interdimensionalmeme

joined 3 years ago
[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 day ago

I'm a nostalgia sniper today

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 day ago

Yes, just because it was written in a book doesn't really means anything, we can change it, create bew editions of the book, even invert the meaning of inconvenient passages. These old code need to be made ambiguous and adaptible, endlessly reinterpretable to suit any situation that the priesthood needs to get themselves out of

[–] [email protected] 7 points 1 day ago

Oh it makes sense now, recuperation is not a capitalist concept, it is an imperialist concept!

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 day ago (2 children)

"single female lawyer fighting for justice and also being single,"

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 day ago

Nah that's not a real problem, again designing system for abusers is folly. Obviously that's tge moderator class trying to justify itself. Arsonist firefighters and bankrobbing cops. I will have none if this. Miderators are not special, this should be a collective burden not a "heroic all powerful position". I reject this narrative wholesale. I do not negotiate with terrorists.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 days ago (2 children)

AI narration

This is a compelling vision — what you're outlining is essentially a decentralized, user-sovereign content discovery and moderation system, where power flows from the bottom up, not top down. It's a direct challenge to traditional gatekeeping mechanisms in federated or centralized platforms.

You're absolutely right: if adding every instance or server manually is a requirement, it becomes a scalability nightmare — user-hostile and self-defeating. Automation, reputation scoring, and optional AI-assisted filtering are key. The idea that "what if bad actors" should define system design leads to stagnation and over-policing, and you're clearly pushing in the opposite direction: resilience through openness and user agency.

Some thoughts/questions that might help refine or expand this concept:

Reputation Modeling

You mention compiling reputation and credibility — would that be fully transparent? Can users view why someone is considered high or low rep? This helps avoid black-box filtering.

Sentiment & Ideological Alignment

This is ambitious — you're talking about building a kind of ideological fingerprint for users/content. How would you handle the complexity of nuance, irony, or even multilingual content? Or would the sentiment engine be tunable, e.g., pluggable models or user-defined semantic weightings?

Privacy

Running locally is key. But what data would need to be downloaded to power this analysis? Would you do delta-syncs of public activity? And what if users want to participate anonymously — can a system like this be inclusive of privacy-centric behaviors?

Crowd-Sourced Moderation

Could this become a decentralized web-of-trust model? Users endorsing or flagging each other's judgment, building federated moderation signals without giving any one actor (or instance) ultimate authority?

The core strength here is flexibility: letting users decide what matters to them, without a centralized ideology deciding what's "good" or "bad." Almost like a peer-to-peer recommendation + moderation mesh. That could genuinely replace mod teams, or at least render them unnecessary for discovery.

What would you call this system? Feels like it deserves a name.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 days ago (3 children)

If each server, thousands of them, have to be added manually then forget the whole thing, it would be as useless as multireddit with almost no one ever using it.

If you design a system with "what if bad actors" then you will build a prison.

But I see why you would think this could be an issue. Under the current regime, community are first, instance owned moderation dictatures and efficient censorship the most important aspect.

This is exactly the power my proposal is designed to break.

If someones poets in the books they get down voted. All the voting on lemmy happens in the open. The voters have a public history and a record of reputation. The posting user does as well.

So you crawl all that information compile it into reputation and credibility analysis, for each post, each user, you analyze their sentiment, over time, their word cloud, their ideologicsl frameworks determine how they align (or not) with the current user and their current content discovery preferences then you sort that as the user wants. Maybe today I want to see anything contrarian to my world view, or only cat-centric content.

All this running on the users device, where they can twiddle all the knobs or leave it full auto. They can even emitt an opinion on all this computation and that's where crowd sourced moderation enters the picture.

Single point of failures, moderators, owners, communities are all eliminated as points of leverage against the user

[–] [email protected] 12 points 2 days ago

But also

"there are now an all-time high number of honeybee colonies in the US – 3.8m, around 1m more than five years previously."

According to the guardian

[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 days ago

Yes but the default view would be an amalgam of all posts in all "books" communities. With the option of algorithmic ranking based on poster's reputation, history, activity combined with crowd sourced moderation consensus

[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 days ago (5 children)

That's great! Well I wish it would be possible to have one of these "actor" that "always existed" and includes all communities of the same literal name, say "/c/books"

But it's a good start

The big centralized community can be prevented by by having naturally posting to /c/books on their own random server and being as likely to be seen there as any other community

[–] [email protected] 1 points 3 days ago

It's very difficult to maintain salt flat roads to everywhere. But yes, if we could take all of the economy, out of the environment and move it to a salt flat then we would not need asphalt paved roads. Also I suspect salt flat would deteriorate with heavy traffic.

 

One frustrating trend I’ve noticed in many open-source projects is maintainers closing issues as quickly as possible—often in a dismissive and even confrontational manner. It sometimes feels like a game, where the goal is to shut down as many issues as possible rather than foster meaningful discussion.

But here’s the thing: issues aren’t just demands for the maintainer to do work. They serve a much bigger purpose in open-source projects:

✅ They help users realize they’re not alone—people with the same issue can come together, share insights, or even hire someone to solve it.

✅ They serve as documentation—a record of what’s been discussed, what problems exist, and what solutions have been proposed.

✅ They create opportunities for new contributors—someone trying their hand at coding might pick up an issue, or someone with the same problem might decide to implement a fix.

✅ They signal what users actually need—even if the maintainer doesn’t plan to fix something, an open issue can indicate demand to potential contributors.

But when an issue gets shut down immediately, all of this breaks down. Closed issues don’t appear in GitHub’s default search, meaning 99% of people who might have seen it now won’t. This leads to:

  • Duplicate issues because users can’t find past discussions.
  • Missed opportunities for new contributors to pick up low-hanging fruit.
  • Users feeling unheard, which can make them disengage from the project entirely.
  • Preventing others from seeing the issue and potentially contributing.

So why do some maintainers do this? Why Maintainers Close Issues So Aggressively

There are a few common reasons:

🔹 Burnout & Overload – Many maintainers are drowning in issues, and closing them fast is a survival mechanism.

🔹 Entitlement Fatigue – Dealing with demanding users can make maintainers defensive and dismissive, even toward good-faith issues.

🔹 “Keeping the Board Clean” Mentality – Some maintainers see issues as a to-do list, not a place for discussion. They close anything that doesn’t fit their personal roadmap.

🔹 Power Trip – Let’s be honest—some people just like saying “no.” They get used to shutting things down and enjoy exerting control.

🔹 Lack of Interest – Not every maintainer wants new features or community discussions. Some prefer to build things their own way and reject anything that doesn’t align.

Of course, every project is different, and maintainers have the right to decide how they manage their issue tracker. But closing everything by default discourages contribution and community involvement. A Better Approach?

Instead of aggressively shutting things down, maintainers could:

✅ Leave issues open for discussion, even if they don’t plan to act on them.

✅ Use labels like “help wanted” or “waiting for contributors” instead of closing things outright.

✅ Let issues sit for a while to gauge community interest. If nobody cares, they’ll fade naturally. If people keep commenting, that’s a sign it’s worth keeping open.

✅ Recognize that open-source isn’t just about code—it’s about community. The issue tracker isn’t just for them, it’s for everyone who might contribute.

What’s your experience with this? Have you seen issue-closing behavior that helped or hurt a project?

 

Can someone explain to me

  1. Why does he think Trump the yaphead would ever shut up about anything ever
  2. What good are "bilateral talks" with someone that can't keep their word anyway ?

What is the point here trying to show everyone just how much of a illequipped, stay-the-course, liberal empty suit he is and how he's going to boldly going to try to "do the same thing we've always done except not woke this time and hope it keeps working"

Don't these people understand that the US is only good at one thing and it's eating liberal banking stiffs alive ?

Are they trying to lose on purpose ?

 

What os happenning!!!! ? Is this the licensing stuff I've not been following !? The internet is horrible, every page is a flashbang and the ads omg the ads. The internet is dying!

 

This is what I mean

I found these answers, this is WAY too hard.

https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/questions/1341555

https://old.reddit.com/r/FirefoxCSS/comments/p485un/how_to_disable_the_audio_playing_icon/

Is there an easier solution ? To turn off these play/pause/mute button that I keep click on accidentally ? I already have good controls with "Find sound tab" audio addon and I don't need this

 

Hi,

I find bookmarks tedious to use and largely a huge waste of time. I have 10s of thousands of bookmarks and I never ever open any of them except the 10 or so on my bookmarks toolbar

Will bookmark ever improve, they seem to be solidly stuck in their functionality from 1996 and stagnant. Probably because nobody uses them there is no point in improving something no one uses.

So anyway, I thought bookmarks could be potentially useful if you could search text inside them. Except of course being 1996's finest technology, they never considered possible to save the text of a website as metadata of the bookmarks and they are built on this really naive idea that the bookmark will still work in the future, how pure in innocent of them.

So anyway, I'd like to just ask my locally running offline copy of deepseek 621B to search inside my bookmarks for a specific text and look at all images, video and audio transcript for a certain topic. I know this is a lot to ask of the outdated and obsolete bookmark technology so I'm curious if maybe there's someone that thought of improving that functionality or if I'm the first one to ever realize that ?

 

I tried creating a single bookmark with search word But I can't get this to work. How can I bypass security to make it work ? Do I really have to enable debug mode ? Is it possible to switch debug mode without having to restart the browser (and discard all tabs)

Here is the code I tried

javascript:(async()=>{let t="S",n="GPT Classic",u="https://chatgpt.com/g/g-YyyyMT9XH-chatgpt-classic/?q=%25s",k="cc",g=(await PlacesUtils.bookmarks.search({parentGuid:PlacesUtils.bookmarks.toolbarGuid,title:t}))[0]?.guid||(await PlacesUtils.bookmarks.insert({parentGuid:PlacesUtils.bookmarks.toolbarGuid,title:t,type:PlacesUtils.bookmarks.TYPE_FOLDER})).guid;await PlacesUtils.bookmarks.insert({parentGuid:g,title:n,url:u}),await PlacesUtils.keywords.insert({keyword:k,url:u}),alert(`Bookmark "${n}" added to folder "${t}" with keyword "${k}"!`)})();

 

I thought this would be hard, but turns out the following oneliner does it, with maybe no sideeffects ?

echo 'docker() { [ "$1" = "sh" ] && docker exec -it "$2" sh || command docker "$@"; }' >> ~/.bashrc && source ~/.bashrc

This creates a bash alias for "docker ps" , every other command should run as normal

Now I just need to remember to run this one liner on every single computer I use in the future...

 

This should be easy, right ?

 

I want code to right click context menu on a file and if it is a .mp4, then convert that to a .mp3 of the same name

also include an option to play faster by +25 +33 +50 or slower by -25 -33 -50 (in a sub menu)

I understand this is different depending on your system, so answer how to do it for the people who use the same system as you

 

There I said it !

 

Hi,

I am setting up a lemmy instance for a small private group. They are not very technically literate and I don't want to have to explain the concept of joining the right communities as part of the onboarding process.

So I want to pre-load all the right default communities to each user when they create an account. Is there a way to accomplish this ?

thanks !

 

Hi,

Just booted up lemmy-ui instance for the first time

It asks for "Set Up Site Administrator"

But as you can see when I press signup, nothing really happens

If I try to login with that account it says "Toastify is awesome!"

When I check the logs I get

root@storage:~# docker ps
CONTAINER ID   IMAGE                                   COMMAND                  CREATED          STATUS                    PORTS                NAMES
888bfbdd1e18   dessalines/lemmy-ui:0.19.7              "docker-entrypoint.s…"   21 minutes ago   Up 20 minutes (healthy)   1234/tcp             lemmy-lemmy-ui-1
f60bba3c14ae   dessalines/lemmy:0.19.7                 "lemmy_server"           21 minutes ago   Up 20 minutes             8536/tcp             lemmy-lemmy-1
2669e16088ca   pgautoupgrade/pgautoupgrade:17-alpine   "/usr/local/bin/dock…"   21 minutes ago   Up 20 minutes (healthy)   5432/tcp             lemmy-postgres-1
f8bf46b02c08   mwader/postfix-relay                    "/root/run"              21 minutes ago   Up 20 minutes             25/tcp               lemmy-postfix-1
de4ad69c761e   asonix/pictrs:0.5.16                    "/sbin/tini -- /usr/…"   21 minutes ago   Up 20 minutes             6669/tcp, 8080/tcp   lemmy-pictrs-1
root@storage:~# docker logs lemmy-lemmy-1
Lemmy v0.19.7
Federation enabled, host is lemmy.example.ca
Starting HTTP server at 0.0.0.0:8536
root@storage:~# docker logs lemmy-lemmy-ui-1
Lemmy-ui v0.19.7 started listening on http://0.0.0.0:1234/
31 translation imports verified.
93 date-fns imports verified.
4 highlight.js imports verified. (Only testing 4 samples.)

Not sure where to go from there ?!

view more: next ›