37
submitted 1 year ago by antonim@lemmy.world to c/pixelart@lemmy.ml

old school

[-] antonim@lemmy.world 243 points 1 year ago

Maybe you shouldn’t even have had your account on the largest server to begin with?

Maybe I didn't have my crystal ball nearby when I was creating my Lemmy account.

Maybe many users will have an account on the largest server, because by definition it's the largest server, with the most users. 🙄

[-] antonim@lemmy.world 12 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I live in a country with a relatively similar political climate as Poland (highly religious, post-communist, wannabe central Europe). And I used to use the same argument when I was surrounded by more conservative people. The argument is IMO frequently invoked not by people who are truly worried about children (which I'll write about below), but by conservatives who need a civilised, "agnostic" argument for their homophobic stances. But ofc it's better to assume good intentions, at least if you don't know anything about the person using the argument (as e.g. here).

The biggest problem with the argument is that it's purely reactive and, under the hood, disingenuous. Children bully each other horribly already for a million stupid reasons - their shoe brand, their phone brand, their behaviour, etc. or just so, for no detectable reason at all. They also bully their teachers and professors. What is done against all this? Absolutely nothing, as far as I see (and I've seen and heard plenty while I was growing up). It is never brought up as a problem in public discourse, nobody seems to care too much. Bullying somehow becomes a big problem and relevant for the lawmaking only when gay parents are a possibility.

In general, from what I've seen, bullies will find just about any reason to target a kid. Adding one more to the roster seems borderline trivial. E.g. a lot of existing bullying is class-based - my younger sister was mildly ostracised in the primary school for a while because she wore the clothes my mother sewed for her, without a brand or anything, suggesting we don't have the money to buy "proper" clothes. Should we, then, try to separate poor kids from the rich kids, so the poor don't get bullied? Or just forbid poor kids from going to school?

Thus, instead of doing anything against the actual problem – that is, bullying as such – the laws of the state, the fundamental right of a child to a family, etc. should all buckle down before some child bullying? A child should be denied growing up with a potentially good and loving family with LGBT parents, and instead be adopted by a potentially inferior heterosexual family (assuming the adoption centres have some sort of system to judge the adopters in advance), or stay without a family at all indefinitely, because someone could/will bully them based on their most intimate and safe space, that is their family? Just as it would be monstrous to forbid poor kids from going to school to "protect" them from bullying, it is monstrous to propose "to protect some kids from bullying, we'll deny them from having a family". The whole argument is actually (or should be) an argument for aggressively rethinking and reworking your educational system , parenting and culture in general.

because why should these children be victims of war that is not even theirs to fight

Under the current system they're also victims and involved in this same war - a part of their potential adopters is denied by default, and they stay without a family for longer. Are they not victims here? (Not to get into the issue of measuring potential benefits of having a family against the potential negatives of bullying, it's purely arbitrary and depends on the given culture too.)

On the other hand, I do think the whole discussion has been derailed by overly focusing on this as an LGBT issue rather than an issue of children without families. So there's some merit at least in the general approach of the argument you present (the children are those whose well-being is most important here), but it leads to the wrong conclusion, usually because it's invoked by people who really just want to get to that conclusion one way or another, rather than helping the kids.

269
Ruled Away (2001) (lemmy.world)
submitted 1 year ago by antonim@lemmy.world to c/196
95
submitted 1 year ago by antonim@lemmy.world to c/books@lemmy.ml

Fortunately for Glukhovsky, he is not actually in Russia, and was sentenced in absentia. His current whereabouts are unknown.

[-] antonim@lemmy.world 17 points 1 year ago

This is the first time in my life I've seen dislike of the userbase of an another site called 'xenophobia'.

Especially weird since 90% of Lemmy is fresh off reddit themselves.

Personally I just don't want the shitty aspects of the reddit community seeping over here. It's a fact that reddit userbase has been facebookised, to the degree where I frequently see people who are outright stupid (repeatedly posting threads to wrong subreddits, ignoring mod messages, unable to comprehend basic English... stuff that I'd expect to see on Facebook and not reddit), or focused on memes and quips to the point where any discussion is flooded with such moronic content. There's still (at least) tens of thousands of people on reddit who I'm sure would be great contributors on Lemmy too if they decide to switch, and I hope they will. But I don't want all of reddit here. Is that really so bad, to not want to look at unfiltered normie crap? Reddit was good (if it ever was good) precisely because it was a bit elitist in its design and its culture.

We can’t argue about federation on the net, avoiding corporate control, or whatever while sticking our hand out and stopping people from joining.

Maybe people can join somewhere else too? Make a Fediverse equivalent of Facebook/Instagram or something. Lemmy is not all of Fediverse and doesn't have to be for everyone.

Like half of your complaints are literally good things. Yes, people want to be heard and not practically hidden from 90% if they don't get enough upvotes on their post/comment during the crucial early time frame, as on bigger reddit subs. Lemmy is not a social media platform anyway, its goal is not to facilitate socialisation among the users and it doesn't need many millions of users to work well.

[-] antonim@lemmy.world 21 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Bookwyrm is open-source, works similarly to Lemmy (i.e. is a federated platform). Storygraph and LibraryThing are also popular alternatives, but IIRC they're both closed source.

Personally I think just creating a spreadsheet file with your reading data is better. (In LibreOffice, of course.)

52
poster (lemmy.world)
118
submitted 1 year ago by antonim@lemmy.world to c/books@lemmy.ml

It could be kind of lame to poke fun at a site that I don't use (anymore), but I find this funny enough to share: Goodreads has started changing and updating their site last year, but apparently they've broken a ton of things in the process, and now they've published an announcement with the list of 12 bugs they're (supposedly) trying to deal with.

https://help.goodreads.com/s/announcements/a031H00000QxZ5SQAV/known-issues-july-2023-includes-language-search-and-sort-issues-731

In short, literally the most essential functions aren't working. In the iOS app some people can't shelve books. On Android people can't see all reviews. On desktop the search and sorting are completely random, the default editions that represent each book are also apparently random, though it seems the selection favours the editions in any language other than English, preferably also in a non-Latin script. The database is borderline impossible to navigate.

So if you search for Harry Potter, the first result is Random Harry Potter Facts You Probably Don't Know: 154 Fun Facts and Secret Trivia. If you open the page of William Shakespeare, the first books that are presented to you are Romeo and Juliet in English, Hamlet in Italian, and Macbeth in Arabic. And after a while instead of showing his actual plays, the site just lists weird collected editions such as Romeo and Juliet; Hamlet; Othello; An Index (The Works of Shakespear, Vol. 8) by some scammy publisher that prints PDFs from Google Books.

I've spent enough time on GR to see how it's held together by duct tape and inertia, and now it really seems to be crashing down. Still, kudos to the admins who are keeping up with the recent trends in technology, such as actively ruining your website, as also seen on reddit and Twitter. In fact I'd say GR has better chances of actually dying (i.e. having a massive user drain) than the other two sites.

Is there anyone here who's still active on GR? Not trying to judge, but I really have to ask -what's making you stay there? Are the alternatives too lacking in book data/users?

175
rule (lemmy.world)
submitted 1 year ago by antonim@lemmy.world to c/196
20
submitted 1 year ago by antonim@lemmy.world to c/libgen@lemmy.world
[-] antonim@lemmy.world 8 points 1 year ago

No one. NO ONE, think LGBT people shouldn’t be allowed to exist.

What I've heard IRL and what I've read online in less moderated spaces speaks to the contrary.

[-] antonim@lemmy.world 22 points 1 year ago

You can block NSFW content in your settings.

[-] antonim@lemmy.world 12 points 1 year ago

They're already acting. The guillotine is now erased.

They're not touching the "fuck spez" signs, true. Still, remember that in the last edition there was a massive amogus cock extending across half the canvas throughout most of the event and it was eradicated by the end as well. So based on that I wouldn't bet the "fuck spez"-s will survive either. (Not that their survival would mean anything...)

33
a worn-out rule (lemmy.world)
submitted 1 year ago by antonim@lemmy.world to c/196
[-] antonim@lemmy.world 23 points 1 year ago

Until moderators just cover it all with random pixels, as they did for similar controversial/NSFW stuff in '22.

137
submitted 1 year ago by antonim@lemmy.world to c/196
[-] antonim@lemmy.world 9 points 1 year ago

no anonymity

I doubt that Instagram users who willingly install an another app made by Facebook care about that lol

46
medieval art rule (lemmy.world)
submitted 1 year ago by antonim@lemmy.world to c/196
[-] antonim@lemmy.world 8 points 1 year ago

I never got anything for all that sweet karma

Oh, but you could.

https://redaccs.com/

[-] antonim@lemmy.world 11 points 1 year ago

fck you descriptivist

You mean prescriptivist? 😅

(beep boom I'm a human)

77
submitted 1 year ago by antonim@lemmy.world to c/196
[-] antonim@lemmy.world 10 points 1 year ago

Honestly going for the ‘largest’ instance is kind of dumb. Smaller, faster instances provide a much better experience. Bigger is not better in the fediverse.

Ok, but how is a new user supposed to know that?

view more: next ›

antonim

joined 1 year ago