Tregetour

joined 2 years ago
[–] Tregetour@lemdro.id 4 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

Yes it is, that's what I'm getting at - independent output's share of total output increasing significantly

[–] Tregetour@lemdro.id 4 points 10 months ago (1 children)

You don't need the law to do that, you need a weekend of brushing up on router operation

[–] Tregetour@lemdro.id 9 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago) (2 children)

Responses ITT have focused on legal and technical roadblocks. But if you can imagine a world where cultural production is even slightly less consolidated and corporate, where we start doing more of it for ourselves and our social circles, a cultural roadblock starts to emerge. How do I copy illicitly if the output is specialized and uniquely calibrated to the personal tastes of a hyper-small audience? Another way of asking the question might be: if mass markets don't mean much anymore and it's easy to make and propagate things ourselves, does piracy still exist? Or do we recognize that copying is a fundamental mechanism of culture, and there's no longer any point in encumbering it for the sake of the profit motive?

I think the remarks of Denuvo hardly mattering for Ubisoft titles because they're shitty games to start with, or jokes about Disney succeeding in making a film that will never get pirated (Snow White), start to get at this question

[–] Tregetour@lemdro.id 12 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

It wouldn't surprise me if 'fatphobia' turned out to be a psyop, like the corporate-funded research into nutrition whose aim is to plant a particular meme in the public conscience ('don't give up soda kids, just exercise to lose all that weight!')

50 years of high-fructose food ubiquity doesn't negate millennia of evolutionary conditioning that expects us to be on foot most of the day, consuming high protein diets and covering 10+km distances

The notion that we can out-social engineer physical reality is a doggedly persistent one

[–] Tregetour@lemdro.id 0 points 10 months ago

which makes it impossible to go off-grid in suburbia

State/corps: Mission accomplished

[–] Tregetour@lemdro.id 0 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

I would love a politician to try explain why they were so committed to killing vaping

Narrator: The main reason was ego

[–] Tregetour@lemdro.id 0 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago) (2 children)

I suspect the high tax no longer has much of a harm reduction/uptake suppression utility, and that the Aus government secretly knows this, but they are hopelessly addicted to the revenue so will enact overbearing new laws to protect the income stream.

I remember the Australian government crowing about their world-first plain packaging initiative many years ago. Talk about fighting the last war lol

[–] Tregetour@lemdro.id 7 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

What you want is basically a recipe for the web turning into an exclusively corporate wasteland. Lack of installation freedom doesn't provide security from anything when the A/G app stores are already full of malware. Real security - security for users - lies in our ability to exercise choice - to use a FOSS app, or to pay conventionally via the web instead of having to put up with creepy opaque vendor portals (or worse, an app)

Phones are generic computing devices. We must able to operate and maintain them however we wish.

[–] Tregetour@lemdro.id 0 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

Lwaxana is a great character in her own right. Her comparitive color and depth next to Deanna is an indictment of the writers' abandonment of the latter as a viable character.

S5E20 is Trek at its spiritual best, and contains some of TNG's funniest images (like Worf in a mudbath)

[–] Tregetour@lemdro.id 0 points 10 months ago

Anglophone country but I would rather not specify.

Yes the BBC has its own legacy wierdness - and sadly a track record of protecting predators in order to protect itself

[–] Tregetour@lemdro.id 0 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago) (2 children)

The old metric used by free-to-air networks was advertising minutes per broadcast hour. When I stopped watching FTA about a decade ago that number was about 12 or 13. Youtube's must be 40+. I'm not brave enough to rawdog 60 minutes of YT and test it (and of course it wouldn't be uniform number anyway)

 

1

Gnarly Christmas Day watch for the whole family

 

It's worth going in blind. But for the impatient, here's an insightful review: https://www.themoviedb.org/review/5cc25a01c3a3681e6b805326

 

Protector of arresting color palettes. Spiritual sponsor of NPBs. Discarder of crepes.

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