• Brustadnrift@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    Man, this is depressing. While I wasn’t “raised online” since I was raised on dialup and couldn’t block the phone line all that long.

    I still remember when google was the new kid on the block and the general feeling about them across early Internet forums.

    Microsoft was evil because they copied everybody else’s stuff and wanted to charge for it. Apple was clueless making expensive junk. Sun was a darling for a while at least until they started pulling shit.

    Enter mother-fucking-Google. Ethical. Honest. Not evil. Smart. Supporting open source. And on top of all that, FREE to use. Like Microsoft wants to charge you for hotmail if you want an inbox > 2MB? Fucking EVIL!!! Google is ethical because they are completely free!!! And I hear they are working on an email service too. Google just wants to shepherd the internet and protect it from companies like Microsoft, Apple, and AOL.

    Oh Google.

    • Asafum@feddit.nl
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      1 year ago

      A company that survives long enough eventually gets turned to the dark $ide. Greedy asshats will always ruin a good thing for their own benefit

      • kittenbridgeasteroid@discuss.tchncs.de
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        1 year ago

        Any company that becomes publicly traded gets turned to the dark side. That’s the factor that does it because they have a legal requirement to do everything they can to maximize profits.

        Trying to sustain perpetual growth will always lead to companies fucking over their customers and employees.

        • blindbunny@lemmy.ml
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          1 year ago

          While I feel this is true there are so few privately owned companies that prove this as fact. Holds breath that steam never fucks over its customers

          • mnemonicmonkeys@sh.itjust.works
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            1 year ago

            I live Valve, but there’s always that nagging bit in the back of my mind reminding me that they can always turn evil in the span of a few years. And the recent debacle with Dolphin doesn’t help

              • mnemonicmonkeys@sh.itjust.works
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                1 year ago

                No, Dolphin was their fault. Valve reached out to Nintendo before Dolphin was added to the store. If Valve hadn’t asked Nintendo for permission first, Nintendo probably would have said nothing

                • LiquorFan@pathfinder.social
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                  1 year ago

                  It makes sense though. People can already install Dolphin wherever they want, including the Steam Deck. But Valve probably thinks they can get Nintendo to publish on Steam. It wasn’t so long ago that Sony and Microsoft maintained exclusivility on their platforms. Valve doesn’t win anything allowing Dolphin on Steam, but it can potentially anger Nintendo.

            • Nils@feddit.de
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              1 year ago

              Nintendo sent them a DMCA takedown request for the Dolphin Steam page. So I don’t think we can blame Steam for wanting to stay out of legal trouble

              • mnemonicmonkeys@sh.itjust.works
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                1 year ago

                No. That is not at all what happened. No DMCA takedown notice was ever sent in this.

                What happened is that Dolphin applied to go on Steam and announced that. Then Valve emailed Nintendo asking for permission. Nintendo said they didn’t want it on the store, pointed to parts of the DMCA which were not actually valid for a theoretical case, and Valve blocked Dolphin from going on Steam

                • Nils@feddit.de
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                  1 year ago

                  You’re right.

                  Sorry, I just heard somewhere Nintendo sent a DMCA notice and assumed it was right because that seems like a Nintendo thing to do.

            • jsnc
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              1 year ago

              deleted by creator

        • moormaan@lemmy.ca
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          1 year ago

          There is also the B Corp designation (short for Public Benefit Corporation) which allows a company to balance its responsibility towards the share holders with some other benefit it aims to provide where the share holders aren’t the (only) beneficiaries.

      • THED4NIEL@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        The biggest problem in my opinion is, when companies stop to be companies and instead turn into glorified money trees whose only purpose is to shake all value from, value generated by the people who have to work there.

        Once a company sells its soul to investors, it becomes nothing more than a human in the Matrix: a thing to harvest, to be kept alive until nothing of value remains, then thrown aside and disposed.

        Source: I speak from experience, worked at one investor-driven enterprise and one that is listed on exchanges

        • Fried_out_Kombi@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          It’s why I think worker-owned coops should be more common. Research shows that they’re a more resilient business model than hierarchical businesses. I think it’s because they can largely avoid the principle-agent problem, wherein executives and investors act on behalf of the company, but their personal incentives do not necessarily align with the company’s. For example, a CEO has a vested interest in pumping up profitability in the short term, even if it’s by slashing R&D funding and alienating customers long-term, so they can get nice numbers to pad their resumé. Likewise, investors just want their investment back.

          With a coop, overall control of the company’s decisions is guided more by the long-term health of the company, as that’s what is best for the workers. It aligns incentives, avoiding the perverse incentives that cause hierarchical businesses to make unsustainable, short-term business decisions.

        • Brustadnrift@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          Google also had, realistically, no competition in the online ads business for most of that time. Microsoft tried so hard but never broke into that market. No other online ad company could even come close to google 2000-2010 in terms of scale, technical chops, etc.

          It’s easy to have principals, it’s hard to live up to them. The first real competitor to Google’s online ads dominance was Facebook and has caused Google to completely shit the bed (from practices and policy, they’re obviously doing well money wise)

    • johnthedoe@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      Google was so exciting. Gmail especially.

      We were so keen to ditch yahoo messenger and msn as soon as facebook messenger came out too.

      Now it all sucks.

      • Aielman15@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I miss the old days, browsing internet forums and discovering for the first time that there exist people out there who like the same nerdy things that I do!

    • Dekthro@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      since I was raised on dialup and couldn’t block the phone line all that long.

      That bit reminded me that my mom had a desktop application that takes messages for you when we were using the dial up.

  • 𝘋𝘪𝘳𝘬@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    All of this led to me ditching all of those (except YouTube, this is without a real alternative due to the content exclusively hosted there) and starting to self-host my stuff and joining the Fediverse.

    • J Lou@mastodon.social
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      1 year ago

      To have some sort of viable fediverse alternative to YouTube, the developers of it would have to abandon some of the free software principles that current fediverse platforms uphold. There needs to be a way to monetize to attract creators and get people to host the servers

      • miniu@beehaw.org
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        1 year ago

        Free in software should stand for freedom, not money. We need better ways for financing such software projects and creators making content on them.

        • J Lou@mastodon.social
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          1 year ago

          Yeah free as in freedom not as in price.

          The closest anyone’s come to a mechanism that would allow efficient financing of public goods like free software is quadratic funding. Unfortunately, there are unsolved issues with collusion and identity verification

      • chocobo13z@pawb.social
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        1 year ago

        If it were possible, I’d like to continually donate a given sum of money to an account that split the proceeds between the content creators and the people hosting. Granted, while I’m unemployed, the best I can do currently would be to donate hosting directly

    • TimeSquirrel@kbin.social
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      Yeah but…ordinary people were not dialing into BBS forums back then. We weren’t “raised” online like kids now are, we were able to log off anytime and not ever need it to function in society. That started changing in the early 2000s. All my kid’s school assignments are now done on a laptop on a district-owned cloud system. He hasn’t needed a pencil and paper in…I forgot how long.

      If you’re around my age, congratulations on being the last generation to ever know what the world was like before widespread use of the Internet.

      • mnemonicmonkeys@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        If you’re around my age, congratulations on being the last generation to ever know what the world was like before widespread use of the Internet.

        This is why I always insist that the cutoff between millenial and Gen Z is 1995. There’s a pretty obvious generational split along this topic and 1995 seems to be the birth year of the divide

      • Someology@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Most districts don’t own a cloud system. They subscribe to one from a big vendor, and that vendor is scraping that sweet sweet data (aggregated and anonymity of course, because, kids), but still.

    • The Cuuuuube@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      Eh. But what does it mean to be raised online? I think for that you need the availability of ever present internet connections in the form of mobile devices. I think the first kids raised online would have been born in 2003, and would have been 4, preschool age, in 2007 when the iPhone came out. Those kids are 16 now. If we want to set the standard for “raised online” as being “digital native” then I think we should dial back the range to when AIM was popular. Again, setting the standard for who could have been raised with that constant interconnectedness as being someone who was 4 at time of introduction would give us the first AIM connected people reaching age 30 right now.

      The reality is, I think, in the middle. The first generation we could say was raised online is basically right in between those two ages, 23. The other standard we could try to set is, who is the first generation who doesn’t remember the internet as exciting, just instead a daily part of life

      • Lileath
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        1 year ago

        I am sorry to disappoint but people born in 2003 would be either 19 or 20 years old now. I know that it is hard to accept getting old.

    • Vigge93@lemmy.world
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      I think it’s fair to say that those in their late teens now are the first generation raised online. Sure, previous generations where raised alongside the internet, but the current generation is raised with a much larger presence of the internet.

      • Jon Von Basslake@lemmy.world
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        Nah, the zoomers are IMO the second generation to grow up with the internet. Sure it’s even more present for them and gen alpha, but I’d argue us millennials are the ones who first really grew up with the net. While we weren’t on the net all the time back then, we were the generation that grew up with the net as it became what it is today, for better or for worse.

        • captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Yeah I’m 28 and was consuming memes in middle school. I was not aware at any point where the default solution to a question was anything other than to look it up on the internet when you get home. I quit Facebook in high school.

            • Tavarin@lemmy.ca
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              1 year ago

              But not a massive social media presence, not a massive streaming presence, little to no influencers. We didn’t grow up online like kids today, even if we played some Runescape on dial-up.

        • Obi@sopuli.xyz
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          But it certainly wasn’t the internet listed there at least not until the very tail-end of “growing up”.

  • xerazal@lemmy.zip
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    1 year ago

    This is what neoliberalism does. It privatizes everything, including the individual. Everyone is a product. Everyone has a “brand”.

    • traveler01@lemdro.id
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      1 year ago

      Had to come the commie of the area 😅

      Money doesn’t fall from trees, if you’re not paying a service they must be making money from somewhere else.

      • JungleJim@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        Why’s everything gotta be about money? Good things happen without it. Rain falls, feeds a fruit tree, makes a fruit, I eat it, poop out the seeds, new fruit tree grows. Money doesn’t fall from trees, but I can’t eat money.

        The whole system is poorly prioritized to protect people’s things instead of people. Even then it does a poor job and only protects the things that belong to those with the most things. It’s not even about those people, just their wealth, because if somebody else got their wealth no one would care about them anymore.

        I don’t care about communists or capitalists or any ists you can name. To hell with Mao and Thatcher and Lenin and Reagan and Trump and Biden. Fuck em. My question is why can we always find money for war, and for rich people to do stupid shit, but never enough for health care, or food for hungry children, or anything like that. Fuck anybody okay with hungry babies.

        • nilloc@discuss.tchncs.de
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          1 year ago

          Eating and apple and pooping out the seeds might grow new trees, but none of those trees are likely to make apples like you ate.

          Money is a convenient way to trade your work or skills for someone else’s. Like the guy who grafts apple tree scions together to make the apples that taste good grow in their orchard.

          Now when the guy who knows how to grow hood apple trees decides he doesn’t want to compete against anybody else’s apples and squashes them, we have problems, and need rules to keep that from happening.

          • TeenieBopper@lemmy.ca
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            1 year ago

            I like how you equated money as a goal to money as a tool and that because the latter is a good idea then the first one must also be a good idea.

          • JungleJim@sh.itjust.works
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            1 year ago

            I found this list of true-to-seed fruits and vegetables I thought you might find interesting. I found it on The Spruce.

            Certain heirloom apples, such as Antonovka

            Polyembryonic mango seeds

            Lemon

            Lime

            Orange

            Peach

            Papaya

            Apricot

            Nectarine

            Heirloom tomatoes

            There are tons of other heirloom vegetables, I don’t know why they only mentioned tomatoes on their list but yeah.

  • Prethoryn Overmind@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Lemmy is great but the majority of you guys have a, r/notlikeothergirls vibe.

    Like you know something about the world and by saying, “I am not mainstream I am alternative,” you are making yourselves inclusive in some way. You don’t know anything the rest of the world doesn’t already have some idea about. Some sort of secret knowledge. I think my favorite thing I have seen on here is people thinking they are private and secure on the Fediverse. Despite the fact you are on a self hosted instance of someone’s hardware and handing your privacy and security to someone random or an entity at random.

    Being inclusive is not how you educate people. It’s how you isolate your knowledge and make people think you are a jerk.

    • ayyndrew@lemm.ee
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      Lemmy attracts this FOSS/linux/firefox/self-hosted or die mentality because the biggest jump in Lemmy users came from a corporation messing with a product they liked

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        1 year ago

        Which is good.

        Without “die hard” FOSS people we wouldn’t have Lemmy, Linux, Apache, Firefox etc etc etc. I mean, dont shit where you eat I guess I what I want to say.

            • nilloc@discuss.tchncs.de
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              1 year ago

              We recently had trouble with the voicemail on a phone, and when we were talking to apple support over the phone, they mentioned that our phone had recently overheated but that wouldn’t have caused the problem. It was in the sun on our dashboard for a few minutes a week or 2 before.

              I wonder if that type of data could also be going into your interest rates if you apply for an Apple Card. Same with battery levels and drop events. I know that Chinese loan apps mine that data when approving loans, but don’t know if apple would use that data.