Not Important
never test the depth of water with both feet.
- Oct 4, 2016
- 9,820
- 15,704
- AFL Club
- Tasmania
they are shit cars anyway. going electric, get a volvo.
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I actually struggle a little to disagree with her.I'm just going to put this on here because it's relevant to people's concerns about the platform. (I'm not a fan of Elon and the way he has changed the site) View attachment 2150222
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I actually struggle a little to disagree with her.
People behave like their specific site or blog or service or whatever have you isn't a business that you can opt in or out of their product. If that product no longer specifically appeals to you - for whatever reason - don't use or consume it. It's not fundamental to your identity; you don't need it for work unless you work in a very specialised field, you don't need it socially unless your friends are chronically online (and if they are, there's alternatives like discord, whatsapp), you don't need it to do anything. It's a way of being connected, and there are other ways to do that.
If you have privacy concerns stemming from online stalking - or doxxing - then that's potentially a separate issue, the solution ostensibly remains the same: get off the site. Scrub your profile, tell them your reasons, and leave.
If Woolies ceases to sell a product you like, find it elsewhere. You're not going to whinge at Woolworths for neglecting to stock a product you liked. If you don't like prepaying for fuel, don't go to the sites which force you to do it after hours.
If you don't like that Twitter won't let you block people, go to an alternative that will.
Australian shares are poised to fall as US stocks cooled further, but Tesla provided a late boost to Wall Street after surpassing earnings estimates for the three months to the end of September, with the electric carmaker turning around a slide that began earlier this year.
In an after-market update, the Elon Musk-founded company said net income had hit $US2.2 billion ($3.3 billion) in the three-month period, up 17 per cent on the same time last year. It has been attempting to turn around poor new car sales over the last year through discounting and other promotion.
i can see the validity behind their post, however, at the same time, shouldn't the space you use (and frequent be safe). i thankfully don't post often on twitter bc i'm boring and am not vain enough for social media (being vain in saying that, ironically) but people who're big(ger) than me should be able to disallow trolls, creeps or freaks from interacting and engaging with them, right?I actually struggle a little to disagree with her.
People behave like their specific site or blog or service or whatever have you isn't a business that you can opt in or out of their product. If that product no longer specifically appeals to you - for whatever reason - don't use or consume it. It's not fundamental to your identity; you don't need it for work unless you work in a very specialised field, you don't need it socially unless your friends are chronically online (and if they are, there's alternatives like discord, whatsapp), you don't need it to do anything. It's a way of being connected, and there are other ways to do that.
If you have privacy concerns stemming from online stalking - or doxxing - then that's potentially a separate issue, the solution ostensibly remains the same: get off the site. Scrub your profile, tell them your reasons, and leave.
If Woolies ceases to sell a product you like, find it elsewhere. You're not going to whinge at Woolworths for neglecting to stock a product you liked. If you don't like prepaying for fuel, don't go to the sites which force you to do it after hours.
If you don't like that Twitter won't let you block people, go to an alternative that will.
I actually struggle a little to disagree with her.
People behave like their specific site or blog or service or whatever have you isn't a business that you can opt in or out of their product. If that product no longer specifically appeals to you - for whatever reason - don't use or consume it. It's not fundamental to your identity; you don't need it for work unless you work in a very specialised field, you don't need it socially unless your friends are chronically online (and if they are, there's alternatives like discord, whatsapp), you don't need it to do anything. It's a way of being connected, and there are other ways to do that.
If you have privacy concerns stemming from online stalking - or doxxing - then that's potentially a separate issue, the solution ostensibly remains the same: get off the site. Scrub your profile, tell them your reasons, and leave.
If Woolies ceases to sell a product you like, find it elsewhere. You're not going to whinge at Woolworths for neglecting to stock a product you liked. If you don't like prepaying for fuel, don't go to the sites which force you to do it after hours.
If you don't like that Twitter won't let you block people, go to an alternative that will.
The post being rather rude and victim blamey doesn't detract from the logic of the thing.Seems very victim-blamey to me.
'grow up'
'too fragile for social media'
you need to coexist with the public, if you can't gtfo'
'whining'
'internet babies'
'grow up'
'whiny brats'
It's a no from me.
We wouldn't accept harassment in any other public space (and social media is a pseudo 'public' space even if privately owned) or tell people to suck it up, stop whining, and leave if they don't like it were they being harassed anywhere else.
I doubt it.I suspect if it was a male posting this kind of stuff you'd have different thoughts on it.
I actually struggle a little to disagree with her.
People behave like their specific site or blog or service or whatever have you isn't a business that you can opt in or out of their product. If that product no longer specifically appeals to you - for whatever reason - don't use or consume it. It's not fundamental to your identity; you don't need it for work unless you work in a very specialised field, you don't need it socially unless your friends are chronically online (and if they are, there's alternatives like discord, whatsapp), you don't need it to do anything. It's a way of being connected, and there are other ways to do that.
If you have privacy concerns stemming from online stalking - or doxxing - then that's potentially a separate issue, the solution ostensibly remains the same: get off the site. Scrub your profile, tell them your reasons, and leave.
If Woolies ceases to sell a product you like, find it elsewhere. You're not going to whinge at Woolworths for neglecting to stock a product you liked. If you don't like prepaying for fuel, don't go to the sites which force you to do it after hours.
If you don't like that Twitter won't let you block people, go to an alternative that will.
This is an interesting thought, but Woolies absolutely sell products that are dangerous, with a variety of different rules. You cannot buy a kitchen knife as a child - at least, you used to not be able to - and you cannot purchase cigarettes or alcohol at Liquorland without ID. You can make a Twitter account without ID; you're meant to be above a certain age to do so, but all you need's an email account.In one sense, I agree. Ultimately it's a product not a public space. The fact that people perceive it as a public space doesn't stop it from being so.
But at the same time, as a product it still has obligations to protect fundamental safety of those using the product. Woolies aren't allowed to have dangerous products. The petrol station isn't allowed to get away with not managing fire risks on their premises. If you walk into a cafe and someone is hurling abuse and screaming at the clientele, the cafe owners have both a right and obligation to remove that person.
So whether virtual reality space that is Twitter is adequately safe for it's customers, whatever the answer, is a question that deserves an answer.
It's because politicians are slow on the uptake and silicon valley were clever in their lobbying. Nothing prevents regulation worldwide than the US government capitulating.More generally... I've never understood why social media platforms aren't treated as publishers for any and all content that is generated on them and then thrust into the public space. They should be just as accountable for every post, comment, and photo as a publisher is for its authors and, to a lesser extent, a newspaper is for its journalists (although they have a higher responsibility as an employer of said journalists).
This is an interesting thought, but Woolies absolutely sell products that are dangerous, with a variety of different rules. You cannot buy a kitchen knife as a child - at least, you used to not be able to - and you cannot purchase cigarettes or alcohol at Liquorland without ID. You can make a Twitter account without ID; you're meant to be above a certain age to do so, but all you need's an email account.
The difference is therefore one of regulation, and governments haven't been open to regulating the online behemoths yet. Too aware that those same businesses can burn them and burn them hard come election time, but it's also because politicians tend towards not understanding the implications of new technology.
In very real terms, Australian politicians (and politicians as a whole) are insulated against the consequences of online spaces precisely because their interactions with those spaces are mediated through other, more tech savy people. Until they regulate those spaces, there's no-one between the kids and the smokes.
It's because politicians are slow on the uptake and silicon valley were clever in their lobbying. Nothing prevents regulation worldwide than the US government capitulating.
Well Elon Musk is Henry Ford in this analogy.Standing up and talking about ‘rounding up’ sections of soceity is kind of a hitler thing
Yeh, here's the Wall street journal that the article is based off, newsweek is written by 'AI' and uselessWow
Putin reportedly asked Elon Musk not to activate Starlink over Taiwan
According to a report from "The Wall Street Journal," Musk has been in contact with the Russian president on several occasions since 2022.www.newsweek.com
Named sources are pummelled so why give your self upYeh, here's the Wall street journal that the article is based off, newsweek is written by 'AI' and useless
https://archive.md/gLIk2#selection-1771.0-1771.201
A lot of unnamed sources. The only named source says
Kremlin Spokesman Dmitry Peskov said the only communication the Kremlin has had with Musk was over one telephone call in which he and Putin discussed “space as well as current and future technologies.”
It's pure beat up.......and I think Musk is a flog
Anyone could have passed messages between their organisations without having a direct phone call between the two.Yeh, here's the Wall street journal that the article is based off, newsweek is written by 'AI' and useless
https://archive.md/gLIk2#selection-1771.0-1771.201
A lot of unnamed sources. The only named source says
Kremlin Spokesman Dmitry Peskov said the only communication the Kremlin has had with Musk was over one telephone call in which he and Putin discussed “space as well as current and future technologies.”
It's pure beat up.......and I think Musk is a flog
True, and this means?Anyone could have passed messages between their organisations without having a direct phone call between the two.