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Joined 3 months ago
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Cake day: December 13th, 2024

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  • because calling out nazis as liars about their interest in free speech has got to mean abandoning freedom of speech.

    No duh insincere people claiming to advocate for free speech don’t really mean it. This isn’t exactly new or debatable: what is argued with it is debatable.

    Earlier, you write about “statements nearly impossible to implement” & looking for “solutions” as if free speech needs solving. It doesn’t. Free speech is its own solution: it means free for speech you dislike and for speech to answer it. There’s nothing to solve but a lack of dedication to & endurance of free speech.

    application of ethical principles may change

    this is a nice summary statement here.

    Not to be lifted out of context, “people’s awareness & recognition of” is an important part of that quote.

    It doesn’t mean their application to the same circumstances changes. What changes is people’s awareness/recognition, not that it applies or how (it always applied the moment it was possible to apply). Like finally recognizing equal rights apply to women or minorities. Or that protesting topless is protected speech. Or that free speech applies to communication over new technologies.

    If you got that, though, then it’s a nice summary.


  • Technologies

    yes

    and ethics continuously change

    no

    and adapt to new technologies

    Yes. Technology may change, people’s awareness & recognition of the application of ethical principles may change, however that doesn’t mean the principles themselves change.

    In terms of ethical reasoning, the essence of a matter may remain the same regardless of superficial guises (like technology). Adapting to a technology means applying the same general principles to novel, special cases. The principles concern rights & moral obligations people have to each other. Technology isn’t essential or relevant: the use of technology to perform an action is irrelevant to whether that action is right or wrong. The principles themselves can be timeless, immutable, and concern only essentials necessary to evaluate actions. Thinking otherwise indicates confusion & someone who doesn’t know what they’re talking about.

    I’m not interested in discussing the analogies of going from codexes to printed books vs. going from printed hard copies to human-human interactions being hijacked by human-passing bots, because to me these are evidently not comparable.

    Well, you’re wrong. They’re ultimately ways of disseminating expression. Just because you think some shiny, new, whizzy bang doodad fundamentally changes everything doesn’t mean it does.

    It probably indicates lack of historical perspective. These problems you think are new aren’t. People have long been complaining about lies spreading faster than truth, the public being disinformed & easily manipulated. In the previous century, the US has been through worse with disfranchisement, Jim Crow, internment camps, violent white supremacy, the red scare, McCarthyism. Yet now contagious stupidity spread through automations is an unprecedented threat unlike the contagious stupidity of the past? Large scale stupidity isn’t new. Freedom of speech was essential to anti-authoritarian, civil rights, and counterculture movements.

    There’s something contradictory about trying to defend liberal society by surrendering a critical part of it.

    The fact that this discussion is taking place on Lemmy and not Xitter tells plenty about the actual complexities of this story.

    Not really. Decentralization is part of the solution.

    Some people never liked Twitter.



  • That’s just technology & fearmongering. Socrates was critical of writing out of concerns it would deteriorate minds & make superficial thinkers. Critics were concerned the printing press would lead to widespread moral degradation with the abundance of low-quality literature. People criticized television & media for brain rot.

    Guess what you’re the next iteration of?

    Technologies change, yet good principles hold regardless.

    You know what you can do with free speech? More free speech. No one has a monopoly on LLM, bots, or algorithms. If people were inclined, they could launch these technologies to counter messages they oppose. People can choose to tune out & disregard expressions. Much more can be done with free speech.



  • The point of my post is that some of the loudest proponents of free speech have ulterior motives.

    So what? Free speech is still right: everyone should fervently defend it. Whether they’re sincere about it or not, free speech is indispensable to a liberal democracy.

    The problem isn’t free speech. The problem is people who want to take it all away. If you fall into the trap of abandoning basic values from the enlightenment when they make it inconvenient, then you play into their game & help them set back society.




  • Though that may be the case with references to Luigi, they’ll happily abide by much senseless moderation like

    • blanket blocks of comments containing links of any kind in subreddits such as r/mildlyinfuriating
    • blocks of meta discussions
    • strange ideas of brigading that treat a link to a post in another subreddit as “community inference”
    • practical bans of subreddits airing grievances about bad moderation
    • blocking any insult even when it doesn’t amount to harassment
    • blocking any expression of violence even when it’s not incitement until it swings back & strikes against expressions of class consciousness that refer to Luigi.

    With newer platforms like mastodon & bluesky, it seems like more of the same: their advocates often gush proudly of their robust moderation & claim that their extra moderation is indispensable to a safe, non-toxic experience.

    I think all we need from moderation is removal of illegal content & perhaps offloading of off-topic content somewhere else. Rather than block offensive content, they could label it & let users decide whether to filter it out. Bluesky already does this, but they hardcode their in-house moderation, so users can’t opt out as we saw when they blocked the Trump toe-sucking Elon deepfake video.



  • Not saying you should. The fact remains, though, you’re already investing it in real estate in an all-eggs-in-one-basket situation, inflation & property taxes are real, and insurance costs. Real estate still has some risk compared to low-risk assets that appreciate: do you remember any recent real estate crashes?

    Investment accounts are generally insured (against things going missing) up to high limits, and you can split them up to fit in those limits.

    If it all goes to shit, practically none of it will be worth much anyway. If armageddon doesn’t come to pass, you’ll be stuck with some property, livestock, crops, so not all bad.


  • Tax-free growth at compounding interest, beating inflation, diversification to mitigate risk & lessen volatility (eg, not putting eggs all in 1 basket). Markets always have risk: if you’re really afraid of risk, you can shift to mostly low-risk types of investments (bonds, money market, cash equivalents, etc). Real estate is typically considered riskier.

    Retirement isn’t necessary: qualified distributions (no tax penalty) only require reaching a certain age or any of the many exceptions (including terminal illness). Early distribution with tax penalty is always possible.

    It’s all basic information a certified financial planner or advisor or some articles on the internet can tell you.





  • loaded an HTML login page that had no discernable controls to use that Bitwarden passkey; expecting entirely for it to exist in my Apple keychain, which I never use

    I use Bitwarden, yet not macOS/iOS. Whenever a passkey dialog from the wrong authenticator comes up, I choose option other to redirect to a device running Bitwarden: I see macOS & iOS offer similar controls. However, Bitwarden’s passkey dialog (section with links to configuring that) usually pops up, so that isn’t necessary.

    But if that’s the case, how can I guarantee any other accounts I move over won’t fuck it up somewhere?

    Save a recovery code in Bitwarden (add field type hidden named Recovery code to the login entry)? That’s standard practice for me, though I’ve never needed them.

    I haven’t seen anyone get the concept of passwords wrong

    I have control of the copy-paste function and can even type a password myself if needed

    I’ve seen forms disable paste. Much can go wrong with passwords. Passwords require sharing & transmitting a secret (a symmetric key), which either party can fail to secure. Passkeys, however, never transmit secrets. Instead, they transmit challenges using asymmetric cryptography. The application can’t fail to secure a secret it never has. Far more secure, and less to go wrong.

    The password field is a more manual, error prone user interface. With passkeys/WebAuthn, you instead supply a key that isn’t transmitted: easier than passwords when setup correctly, & nothing to do until it’s setup correctly.

    Similar situation with ssh: though it can accept passwords, ssh key authentication is way nicer & more secure.



  • My company insists on expiring passwords every 28 days, and prevents reuse of the last 24 passwords. Passwords must be 14+ characters long, with forced minimum complexity requirements.

    Outdated security practices & cargo culture. Someone should roll up a copy of NIST SP 800-63 to smack them over the head until they read it:

    The following requirements apply to passwords:

    1. Verifiers and CSPs SHALL require passwords to be a minimum of eight characters in length and SHOULD require passwords to be a minimum of 15 characters in length.
    2. Verifiers and CSPs SHOULD permit a maximum password length of at least 64 characters.
    3. Verifiers and CSPs SHOULD accept all printing ASCII [RFC20] characters and the space character in passwords.
    4. Verifiers and CSPs SHOULD accept Unicode [ISO/ISC 10646] characters in passwords. Each Unicode code point SHALL be counted as a single character when evaluating password length.
    5. Verifiers and CSPs SHALL NOT impose other composition rules (e.g., requiring mixtures of different character types) for passwords.
    6. Verifiers and CSPs SHALL NOT require users to change passwords periodically. However, verifiers SHALL force a change if there is evidence of compromise of the authenticator.

    Maybe ask them their security qualifications & whether they follow the latest security research & industry standards.



  • For some people it is that easy.

    When it is saved to a cross-platform password manager, it is secured on all devices that password manager runs on including your computer on other operating systems. You can also choose other in the OS prompt & redirect to a device with your passkey or use a hardware security key (I don’t). If your preferred password manager isn’t the primary one on all your devices, then fix that or use the other option mentioned before.

    How would a non-techie figure this shit out?

    The same way they figure out passwords & multifactor. Their pain isn’t ours for those who’ve figured this out & have a smooth experience.