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PhazonJim

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PhazonJim
·3 lata temu·discuss
> the way this team published their results

The results weren't formally published.
PhazonJim
·3 lata temu·discuss
I leave my home office and connect with my kids or go outside. Just the action of getting up and leaving the work space and starting a new activity seems to do the trick for me, YMMV of course.
PhazonJim
·3 lata temu·discuss
It used to, when I cared a lot more. But at this point in my life work is just a means to an end - a source of income to allow me to pursue passion projects and support my family. I do my job as well as I can and when "stressful" things happen that are out of my control - I just ride it out.
PhazonJim
·3 lata temu·discuss
And that appears to be a dupe of: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=36693994
PhazonJim
·3 lata temu·discuss
IIRC OTA use is climbing. I believe a lot of the market is lower income and/or rural. New user so not sure if I can post a link but a 2022 Nielsen report:

> Nielsen divides OTA home into three segments, those with no streaming subscription VOD services (and maybe no broadband); those with SVOD, but without a virtual multichannel video programming distributor, such as Hulu Plus Live TV, YouTube TV or Sling TV; and those with SVOD and vMVPDs.

> The largest group uses OTA and SVOD at 9.3% of the country, up from 7.2% in 2018. The OTA homes with vMVPDs rose to 1.9% from 1.2%, while the OTA only home fell to 4.1% from 5.9%.

> People in homes that go over-the-air but don’t stream have an average age of 61, only 13% of them have children and their median income is $22,800.

> People in homes that combine over-the-air viewing with at least one streaming service have an average age of 45, 40% of them have kids and the median income is $49,000. In the homes that have OTA and a vMVPD, the average age is 49, 35% have children and the median household income is $77,000.
PhazonJim
·3 lata temu·discuss
I think you were downvoted because your comment wasn't substantive and perceived to not be on topic. If anyone cares about their data privacy I would expect HN users to be on the frontlines.
PhazonJim
·3 lata temu·discuss
I feel torn about how sites (like reddit/Twitter mentioned in the article) are going about their monetization. Surely these companies can not run these sites for free long term - they have to make money somehow. As a user, all of these changes negatively impact me and devalue their platforms but what alternative is there? Everywhere I go now I see either login/pay walls, my data is getting packaged up and sold off to third parties, or a mix of both.

Free and open web is what we all want but how can massive services like reddit or Twitter operate long term while losing so much money?
PhazonJim
·3 lata temu·discuss
Of course not, I just didn't see how the number of Threads users relates to tax sites selling your data.
PhazonJim
·3 lata temu·discuss
I don't reckon that is super on-topic unless you are trying to relate this article to the amount of people willing to hand over their personal info via Threads/Meta. But that seems like an aggressive reach.