Yes, the one that got in the top-3 COVID deaths per 100,000 habitants, along with USA and Brazil.
Futility is resistant
Yes, the one that got in the top-3 COVID deaths per 100,000 habitants, along with USA and Brazil.
Our current government is guilty of letting 300,000 (officially, 800,000 unofficially) people die because it minimized COVID and refused to implement any significant measures besides improvised hospital beds because its policy is saving money (to recklessly waste elsewhere).
Pro tip: you can use Google’s Verbatim mode to get exactly what you want.
We changed to USB-C ports because the EU forced us we have courage!
Ah, but when a subreddit had mostly mods from that 10%, <chef’s kiss>
AskHistorians, AskScience, WhatIsThisThing, etc.
Maybe this is another example of Sturgeon’s law.
Especially your security programs, like third-party antivirus or firewalls. They can install system-level plugins in your browsers, and sometimes those don’t work well. Windows defender and the built in firewall are good enough and play nice with other programs.
“2040: Google had laid off thousands of employees, and hasn’t been able to launch a new product in years”
So, like 2023 Google? It’s happening!
Also, Meta/Facebook tweaking the codebase is not necessary a bad thing. While being mostly evil, it has made significant contributions to open source, maybe wait and see will allow us to copy good ideas… before defederating them, because sooner or later they will get defederated.
I don’t see them as a good Fediverse player, but preemptive defederation, before they even start to show their colors, seems like almost unfair.
Unless you’re Chinese, there’s very little you can do to stop that, as opposed to encouraging your country’s politicians who have proven commitment to curb climate change.
So “China builds 5 coal plants every day before breakfast” is the whataboutism here.
<shows pale, tasteless spot>
I see Zuckerberg trying to capture the Fediverse as a good thing, but only because it will test how resilient it is, and expose any weak spots the community can fix.
Bad actors are inevitable in a federated network, and they’re supposed to become increasingly ostracized if they keep at it. Let’s see how resilient the Fediverse is against a thirsty bad actor with a deep wallet.
His first book (Sapiens) does a great job of showing how frail is modern civilization, though. Its foundation is, like religion, only beliefs.