I've boycotted the FSF for 30 years. I'm not sure what new thing that the rest of you have recently discovered that makes you want to boycott them now.
I mean, I do understand. It's the social media pile on effect where a bunch of like minded people get outraged and feel they can successfully bully the FSF into seeing things their way.
I've read letters like the following. It's garbage, indicting Stallman for being nerd, which by definition means he sees things differently. rms-open-letter.github.io
For example, of course nerds are wrong when they insist "they" must be only plural instead of gender neutral. But this doesn't mean they are transphobic. Nerds are overwhelming pro LGBT, and are well-meaning supporters of our cause, but simply hold unorthodox ideas.
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I have the same questions. Note that I am willing to accept there's good explanations, that there's some law I've missed that explicitly gives them power to do this. It's just that if there isn't, then the FBI's actions are egregious and worthy of outrage.
I deal with sides: law enforcement on one said and cyber anarchists on the other. Law enforcement hates anarchists and see themselves as inherently better, because they believe in following the law.
Except, as it appears here, they didn't. They simply ignored the law, pretending that a search warrant gives them the power to delete files from people's computers. They feel justified in this obvious misreading of the law because their cause is just.
Everyone is laughing at Ted Nugent for saying "why no lockdowns for COVID-18", but people aren't likewise laughing at tech CEOs for saying "we can do X online but not vote?".
The answer is because a small amount of fraud/mistakes are acceptable for X, but not for voting.
Credit card fraud accounts for like 0.5% of all purchases. Imagine if 0.5% of votes where fraudulent. Uber is full of GPS problems (arriving and getting you to the destination), and drivers routinely game the system to get the most profitable riders.
Moreover, the most important part of the voting system is trust -- trust that the system hasn't been hacked either by foreign hackers or the elites who run/administer it. That's vastly easier to demonstrate with a paper trail than the magic of computers.
The effort to dig tunnels depends upon the size of the tunnel -- but this grows faster than you think. Twice the width of the tunnel means FOUR TIMES the effort to dig it. You can see that with the following circles: the larger is twice the width of the 4 smaller ones
Subway tunnels to fit rail cars are often around 28 feet, Elon's trying to get his tunnels below 14 feet. This means creating tunnels with ¼ the effort, a quarter of the cost. Instead of $200million for the Las Vegas project, $50million.
College programming courses are horribad. They are college -- they attempt to teach you the theory of coding rather than practice. Thus, they leave you totally unequipped to actually code.
To be a good coder you need both theory and practice, so I can't say that colleges are wrong in focusing on theory. I'm just saying that you need practice. If you enter college having already practiced, the theory will make much more sense.
If you try to learn coding by picking up a college textbook and all that theory looks like gibberish, drop it and find a book that focuses on practice instead. But later, go back to that college textbook and learn theory. Both are needed.
If you go back through my feed, you'll see tweets like this one. I'm rabidly pro-vaccine, but also supportive of the fact that there's two sides to the question, that instead of bullying people for questioning vaccines, we should empathize with them:
Sometimes a feel alone. All I see on my twitter feed is toxic bullying of those who have questions about vaccines -- without anybody actually answering those questions. Am I wrong? Should I be bullying instead of empathizing?
Please get your covid vaccine as soon as possible. Those aren't "side effects" -- those are the "effect" of the vaccine that tricks the body into feeling sick without making it sick. So brief fatigue/headaches/mild-fever are normal right after -- it means it's working.
So let's explore why Tim Cook is stupid about thinking we can vote from phones.
To make internet voting work, you first need to have a national ID card. This is ironic because in the above interview, Tim Cook criticizes the Georgia voting law that has an ID requirement, then proposes Internet voting that needs more of an ID requirement.
Online banking works because banking tracks every transaction back to the user. The principle of voting is that you cannot track votes back to the person who cast them. Voting is anonymous: you can track the fact people voted, but not who they voted for.