Yeah guys! It’s very important that we learn nothing from history and that we ignore the signs of fascism rearing its head once more. /s
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Having a boss is a good indicator that it’s a hierarchy though, friend ;-)
Interesting, my experience has been quite different but then it has been more with executives of relatively small (<500) and private companies. I’ve also seen some cases of companies closer to dictatorships, but they have (at least from my external perspective) seemed like dictators with at least clear visions. A small minority have been loudmouthed assholes.
grindemup@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•Drug Enforcement Administration agent used Illinois cop’s Flock license plate reader password for immigration enforcement searchesEnglish1·10 天前Would you like to at least engage with the discourse a bit more, eg explain why the reason I have mentioned and other possible reasons are not good to you? Otherwise you’re not adding much to the conversation.
Have you worked with very many CEOs at SMEs? Based on my experience it seems to match the description, by and large.
grindemup@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•Drug Enforcement Administration agent used Illinois cop’s Flock license plate reader password for immigration enforcement searchesEnglish1·12 天前Hmm, why have you not responded to the substantive reasoning for the law? As a self-professed freedom advocate, well, that’s obviously a lie so do you actually have something of value to add or are you just trolling?
grindemup@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•AI experts return from China stunned: The U.S. grid is so weak, the race may already be overEnglish1·12 天前AlphaFold’s success seems to be largely linked to its use of attention-based architecture, similar to GPT, i.e. the architecture used by LLMs. Beyond that, they are both building on work in machine learning and statistics, so I don’t think they are nearly as independent as you are making out.
grindemup@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•Drug Enforcement Administration agent used Illinois cop’s Flock license plate reader password for immigration enforcement searchesEnglish31·16 天前Despite all the downvotes, I think it’s a reasonable enough question. It happens to have a very reasonable answer though.
First of all, your concern is largely addressed, since immigration control can still access law enforcement databases if they have a warrant.
As for why this law exists at all, well it’s actually to the benefit of law enforcement: the idea is that immigrant communities are more likely to cooperate with law enforcement if they aren’t scared that they will be the target of immigration control. This is all the more practical now, when ICE has degraded into a largely lawless and authoritarian organization, since you can imagine most immigrants wouldn’t want to say a word to any police officer unless they at least have the protections of the 2017 TRUST act in place.
Now, what I’m a bit confused about is why you are so up-in-arms about the existence of this law instead of the violation of this law. Surely if you are so law-abiding as you make out to be in your comments, you should be shouting for legal action against the police officers involved in breaking the law.
grindemup@lemmy.worldto Canada@lemmy.ca•Food too expensive? It’s time for public grocery stores1·21 天前Alright friend, OP certainly never implied “giving government ubiquitous control over the food supply” by any means, so at least this is clearly a simple case of strawman fallacy.
edit: like if you think about it for literally more than two seconds, you’ll realize that OP’s idea involved building capacity amongst the general population for horticulture, something which fundamentally opposes the idea of giving government ubiquitous control.
grindemup@lemmy.worldto Canada@lemmy.ca•Food too expensive? It’s time for public grocery stores2·22 天前Is there a name for the fallacy that something is doomed to fail just because some quasi-communist state tried to implement something similar at some point?
grindemup@lemmy.worldto Lemmy Shitpost@lemmy.world•Need a keyboard with a dedicated "slop" button1·22 天前Fair enough, that seems accurate!
grindemup@lemmy.worldto Canada@lemmy.ca•Food too expensive? It’s time for public grocery stores51·22 天前You seem to be assuming that this idea would have to solve all food consumed by everyone. No one is making that assumption except for you.
grindemup@lemmy.worldto Canada@lemmy.ca•Food too expensive? It’s time for public grocery stores4·22 天前Only available for children in the summer… I don’t think this isn’t the solution being proposed.
grindemup@lemmy.worldto Lemmy Shitpost@lemmy.world•Need a keyboard with a dedicated "slop" button11·22 天前Tbh in my experience LLM and other recently developed techniques such as stable diffusion are referred to as GenAI by most lay people. For both lay people and technical audience, i.e. people who work in machine learning, AI has a much broader significance.
grindemup@lemmy.worldto Lemmy Shitpost@lemmy.world•Need a keyboard with a dedicated "slop" button21·22 天前Most people on Lemmy seem to define AI as “evil machine learning that i don’t like” vs non-AI as everything else. It’s a wee bit delusional.
Honestly I don’t see them complaining nor are they pretending that it’s uniquely male. I just don’t see any words to support that. Do you think you might be reading a bit too much into it?
grindemup@lemmy.worldto Work Reform@lemmy.world•A Stanford University professor wrote an article about how the grad students going on strike are supposedly extremely selfish people21·1 个月前That’s great, these sound like basic details that their budget should take into account when considering how many people they can employ!
grindemup@lemmy.worldto Canada@lemmy.ca•B.C. fast-tracks recruitment of international doctors as U.S. campaign delivers results: "almost 780 job applications from qualified health professionals across the United States"7·1 个月前Ah yes, how can we forget that this is Canada’s 200th anniversary, after the signing of the confederation in 1825. Sounds like you’ve definitely got your facts straight…
I don’t really follow your train of thought. People would have been just as aware (if not more, due to the prevalence of multigenerational households) of this in the past as they are now, no?