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stackghost

2,443 karmajoined 2 years ago
New account who dis?

https://stackgho.st

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Tell HN: Mindie.dev is scraping emails from profiles to send spam

27 points·by stackghost·2 months ago·6 comments

Meta to cut 8000 employees despite $26B Q1 net income

moneywise.com
36 points·by stackghost·2 months ago·6 comments

GNU: A Heuristic for Bad Cryptography

soatok.blog
10 points·by stackghost·7 months ago·4 comments

comments

stackghost
·6 hours ago·discuss
RMS may be legendary but he's no John Carmack or whomever else. I use emacs every day, and nobody who does the same can honestly say the foundations are good. The performance is atrocious. The UI locks up when you make network calls because the whole thing is single threaded. The whole thing is a mess of spaghetti code and there are multiple instances of core developers like Eli Zarerski admitting on emacs-devel that they don't know how <internal core system> works.

RMS is a visionary but as an actual software developer he's pretty mid.
stackghost
·yesterday·discuss
Why are Rust people so insufferable?

We get it. You like Rust. It's not a panacea.
stackghost
·yesterday·discuss
Designing the game and having codex shit out the code is how I roll.
stackghost
·yesterday·discuss
...every nah'n'then I get a little bit terrified, I see the fuckin look in your eyes
stackghost
·2 days ago·discuss
Other than gopher/Gemini, not really, no
stackghost
·2 days ago·discuss
You mean centralizing the web? Doesn't bother me. Most of the web is a dumpster fire of AI slop anyway.

There's more to the Internet than the world wide web, though. NNTP and IRC communities remain vibrant, if diminished in size
stackghost
·2 days ago·discuss
That's an interesting choice of analogy because I despise doing jigsaw puzzles. I don't see where the entertainment is supposed to be.
stackghost
·2 days ago·discuss
And to the sycophant, pointing out real and obvious drawbacks is being a curmudgeon.
stackghost
·2 days ago·discuss
>Now tell me what is cool

Piracy is cool. Information wants to be free.

I hate the corporate bootlicking that is so prevalent here.
stackghost
·2 days ago·discuss
There needs to be another rule against being a techno-sycophant.
stackghost
·3 days ago·discuss
Technically, any conversation possible exists somewhere in the digits of pi.
stackghost
·3 days ago·discuss
Nobody is saying that their minimal default install is itself problematic.

But trumpeting your default install's safety record doesn't actually say much when the default install doesn't actually do anything. As soon as you add a package or a port you're beyond "default install" territory and their vaunted security reputation's coverage.
stackghost
·3 days ago·discuss
NB: "Pi" in this context refers to an agent harness of some sort, and does not refer to the Raspberry Pi.

I was confused.
stackghost
·3 days ago·discuss
OpenBSD has a reputation for being... selective about what they admit is a security-relevant bug.
stackghost
·3 days ago·discuss
>writing code is the actual fun part of the job though.

You mean typing the actual code into the editor is the fun part for you? For me, the fun part has always been "cause computer to do novel things", and actually typing/compiling/debugging the code is just a speed bump on the way to something fun.
stackghost
·3 days ago·discuss
[dead]
stackghost
·3 days ago·discuss
Traders have no more special insight into economic policies than anyone else. The economy != the market.
stackghost
·3 days ago·discuss
>Sorry, why are their sources of funding relevant?

Because money is power, are you new?

You claimed that some unspecified "They" are attempting to force a socialist utopia/dystopia upon us, and that "They" are seeking to end private ownership because socialism. You seem to be unable to articulate who "They" are, from where "They" derive their power, or who is funding "Them".

>If they’re in power or have influence, it could largely be a grassroots movement and it doesn’t matter?

Grassroots movements quite simply do not have power or influence unless either:

1. they're well-funded, in which case see my previous point. Where does that money come from? or

2. they're supported by a significant majority of the public, in which case it makes no sense to refer to "They" in such a way as to insinuate there is a small minority of powerful figures forcing these issues upon an unwitting or unwilling public. If the movement enjoys broad popular support (unlikely!), then there is no conspiracy and you simply have a minority opinion. In that case, deal with it.
stackghost
·3 days ago·discuss
>Because the green movement is largely made up of socialists

Okay, and where are they getting their political clout and funding? I believe in following the money. Where does the money come from?

>I don’t think it’s accurate to assume auto manufacturers have a financial interest in opposing the end of fossil fuels.

Auto manufacturers certainly have a financial interest in private automobile ownership, don't you think?
stackghost
·3 days ago·discuss
>[seeking to] mandate digital currencies, mandate digital IDs, impose "chat control" and eliminate all privacy.

None of this has anything to do with a purported green movement that seeks to end private ownership of cars. Modern cars are easy to track, for starters.