RevengeOfTheMutantAlgorithms #WritingMonth



✊ “Esto antes era barrio”. Hoy he participado en la manifestación de la plataforma #CádizResiste contra un modelo turístico depredador que expulsa a las/os vecinas/os de sus barrios y convierte el derecho a la vivienda en papel mojado.

👏 Todo un éxito.



Nuestra democracia, insuficiente y deteriorada, solo tiene sentido si las clases populares la reivindicamos como propia y militamos activamente para mejorarla.

El próximo 23 de noviembre presentamos la Convocatoria por la Democracia a toda la ciudadanía.



Hi, @bagder I am writing just to express my gratitude. As a blind software engineer, I often find that GUI tools for making API calls leave much to be desired regarding accessibility.

Using curl in scripts has enabled me to accomplish everything my colleagues do with “Postman,” and even more.

Thank you for creating such a fantastic tool!!!



A raíz de una conversación que tuve ayer con un compañero, me apetece hablar de juegos, personas ciegas, prejuicios, desconocimiento generalizado, y reacciones cuando les contamos lo que hay en realidad. Siempre cortocircuitan. Y a muchos aquí os pasará lo mismo, seguramente. Al principio me apetecía escribir un artículo largo y más estructurado, pero es finde y quiero relajarme. Voy a soltar ideas como quien no quiere la cosa, y a ver qué sale.
in reply to José Manuel Delicado

No sé si lo ha comentado alguien ya, creo que te has dejado los MUD. no soy yo muy aficionado a los juegos pero en Callandor sí que “perdí” un montón de horas.
“Funciona con el chip más potente del mundo: la imaginación.”
youtu.be/900mMQMdCCQ?feature=s…
in reply to Javi Domínguez

Otro buen tema. Los MUDs. Yo estuve en dos en español que estaban inexplicablemente servidos por universidades, pero no me acuerdo bien de los nombres. Uno creo que era pusa. También en algunos en inglés.

Y luego otra historia son los juegos web sencillos tipo conquista del espacio, o cosas de esas.



IMPORTANT: It appears that some newcomers to Mastodon have not yet been lectured enough about adding ALT text to images. That’s definitely the way to welcome people and build community. Scold them about this Shibboleth of Acceptance.
in reply to Stilgherrian

Ah yes, my accessibility needs are a "Shibboleth of Acceptance." Nice.


Eight more videos from the recent LibreOffice Conference 2024! Covering GSoC, new Calc functions and optimisations, improvements to language support and more: youtube.com/watch?v=9IQZ-1sS2K… #foss #OpenSource

LibreOffice reshared this.

in reply to LibreOffice

I'm not a big-brains person that can dissect anything meaningful from technical talks, but I just want to say thanks the the team working on LibreOffice! You have provided me and my family with valuable tools we use a lot, for work, education and free-time shenanigans 👍🏻🙌🏻😁