cacheson

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 15 points 5 months ago (1 children)

Fellas, is it woke for YouTube to funnel viewers towards pro-fascist videos?

[–] [email protected] 1 points 5 months ago

It's worth bumping the priority up. I'm usually not that big on slice of life, but Machikado Mazoku is great.

[–] [email protected] 11 points 5 months ago

Don't give your coins to politicians, kids. They'll just become dependent and less able to survive in the wild.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 5 months ago (1 children)

Personally, I’ve yet to see a single American successfully use guns to protect any other constitutional right from government infringement.

The Battle of Athens is probably the most uniquely clear-cut example of what you're asking for, unless we count the American Revolutionary War itself.

Other successful examples mostly involve activists using non-violent protest to push for change, while using firearms to protect themselves from violent reactionaries that would otherwise murder them. Notably, the civil rights movement of the 1950s and 60s. For a modern example, there's various "John Brown Gun Clubs" and other community defense organizations providing security at LGBTQ events against fascist groups that seek to terrorize event-goers.

It's also worth noting that resistance is often worthwhile even if it doesn't result in unqualified victory. For example, the Black Panthers' armed cop-watching activities saved a lot of Black folks from brutal beatings at the hands of the police, even if the organization was eventually crushed by the federal government.

I have seen lots of examples like Waco and Ruby Ridge, where the government should have tried harder to deescalate, but in the end, everyone died. The closest example I can think of where the government did backoff was the Bundy standoff and all those guys were “defending” was their ability to let their cattle graze illegally on federal land because they didn’t want to pay for access like everyone else.

It sounds like you might be in a bit of a filter-bubble. I don't mean any offense by this, it's a normal thing that tends to happen to people. If the news sources you read and the people you talk to don't mention these things because it doesn't mesh with their worldview, how would you hear about them?

[–] [email protected] 6 points 5 months ago (6 children)

Strong gun control requires a police state, and it's advocates are okay with this. Some of them (mostly suburbanites and the like) just imagine that that police state will never be directed against them.

Others are capitalists that actively want to inflict a police state on the rest of us, for their own benefit. It's a lot easier to break strikes and enforce "work discipline" when the working class is disarmed.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 5 months ago

"Clever" troll is still obvious

[–] [email protected] 1 points 5 months ago

Food Courts Martial

[–] [email protected] 1 points 6 months ago (1 children)

How big is a Bitcoin transaction anyway?

Bitcoin block 841,308 (most recent as I'm writing this) is 1,615,771 bytes and has 3,148 transactions, for an average transaction size of ~513 bytes.

Because a Monero transaction is about one and a half to two kilobytes

So yeah, about 3 to 4 times as large as an average Bitcoin transaction.

Keep in mind we have dynamic block scaling so that the blocks will get larger as more transactions come in.

That's not a scaling solution, though. Larger blocks provide throughput at the expense of decentralization, since fewer people will run full nodes as resource usage increases. Eventually it gets to the point where it becomes feasible for a government to track down and compromise all the remaining node operators.

It seems like lightning service providers may very well be considered money transmitters

Not sure how much this would matter. Lightning wallets don't care whether their channel partners are registered money transmitters, or just some rando operating through TOR or in a permissive jurisdiction. In the case of Samourai, taking down the backend rendered the wallet useless. Taking out a lightning node just temporarily inconveniences users that were connected to them.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 6 months ago (3 children)

Monero may be a good option for some individual users right now, but it isn't a long-term solution for bringing financial privacy to the masses. That pretty much has to be done through Bitcoin wallets with privacy features. Bitcoin is already criticized for not scaling well, but Monero is far worse. If I remember correctly, Monero transactions are roughly 4 times as large as Bitcoin transactions, and they don't have any way to do off-chain transactions the way Bitcoin can with Lightning.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 6 months ago
[–] [email protected] 3 points 6 months ago (2 children)

Doesn't really have anything to do with the public ledger aspect. They got busted because they were maintaining a backend service that their wallet was dependent on, and they were making money from it. Simply releasing a wallet with privacy features is still presumably legal (IANAL) due to free speech protections applying to code. The government can still prosecute end-users directly, but the same is true for users of dedicated privacy coins.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 6 months ago (1 children)

Are there any physical obstructions between the controller and the antenna? That'd reduce the effective range.

 

The recent doxing of a Proud Boy school board candidate by the Midwest Youth Liberation Front highlights the work being done by teenage antifascists.

Article is from 2021, but I'd never heard of the "Youth Liberation Front" before.

 

The Nim team is happy to announce two releases:

  • the latest Nim, version 2.0.2
  • LTS release, version 1.6.18
3
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

EDIT: Looks like the defederation has been reversed. @db0 Thank you for looking into this quickly.


A commenter in the linked post is suggesting that dbzer0 automatically follows lemmy.world's block list. That seems like kind of a bad idea? In this instance it seems like the LW admins are just following the decision of lemmy.ml's tankie admins, and tankies gonna tank.

 

EDIT: As noted in the linked post, the defederation was a mistake and has been reversed. Thank you to the lemmy.world admins for reviewing this quickly.


I'm not a lemmy.world user, so I'm not directly affected by this defederation. I am a fan of both anime and the fediverse in general though, so I'm concerned about an apparent crackdown on my hobby and by what seems to be an increasingly damaging flaw in the fediverse model.

A few days ago. lemmy.ml defederated from ani.social, a lemmy instance specialized in anime. The only explanation given by Dessalines (lead dev of lemmy, owner of lemmy.ml and lemmygrad.ml) was that it was "full of CSAM". As far as anyone who's commented can tell, there doesn't seem to be any evidence of this whatsoever (see post link for an overview of the discussions). The only CSAM here appears to be in Dessalines' head.

That defederation was annoying, but not all that surprising. Dessalines and his fellow lead dev Nutomic are tankies, and tankies often seem to have a weird hatred of anime fans. The two of them have a history of making self-marginalizing decisions, so the obvious course of action is to just point them out so that people gradually abandon lemmy.ml, and hopefully eventually fork the lemmy codebase.

However, today I found out that lemmy.world had also defederated ani.social, again with no evidence presented for the decision. It looks like the LW admins are just rubber-stamping the bad decision of the lemmy.ml admins, without bothering to investigate at all.

We really can't afford to have the most popular lemmy instance behaving like this. The LW admin team has generally shown more professionalism in that past, so what gives?

 

Those of you that have your account on lemmy.ml may want to consider moving to another instance if you still want to be able to access ani.social.

240
Rule but unironically (media.kbin.social)
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

Liberated from some sarcastic tankie

 
 

I'd been vaguely aware of campaigns by tax-prep companies to stop the IRS from offering its own tax-prep software. I was going over some of my old tax info today, and started to wonder if there were any open source tax-prep programs.

What I found was Open Tax Solver. I get the impression that it's more clunky that using commercial tax-prep. Does anyone here have firsthand experience with it?

 
0
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

TL;DR- Be optimistic, but not fatalistic. Success still requires action. The article is worth reading in full, though.

Even if we accept the argument that the success of bitcoin as an asset due to its fixed supply and network effect is of high certainty, that does not guarantee the success of Bitcoin as a platform for a “full stack,” peer-to-peer financial ecosystem.

...

Failing to correct for this will result in the wider Bitcoin ecosystem suffering from choke points and resilience shortcomings which can and will be easily leveraged by adversarial actors to attack the network and its participants.

...

However, some will argue that ossification sooner rather than later is actually desirable as a defense against malicious changes to the Bitcoin core protocol, a la SegWit2x. This attitude entirely ignores and greatly increases another exploitable attack vector: stalling and preventing beneficial changes to the protocol which can enable more robust peer-to-peer and self-custodial solutions on subsequent layers. Indeed, after the spectacular failure of SegWit2x, any adversary would likely conclude the stalling strategy to be far more viable.

EDIT: Didn't propagate because lemmy.world was down

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