Recent comments in /f/articles
KeithPreDramamine wrote
Reply to Revolt of the delivery workers by oolong
Here, if you have a milkshake, and I have a milkshake, and I have a straw. There it is, it's a straw, you see? Watch it. Now my straw reaches across the room and starts to drink your milkshake. I... drink... your... milkshake. I drink it up!
oolong OP wrote
Reply to comment by voxpoplar in The disastrous voyage of Satoshi, the world’s first cryptocurrency cruise ship ("seasteading") by oolong
would've loved to see how they would've enforced the pet policy
neku wrote
Reply to comment by KeithPreDramamine in The disastrous voyage of Satoshi, the world’s first cryptocurrency cruise ship ("seasteading") by oolong
pepsi points are probably more stable than crypto tbh
voxpoplar wrote
Reply to The disastrous voyage of Satoshi, the world’s first cryptocurrency cruise ship ("seasteading") by oolong
I'm disappointed they didn't get to the point where people were actually moving in so some real hell could have happened.
KeithPreDramamine wrote
Reply to The disastrous voyage of Satoshi, the world’s first cryptocurrency cruise ship ("seasteading") by oolong
Reminds me of the people who tried to redeem pepsi points for the jet in the commercial, like 90m points they bought. Might as well be crypto.
neku wrote
Reply to The disastrous voyage of Satoshi, the world’s first cryptocurrency cruise ship ("seasteading") by oolong
Last year, three cryptocurrency enthusiasts bought a cruise ship. They named it the Satoshi, and dreamed of starting a floating libertarian utopia. It didn’t work out
wild
Elwartowski and his girlfriend, Nadia Summergirl,
these people are too much.
voxpoplar wrote
Reply to comment by oolong in Hundreds of Ways to Get S#!+ Done—and We Still Don’t (to do list users, how do you do) by oolong
I am basically at my desktop all day and I keep it open in Sublime Text all the time. I check it far too often.
oolong OP wrote
Reply to comment by voxpoplar in Hundreds of Ways to Get S#!+ Done—and We Still Don’t (to do list users, how do you do) by oolong
do you have a set time to check it/how often do you check it?
voxpoplar wrote
Reply to comment by voxpoplar in Hundreds of Ways to Get S#!+ Done—and We Still Don’t (to do list users, how do you do) by oolong
I think it has helped me but only in:
- Helping me overcome decision paralysis
- Letting me figure out what doesn't need to be a priority right now
- Letting me look back over and recognise what I have gotten done
It has not helped me get more done. There is a limited amount of time and brain juice for that.
voxpoplar wrote
Reply to Hundreds of Ways to Get S#!+ Done—and We Still Don’t (to do list users, how do you do) by oolong
I keep a weird hybrid diary/todo list just in text files on my PC. I put stuff on it I want to get done that day and also just add stuff after the fact as well, including shows I watched, games I played, etc. Sometimes I write actual diary entries at the bottom too. I then keep a few separate lists as well for "stuff I want to get done", "stuff I want to get done when there's time" and "stuff I want to do eventually". I used to dump project ideas into that last one but it was getting too big and stressing me out so I started moving each to their own text file or folder in a separate project ideas directory. It's stuff I still play around with exactly what I'm doing with it but I feel like overall it has helped me plan out things I want to get done and prioritise them without just getting overwhelmed with the amount of tasks.
neku wrote
when i am dead please bury me with Male and Female Accoutrements
at the very least i want a sword
Dogmantra wrote
Reply to comment by hollyhoppet in What Is Lost in Post-Scarcity? by Moonside
Yeah! This scans totally with my experience also. But then I also realise I'm not exactly the sort of music enjoyer that they're talking about. I suspect it's a case of the ol' typical mind fallacy.
hollyhoppet wrote
Reply to comment by Dogmantra in What Is Lost in Post-Scarcity? by Moonside
honestly? i feel like claims that people are listening to music more "just" as background noise comes across as really old-man-yells-at-cloud. i wonder if anyone has any evidence of this that's more than anecdotal. sure, spotify markets a lot of their playlists that way but i wonder how accurately targetd any of that marketing really is.
i've always listened to music while doing things like reading or working. and the key word there is "listened" because i'm not just having it as background noise but acticely appreciating the music. to put it as drily as possible i guess lol, i'm enjoying the intellectual stimulation that music provides, and that gives me a feedback loop to increase the enjoyment or productivity of my current task. granted, this might be an adhd or autism thing, but i doubt i'm alone in this pattern.
then again, maybe i'm the minority, who knows. until i see some actual numbers i'm not gonna buy it though.
Dogmantra wrote (edited )
Reply to What Is Lost in Post-Scarcity? by Moonside
This is an interesting read. I think I kind of disagree at the part where the author starts discussing how the post-scarcity music world means people listen more broadly and in the background. I find that because there is so much available for practically nothing, I filter through and find a few songs that really connect with me. In the days of the record, the cassette, even to an extent the CD, if you wanted to skip a track on an album you had to put physical work in. Yes you were forced into fewer albums, but you had much less of an ability to curate what you wanted to listen to. Making a playlist of your favourite songs involved buying a blank tape and dubbing them over, getting the perfect amount of silence between each track. Now you can "filter" through albums once and then add the songs you like to a custom playlist.
Moonside OP wrote
Reply to comment by oolong in What Nihilism Is Not by Moonside
I've only read The Stranger by Camus and not much Existentialism proper, so take this with a grain of salt. Imho Camus wanted to make his own thing with Existentialism, so I would say it's an attempt to overcome nihilism.
cute_spider_ni_srsly wrote
Reply to yo new gilgamesh just dropped by hollyhoppet
I just finished reading it. I think I'm gonna drop the series. All nostalgia no new ideas :/
neku wrote
Reply to yo new gilgamesh just dropped by hollyhoppet
i preferred his earlier works
oolong wrote
Reply to What Nihilism Is Not by Moonside
so where does absurdism slot in?
hollyhoppet wrote
Just a warning this comment is gonna get real heavy.
I've struggled with suicidal ideation since I was eight. When you're that young, it feels like nobody believes or nobody cares. Either that or they just don't know what to do, so they don't do anything. When you don't get homework or chores done instead of my parents identifying a problem they thought I was lazy.
Likely for obvious reasons, heavy depression makes you a quiet kid so your often seen as "mature" or "well-behaved." Harmful encouragement like that has a huge impact for a kid and can lead to more confusion and depression.
You feel like you have to keep it to yourself because bullies will see you as a target and fuck with you.
You don't have the tools to cope with it. You've only been around for less than a decade and even a month of depression and suicidal ideation feels like an eternity.
I could say something trite like "I really feel for these kids" but that really can't express how much empathy and care kids like these need. It fucks you up for life.
hollyhoppet admin wrote
hey i'm going to add a "CW suicide," sorry if that's an overreach but i think it's pretty important
Moonside wrote
Reply to comment by noammitski in [CW sui] 8-Year-Olds in Despair: The Mental Health Crisis Is Getting Younger by neku
your nick is pretty cool
noammitski wrote
fuck man, tough shit to read. if anyone ever needs to talk or something, i'm all ears.
hollyhoppet wrote
this is cool
twovests wrote (edited )
I agree with the "disclosure" thing. I have about $1000 in Ethereum (which used to be $100), but I think it'll get a lot higher, so I haven't sold it yet. I've also made several donations on ERC tokens, worth about $300 total (summing for the value they were at the times of payment.) I don't have a significant amount of any other cryptocurrencies (except possibly Dogecoin from that old Reddit tip bot, back when Dogecoin was a joke.)
But there's a lot of wrong things in this article, which is disappointing because I generally like this author. But I don't think the author is being intentionally misleading.
TLDR of the parts I disagree with
- Free CPU cycles have always been subject to abuse. I do agree the recent spike in magnitude of abuse is from miners. But the author states this is an entirely new thing, which is untrue.
- Software has always had a profit incentive. I don't know where the "integrity and trust" the author used to have in the software industry comes from.
- Proof-of-Stake isn't being blocked by those with money. They don't have any reason to. Those with money want Ethereum to move to Proof-of-Stake. The author doesn't explain the reasoning behind arguing that "they" don't want PoS to succeed.
- As an example: Ethereum is the prime example used by PoS fans, because it is strictly necessary for it to move to PoS. It's 100% going to move to PoS.
-
Also, 'hard drives' are already used for many different proof-of-space cryptocurrencies. It's not "coming", it's already here.EDIT: I think the author is talking about a very new Proof-of-Space coin, Chia, which is causing HDD shortages. - There are a lot of parts I agree with though, this is just a list of parts I disagree with.
Ahem, here's my full reply, part by part:
Cryptocurrency has invented an entirely new category of internet abuse.
The way this is written makes it sound like botnets have never existed and that free CI/CD (and similar services offering free CPU cycles) have never been abused. Like, the author is obviously aware of password databreaches and SHA256 hashes, but also asks "what kind of abuse would a CI platform endure?"
Like, the pieces are already in the blogpost. DDoS botnets, password cracking, etc. I can show you tutorials on how to install hashcat or jtr on Google Colab to crack passwords, but I don't know of any tutorials to use it to mine cryptocurrencies. I definitely agree that cryptocurrency mining has increased the magnitude of abuse and that absolutely sucks. But it doesn't weaken the author's point to acknowledge that these services have been subject to abuse since their inception.
The integrity and trust of the entire software industry has sharply declined due to cryptocurrency. It sets up perverse incentives for new projects, where developers are no longer trying to convince you to use their software because it’s good, but because they think that if they can convince you it will make them rich.
Like, this gives the impression that the author is deep in some silicon valley nightmare bubbles. Does the author believe nobody was writing code for money before 2009? Has the author really not seen any open-source projects that aren't related to cryptocurrencies since then? Like, the author goes on to say "Which one are investors more likely to invest in? Hint: it’s the one that’s more profitable," and, yeah, this isn't a new problem either. They then go on to mention the DAO, which implies the author is pretty knowledgeable in this area, and then mentions how "they" forked the blockchain, as if it's something special only a reserved "they" can do.
The conspiratorial "they" continues on later, with this line:
Not to mention that any attempts at reform, like proof-of-stake, are viciously blocked by those in power (i.e. those with the money) because of any risk it poses to reduce their bottom line. No, your blockchain is not different.
Which is kind of wildly untrue. This point is the most misinformed, it's completely false. Like, I'm literally betting $1000 that the author is wrong here!
Ethereum is the second largest cryptocurrency and it's migrating to proof-of-stake. I'd love to know any reason why it wouldn't. Those with the big money are also willing to bet that, since they are extremely incentivized to move to proof-of-stake.
For starters, Ethereum on PoS is an eco-friendly, deflationary, and all of Ethereum's cool parts get better under PoS. Investors want those improvements to happen. More and more regular non-tech people will be interested in investing once that whole "eco-friendly PoS thing that will never happen" actually happens. You also have to keep in mind that regular people use Venmo and PayPal like it was a bank, and also don't know what FDIC means. Investors are extremely aware of how much money Proof-of-Stake can make them. But this huge profit incentive doesn't even matter, because it is strictly necessary to move to Proof-of-Stake, or it will die.
For context, Ethereum is effectively designed so that it will kill itself if Proof-of-Stake is not used. This is because of the "Ice Age", which makes mining exponentially more difficult over time. Within a few years, it will be impossible to mine new blocks. But there are currently two forks, one with PoW and one with PoS. Almost every new cryptocurrency you hear about is implemented on top of Ethereum, and most of them are running on the PoW fork.
It's not all just speculation and investment either. There are people running actual, useful software services for money on Ethereum, so there are actual software companies who's function entirely depends on Ethereum existing. So, even if you think it's all stupid, Ethereum is definitely going to finish its migration to proof-of-stake.
As a note, Ethereum's migration to PoS isn't a panacea. For starters, anyone can hard-fork and remove the difficulty bomb and keep mining if they want, but they'll be leaving the dApps and the other coins behind. But more realistically, they'll just sell their GPUs or repurpose their mining rigs for some other purpose, probably mining another cryptocurrency. The energy consumption will just be shifted out of Ethereum's hands.
As a final note, the author says "Rumor has it that hard drives are up next." I think the author is being misleading here as well, because that implies it hasn't already happened yet. "Proof of storage" / "proof of capacity" cryptocurrencies have already existed for many years. EDIT: I believe the author is talking about the Chia coin, which is a proof-of-space coin, which is getting popular for some reason and is causing storage shortages already.
hollyhoppet wrote
Reply to COVID lesson: trust the public with hard truths by Moonside
I honestly wonder how much this would have helped in the case of the states given so many republicans themselves seem to want to spin vaccination as a "personal freedom" issue. Like I doubt there would have been panic but I also doubt the needle would have moved. Moreover, the Danish social contract is significantly different from the US social contract. As the article alluded to, there's more trust in the government and trust in each other.