monkic

joined 2 years ago
[–] monkic@slrpnk.net 5 points 3 days ago (1 children)

Tech bros see dystopian sci-fi as inspiration it seems

[–] monkic@slrpnk.net 8 points 3 days ago

The dystopia that’s unfolding is like bad writing and not something any self-respecting writer will put to paper

 

Quote:

The feature is part of its new Fiverr Go suite of tools, allowing creators to “train AI exclusively on their own body of work, maintaining complete control over their creative process and rights.” Freelancers can edit and set the price for their custom AI models, which are available across services like voiceovers, songwriting, graphic design, illustration, copywriting, and digital marketing.

I hate late stage capitalism and the short term financial incentive for workers and artists to make themselves obsolete

 

Quote from article:

The US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (Noaa) has placed onerous new restrictions on its scientists that people within the agency say could hamper the quality and availability of the world’s weather forecasts, among other key services.

The new requirements have created a sense of unease within the agency, according to current and former high-level Noaascientists and officials the Guardian spoke with, and alarmed partners at European agencies.

“My expectation is that it’s going to be a crackdown on climate,” said a senior Noaa scientist. “People are just somewhere between disturbed and terrified.”

[…]

The Noaa directive did not outright bar its scientists from continuing ongoing international collaboration, but the additional administrative burden appears to be especially onerous for the National Weather Service (NWS) – the division of Noaa that underpins all weather forecasting in the US and provides a constant stream of data on the atmosphere and oceans to the world for free as a public good.

A climate scientist at the EU’s Copernicus agency, who did not wish to be named, said he was “appalled and saddened” when he heard the news last week. “The climate crisis knows no boundaries, and halting international scientific collaboration can only undermine our ability to understand and combat it.”

Cant have a climate crisis if we close our eyes and ignore everything happening! (And in the meantime letting private companies profit off climate, ocean, and weather data that’s currently free and open source)

 

Quoted from article:

[…] all our activities have come to an abrupt halt in the past few days. Last Thursday, the Senate confirmed Russell Vought—an avowed Christian nationalist and architect of Project 2025—to be head of the Office of Management and Budget. Within a day, Donald Trump appointed him to simultaneously be the acting director of the CFPB. As this was unfolding, the administration permitted billionaire Elon Musk and his Department of Government Efficiency underlings to enter the CFPB headquarters, where they reportedly accessed internal systems including personnel rolls and financial records. Musk, it’s worth remembering, has previously said he wanted to “delete CFPB,” which is the regulator that would have oversight of his reported plans to turn X into a digital wallet app.

Since the DOGE takeover, and in the past 72 hours, Vought and Musk have worked hand in hand and with unnerving speed to strip the CFPB for parts and bring its work to a screeching halt. On Saturday night, Vought sent an email to all CFPB employees, building on guidance that Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent issued during his four-day tenure as acting director of the CFPB earlier in the week. Vought directed all CFPB employees to immediately cease issuing rules or guidance, suspend all effective dates of all final rules that have not yet come into effect, not open new investigations, stop all supervision activities, halt enforcement actions, and not issue public communications of any type. Soon afterward, Vought posted on X to proclaim that he would not be requesting the next draw of CFPB’s funding from the Federal Reserve, effectively eliminating CFPB’s customary budget. On Sunday afternoon, CFPB employees were informed by email that headquarters would be closed for the week but that “employees and contractors are to work remotely.”

Despite these unnerving developments, my colleagues and I remained committed to doing our jobs. So it came as a shock when, a few minutes after we logged on to telework on Monday morning, we received yet another directive from Vought, now repeatedly ordering all employees to “not perform any work tasks” and to “stand down from performing any work task.”

As a result, the CFPB now stands as an ineffective watchdog—chained, muzzled, and left to starve in its kennel so that it can no longer guard the public. This is profoundly sad for the employees like me who have worked zealously to protect the American public from frauds and scams, day in and day out. Now, nobody is allowed to respond to consumer complaints that come in, let alone investigate them. This has all been extremely frustrating, confusing, and shocking.  My colleagues and I are complying with the fiat handed down by Vought while trying to wrap our heads around these unprecedented actions happening in real time.  But we’d really rather just get back to the work we are so proud of doing.

[–] monkic@slrpnk.net 4 points 1 year ago

This is actually discussed in the article, which states that the raising awareness effect of zoos is very very small compared to its entertainment effect on individuals.

 

Image description: a bowl of incense sticks sits on a table facing the sea outside of Pulau Ubin

[–] monkic@slrpnk.net 2 points 1 year ago

Thank you! 🙇‍♀️ this is the vegan ramen store at Team Star Lab in Kyoto!

 

Image description: a silhouetted figure queues up at a ramen outlet bathed in warm light

[–] monkic@slrpnk.net 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I actually do and that’s why I’m a bad street photographer hahaha. Nowadays I do try to ask for the quickest consent by waiting before I click the shutter and making sure the subject sees me (and maybe making hand gestures like pointing at the camera and then doing a thumbs up)—some will see and go on their day, some will pose, and some will protest, at which point I stop and apologise. I know by doing this I lose the “spontaneity” of street photography that street photographers love so much. I also have friends who are more of “shoot first and ask for consent later”. Otherwise most street photographers I know personally or read about do seem to feel like they can take strangers’ photos with no qualms.

 

Image description: an orange crane platform stands in front of a building called The Working Capitol while a tall residential skyscraper Pinnacle@Duxton looms in the background

 

Image description: a glimpse through the windows of a Kyoto Starbucks—at the center of the frame is an old man reading a book.

[–] monkic@slrpnk.net 2 points 1 year ago

Thank you so much for your kind words 🥹🙇‍♀️

 

Image description: close up of oranges amongst green leaves in the Imperial Palace, Kyoto

 

Image description: a photo of a stairway corridor bisected by a handlebar bathed in morning sunlight

 

Image description: an old man sits under the shelter of Buddha Tooth Relic

 

Image description: an SMRT train stops beside the green Buona Vista MRT station in Singapore with an overcast sky as background

 

Image description: a living room consisting of a sofa and coffee table in front of a blue-curtained window bathed in golden light that also contours the outlines of the furniture

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