Even if they produce a product which protects against a real disease *that actually exists*, I will forever ignore their product simply because of the tactics I witnessed the pharmaceutical industrial complex employ since the great hoax of 2020.
My opinion of vaccines prior to March 2020: **Neutral** and uninformed
The pharmaceutical industrial complex is probably hard at work drafting ways they can magic bullet him just like his uncle but without it being so obvious.
Why has the author of this meme not considered storing their music locally as well as constructing playlists which also reside locally on a device within the author's possession?
This is the default if you're using free (as in liberty) tech
>ISPs and tech companies must deploy robust defenses against malware, phishing, and hackers.
Now it's the ISP's job to keep your shit from getting infected? What is this boomer tier delusion?
>governments can restore trust in technology
Yes, just wait for the *government* to get involved, *that will fix everything*.
-----------------------------------------
The actual problem is twofold. First, most people are using proprietary dumpster fires designed and managed by big tech, whose incentives are to exploit their users rather than to serve them. **Of course** using that shit is going to suck the life out of anyone.
Second, most people actually are functionally retarded. So asking them to understand basic concepts that would make their day to day life easier is simply too great a task. It is not possible to educate normies. Let them suffer.
>The other issue is that most people are stupid, even technologists.
Especially technologists. I've arrived at the conclusion that the number of people who actually meaningfully understand digital technology is a pathetically tiny population. And, of that population, too many of them accept paychecks from the devil.
One aspect not often considered is how so much modern software is written within frameworks within frameworks. Nobody strictly writes their own code any more. It's all imported libraries. On the web its CDNs with web frameworks.
This translates to very slow programs that must interact through layer upon layer of abstraction, where the people who wrote it couldn't even tell you most of what's going on. If software where written in such a way for a vintage Pentium 4 device, it would also run slow as shit.
There is also the shift to interpreted languages. Again, the web leads in this. And I understand that interpreted languages enable more rapid development, but the end result is unavoidably less efficient.
So today we have such things as "desktop apps" which are actually just electron applications (pre-packaged websites) running shit interpreted code within a Matryoshka doll of nested frameworks reaching out over the internet for half or more of its functionality, running on CPUs whose dies are some double-digit percentage of die space dedicated to doing something other than executing instructions originating from userspace programs.
Each new generation of Intel chips makes it hard for solutions like me_cleaner to eliminate ME binaries. Effectively, even when you "fix" Intel chips, there is still some % of ME backdoor active.
AMD is even worse. Board vendors can expose options in EFI to "disable" the (((platform security processor))) but, being a non-verifiable proprietary black box, is impossible to determine what this option even does (or if it does anything at all and isn't just a placebo switch).
ARM is fucked too with ARM (((TrustZone))) for which there aren't even any attempts to mitigate that I'm aware of.
>Yet, this encryption does nothing to shield a website from other pervasive dangers. For instance, HTTPS does not inherently protect against vulnerabilities in the website's code, such as SQL injection or cross-site scripting (XSS) attacks.
>In essence, while HTTPS is an indispensable component of web security, it is merely one piece of a much larger puzzle.
>During the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, self-checkout machines saw a surge in use because customers sought minimal contact with others
Ah, yes, customers were "seeking minimal contact" when the human registers were completely closed and all clientele were directed specifically to the only remaining option being self-checkout. But sure, people were "seeking minimal contact". Okay.
The "vaccine is dangerous" narrative sits as a distance second to the primary issue that it was also totally unnecessary, being that there was never a substantial health threat.
Left to *where*? Almost the entire basis of their business model is that the "customer" doesn't have any other choice but the local incumbent ISP monopoly.
RollinDaGrassTyson 8 points 3 weeks ago
Aww they're going to have to make profit on the other 20+ vaccines that are already default instead
/v/Health viewpost?postid=682e32dc131fb
RollinDaGrassTyson 1 point 3 weeks ago
Even if they produce a product which protects against a real disease *that actually exists*, I will forever ignore their product simply because of the tactics I witnessed the pharmaceutical industrial complex employ since the great hoax of 2020.
My opinion of vaccines prior to March 2020: **Neutral** and uninformed
Post-2020: **New enemy unlocked**
/v/USPolitics viewpost?postid=6827ab9a02937
RollinDaGrassTyson 0 points 3 weeks ago
Oh no the government is in ruins. Whatever shall we do?
/v/OccidentalEnclave viewpost?postid=682e281a274db
RollinDaGrassTyson 1 point 4 weeks ago
The pharmaceutical industrial complex is probably hard at work drafting ways they can magic bullet him just like his uncle but without it being so obvious.
/v/USPolitics viewpost?postid=6827ab9a02937
RollinDaGrassTyson 1 point 4 weeks ago
Why has the author of this meme not considered storing their music locally as well as constructing playlists which also reside locally on a device within the author's possession?
/v/Memes viewpost?postid=6828ebe680128
RollinDaGrassTyson 0 points 4 weeks ago
That kind of post is all very normal over on the fediverse. It's been overrun with redditard lefties.
It is what happens when an ideological group is allowed full run of an online space, totally unopposed because the rightists are MIA over there.
/v/Troons viewpost?postid=6828aa035e1c6
RollinDaGrassTyson 4 points 4 weeks ago
Each new version of Windows **normalizes** ever greater erosion of ownership, privacy and agency that users once enjoyed.
And everyone treats the prior version of Windows as though it had been some kind of bastion of freedom, privacy and ownership.
Only total newbies and normies are unaware that this is all cyclical, and the real solution is to just avoid Windows entirely.
/v/whatever viewpost?postid=6828c86e842a5
RollinDaGrassTyson 0 points 4 weeks ago
>Bug-free devices
There is no such thing as bug-free
>Minimal updates
This is the default if you're using free (as in liberty) tech
>ISPs and tech companies must deploy robust defenses against malware, phishing, and hackers.
Now it's the ISP's job to keep your shit from getting infected? What is this boomer tier delusion?
>governments can restore trust in technology
Yes, just wait for the *government* to get involved, *that will fix everything*.
-----------------------------------------
The actual problem is twofold. First, most people are using proprietary dumpster fires designed and managed by big tech, whose incentives are to exploit their users rather than to serve them. **Of course** using that shit is going to suck the life out of anyone.
Second, most people actually are functionally retarded. So asking them to understand basic concepts that would make their day to day life easier is simply too great a task. It is not possible to educate normies. Let them suffer.
/v/technology viewpost?postid=68231e6ed1459
RollinDaGrassTyson 2 points 1 month ago
They also lied to you about the existence of the disease is purports to address.
/v/news viewpost?postid=68217ebc18113
RollinDaGrassTyson 1 point 1 month ago
The cattle will lap it up
/v/technology viewpost?postid=681a0173dccd0
RollinDaGrassTyson 0 points 1 month ago
>The other issue is that most people are stupid, even technologists.
Especially technologists. I've arrived at the conclusion that the number of people who actually meaningfully understand digital technology is a pathetically tiny population. And, of that population, too many of them accept paychecks from the devil.
/v/programming viewpost?postid=682084c423e9d
RollinDaGrassTyson 0 points 1 month ago
>A page full of Fuckberg clickables isn't going to make me sign up for Facebook.
You don't *have* to sign up. If your browser is even loading those Fuckberg clickables, then you are *already* using Facebook, technically.
/v/technology viewpost?postid=681b6d1622b39
RollinDaGrassTyson 3 points 1 month ago
One aspect not often considered is how so much modern software is written within frameworks within frameworks. Nobody strictly writes their own code any more. It's all imported libraries. On the web its CDNs with web frameworks.
This translates to very slow programs that must interact through layer upon layer of abstraction, where the people who wrote it couldn't even tell you most of what's going on. If software where written in such a way for a vintage Pentium 4 device, it would also run slow as shit.
There is also the shift to interpreted languages. Again, the web leads in this. And I understand that interpreted languages enable more rapid development, but the end result is unavoidably less efficient.
So today we have such things as "desktop apps" which are actually just electron applications (pre-packaged websites) running shit interpreted code within a Matryoshka doll of nested frameworks reaching out over the internet for half or more of its functionality, running on CPUs whose dies are some double-digit percentage of die space dedicated to doing something other than executing instructions originating from userspace programs.
/v/technology viewpost?postid=681b6d1622b39
RollinDaGrassTyson 0 points 1 month ago
Sadly, it is not fixable.
Each new generation of Intel chips makes it hard for solutions like me_cleaner to eliminate ME binaries. Effectively, even when you "fix" Intel chips, there is still some % of ME backdoor active.
AMD is even worse. Board vendors can expose options in EFI to "disable" the (((platform security processor))) but, being a non-verifiable proprietary black box, is impossible to determine what this option even does (or if it does anything at all and isn't just a placebo switch).
ARM is fucked too with ARM (((TrustZone))) for which there aren't even any attempts to mitigate that I'm aware of.
/v/programming viewpost?postid=681776b6121bf
RollinDaGrassTyson 0 points 1 month ago
Alternate title:
Kazakhstan incentivizes MtF transgenders to commit sex crimes against minors with promise of free gender reassignment surgery.
/v/WorldNews viewpost?postid=681993d5c75b6
RollinDaGrassTyson 0 points 1 month ago
1:47
"We banned content with harmful stereotypes such as the claim that *jews run the world or other major institutions*"
meanwhile:
0:26
"...and when you think about it *the masters of the universe are jews!*"
/v/videos viewpost?postid=6817c25015007
RollinDaGrassTyson 3 points 1 month ago
tl;dr:
>Yet, this encryption does nothing to shield a website from other pervasive dangers. For instance, HTTPS does not inherently protect against vulnerabilities in the website's code, such as SQL injection or cross-site scripting (XSS) attacks.
>In essence, while HTTPS is an indispensable component of web security, it is merely one piece of a much larger puzzle.
/v/programming viewpost?postid=681776b6121bf
RollinDaGrassTyson 1 point 1 month ago
Justin Trudeau guide to sitting
https://www.wikihow.com/Sit-Like-a-Lady#/Image:Sit-Like-a-Lady-Step-3-Version-5.jpg
/v/whatever viewpost?postid=6816ff0932750
RollinDaGrassTyson 2 points 1 month ago
>During the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, self-checkout machines saw a surge in use because customers sought minimal contact with others
Ah, yes, customers were "seeking minimal contact" when the human registers were completely closed and all clientele were directed specifically to the only remaining option being self-checkout. But sure, people were "seeking minimal contact". Okay.
/v/ClownWorld viewpost?postid=6817645b210f9
RollinDaGrassTyson 1 point 1 month ago
The "vaccine is dangerous" narrative sits as a distance second to the primary issue that it was also totally unnecessary, being that there was never a substantial health threat.
/v/Boomers viewpost?postid=6816d779dac1f
RollinDaGrassTyson -1 points 1 month ago
Left to *where*? Almost the entire basis of their business model is that the "customer" doesn't have any other choice but the local incumbent ISP monopoly.
/v/Business viewpost?postid=681712dcd9e60
RollinDaGrassTyson 1 point 1 month ago
Phones are nigger tech.
White Aryans only use desktop.
/v/whatever viewpost?postid=6816257572968
RollinDaGrassTyson 0 points 1 month ago
No, it does more than that. It also helps consolidate the dating pool into a giant harem, at the exclusion of most young men.
It was totally an accident that this happened and the (((people))) deploying dating apps couldn't have possibly foreseen the outcome in advance.
/v/OccidentalEnclave viewpost?postid=68151fa80f0a3
RollinDaGrassTyson 1 point 1 month ago
Yes, but for some reason only when I'm trying to fall asleep. Death doesn't seem so real when you're awake and occupied with life's bullshit.
/v/AskUpgoat viewpost?postid=680e29d96cbdd
RollinDaGrassTyson 0 points 1 month ago
Also possible to do without the stocks part. The trade-off is that your capital just doesn't stretch as far.
/v/TellUpgoat viewpost?postid=680aa13474864