You call me?
HackThePlanet
We went from “everyone will know how to code in the future” to “no one know will know how to code” pretty quickly
There's always a purpose for those marble abs.
For those who may have forgotten, the little prince of Meta more or less started with Facemash, a site that displayed two photos side by side and asked users to vote for which person was "more attractive," using a mechanism similar to "Hot or Not."
All "funny" if it weren't for:
- Privacy: using photographs of people without consent would often violate regulations and, in many countries, personal data protection laws.
- Consent: the people depicted had not chosen to participate.
- Objectification: asking people to rank solely based on their physical appearance can be seen as a form of objectification and can contribute to a disrespectful environment.
- Possible psychological effects: this type of public comparison can affect self-esteem and exclude or humiliate some people.
Not to mention what happened with Cambridge Analytica.
What do people expect from a mind like that?
The artist underestimated himself, $60 is not enough for this masterpiece
It's truly touching how that man says, "It must have cost a fortune" for what his employees did for him. People who dedicate even a small portion of their working time to helping people, even a small gesture, and not just for money, deserve better in this world.
Adding insult to injury.
Satire or not, the guy is describing a possible future of shit where I hope not to be there.
That man figured out how to hack Matrix.
Steam seems to be one of the very few services (perhaps even the only one I know of) that hasn't transformed its product by following the trend of enshittification. I have many games on Steam, purchased years and years ago, many of which are no longer available, but I can still download and play, having purchased them back then.
I really appreciate Steam, but from what I read every day, I don't think "forever" exists, especially online. If we think of it in terms of "everything's in the cloud," well, the cloud costs money, so unless they somehow dispose of data, I don't know if a company can actually keep every single piece of data "forever" while maintaining a good price and not losing out or burdening consumers.
The same goes for physical copies: I could lose them, break them, my house burn down, and I'd lose everything, whereas if they were in the cloud, I wouldn't have any problems. The point is that consumers should be allowed, where possible, to export what they've purchased. Honestly, I think that anyone who bought movies or other content on some platform and then years later discovered that the company had removed them and they could no longer use them (or worse, the same content was on another paid platform) would honestly bother me.

Strange, I thought that paying more and more to get, in most cases, less and less was a good business move.