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anneessens commented on Australia: Kids under 16 to be banned from social media after Senate passes laws   abc.net.au/news/2024-11-2... · Posted by u/llui85
71bw · a year ago
>On a site like HN, I would have expected there to be much more people who also had the same experience as younger me with the internet and social media.

The majority of people who actively engage in discussions here are from generations older than ours (I assume we are similar in age) and hence are mostly unable to relate to our experiences.

anneessens · a year ago
That's true, I didn't think about this. It's a shame people here also have the 'new = bad' mindset.
anneessens commented on Australia: Kids under 16 to be banned from social media after Senate passes laws   abc.net.au/news/2024-11-2... · Posted by u/llui85
rpdillon · a year ago
I have tried to find good scientific evidence that shows that social media is a net negative for kids and or adults. I have been unable to do so.

Reports that I read on conventional media sites often summarize government reports, but they do so incorrectly. And when I go and read the government reports, they present a much more balanced picture than the summaries would suggest. In particular, for marginalized teens, social media represents a unique avenue to connect with teens in similar situations, which provides a significant support network.

I know it's popular now to say that social media is the root of all evil, but I would be very curious to see a scientific justification for banning it for kids under 16. Just a few years ago, this was a concern presented as 'screen time', but I had similar problems there. There's no real evidence to suggest that looking at a screen is the problem...the much more difficult and interesting problem is what you're doing when you're looking at the screen. There's a similar dynamic in play with social media, I think.

For example, Hacker News is the only social media that I use, and I feel that I use it very differently than folks that use Instagram, for example. Can they be effectively conflated?

anneessens · a year ago
> In particular, for marginalized teens, social media represents a unique avenue to connect with teens in similar situations, which provides a significant support network.

Thank you for bringing this up. I was one of those 'marginalised' kids who didn't relate to my real life surroundings so much. The internet was like an escape for me, where I was able to meet many close friends with similar interests on social medias like Twitter and Discord. Not to mention, free internet access in general taught so much about the world, developed my passions and helped determine what I'm now studying and planning to pursue as a career.

If social media was banned when I was younger, it would have made me worse off for sure. And if there were internet/device restrictions more broadly, like I'm often seeing suggested, it would have been absolutely devastating for me. My life would have turned out completely different, in a bad way.

On a site like HN, I would have expected there to be much more people who also had the same experience as younger me with the internet and social media. But for some reason, most of the dominant sentiment here seems to consider social media as a cancer, with no nuance. I'm not sure why they do, but I wish that these people would consider the experiences of people like me.

anneessens commented on     · Posted by u/stareatgoats
anneessens · 2 years ago
> ...especially now as we see these technologies being aggressively utilized in the ongoing genocide in Gaza.

Is this the opinion of the author or does this represent the view of the Tor organisation?

anneessens commented on What makes housing so expensive?   construction-physics.com/... · Posted by u/jseliger
fransje26 · 2 years ago
Funnily enough, the value of a home in Japan decreases over time to converge to a value of 0 over +/- 20 years.

That doesn't mean that the land it is built on has 0 value, but it vastly changes the financial dynamics of home-owning, and would also remove the nonsense linked to home = wealth.

With the reasonable assumption that the build quality of home in Japan is no worse than in the rest of the "Western world", it really puts the whole real estate financial racket into perspective.

anneessens · 2 years ago
Interesting. I'm curious, do you know if there is another asset Japanese people have that is very valuable if not their home? Or some sort of investment?
anneessens commented on What makes housing so expensive?   construction-physics.com/... · Posted by u/jseliger
mihaic · 2 years ago
Exactly. If you stop seeing your house as an investment, and you own it, it doesn't matter if it's value goes down, if it goes along with the market. It even means it's easier for you to trade up.

For the poor souls that have decades of interest left to pay on a loan it's a different story, but somehow, someone has to lose something for most people to have decent housing costs.

anneessens · 2 years ago
Yeah, it's a very difficult situation. Either few people from younger generation will have access to affordable housing and even fewer will own a home, or we cause a lot of misery and hardship like during the 2008 crash, but for even longer. Hard to tell which is the lesser evil.
anneessens commented on What makes housing so expensive?   construction-physics.com/... · Posted by u/jseliger
cqqxo4zV46cp · 2 years ago
In a very short-sighted way, sure. It doesn’t even take that much galaxy-brain thinking to see how housing inequality can be detrimental to one’s finances.
anneessens · 2 years ago
The short sightedness is the problem. As far as I know, NIMBY is endemic in the USA, precisely because home owners are so worried about lowering the value of their home.
anneessens commented on What makes housing so expensive?   construction-physics.com/... · Posted by u/jseliger
mihaic · 2 years ago
The fact that it makes more sense financially to borrow a million to buy a house and keep your 500k of savings tied up in the S&P 500 means we're far away from a solution.

People don't seem to realize that something being a solid investment and it being widely accessible are contradictory terms and that ideal regulation would work towards a balance of these, not over-optimization of either.

anneessens · 2 years ago
This exactly. It's in the best financial interest of a homeowner to stop as much new construction of homes as possible. Until we move away from the idea that owning a home = wealth, then I don't see how this problem can be significantly fixed.
anneessens commented on New 13- and 15‑inch MacBook Air with M3 chip   apple.com/newsroom/2024/0... · Posted by u/dm
brigadier132 · 2 years ago
> I can't tell the difference between my new M1 Max MacBook Pro and the new M3 Max Macbook Pro

I don't know why you bought a new one. You can have two ways to look at this, one way is your ultra pessimistic view, my view is I don't need to upgrade my laptop ever 2 years anymore.

Before the M1 Max I was upgrading so often because intel macbooks sucked so much. Now I can comfortably say I'm keeping my M1 Max for a decade.

As for being "exploited" by ads, just don't be, stop mindless consumption...

anneessens · 2 years ago
'Just don't be exploited' by people who are literally paid to figure out how to exploit your psychological weaknesses?
anneessens commented on Ente: Open-Source, E2E Encrypted, Google Photos Alternative   ente.io/... · Posted by u/madmax108
vishnumohandas · 2 years ago
Not right now, sorry!

There's this tool that can fix capture times: https://github.com/mattwilson1024/google-photos-exif

There are perhaps more that I'm unaware of.

anneessens · 2 years ago
I'll check out this, thanks!

u/anneessens

KarmaCake day70February 16, 2024View Original