Readit News logoReadit News
ciabattabread commented on Microsoft only lets you opt out of AI photo scanning 3x a year   hardware.slashdot.org/sto... · Posted by u/dmitrygr
nosianu · 2 months ago
> People need to treat PR like they do AIs. "You utterly failed to answer the question, try again and actually answer the question I asked this time.

I'm going way off topic, and off on a tangent here.

Anecdote, famous public broadcaster TV talk show in Germany (Markus Lanz): The invited politician failed to answer, so the host did what you asked. Three times. Then he just stopped and went to the next topic like nothing happened.

For anyone thinking this is reasonable, what else could he have done, after all?

This method is utterly useless for the public watching the dialog, but has benefits for both the show and the politician. The public won't learn a thing. The host can pretend to be super tough in evading guests. The politician is let off the hook very easily - he just have to deflect the question(s) with canned standard responses three times, easy enough, no consequences.

Next day, the very critical people on reddit wrote highly upvoted comments celebrating how "tough" the host was on the politician.

But the whole scenario is always the same, every single time, almost like it's scripted: The guest only has to deflect the "tough" question a few times and then nothing else happens, they just move on. It's also eerie to see the change in the host and their questions, from acting tough three times to changing back to acting amiably and forgetting about the unanswered question.

At this point this is all just part of the "act tough but don't upset the guest" show.

You may ask, but what can they do?

Well, how about throwing the guy out? What's the use of them as an interview partner if the interview is used as a mere PR piece? They should just have replacement guests on standby. That won't be a high-level person, but it does not need to be. Yes, they will have trouble getting politicians in if they have to fear actually having to answer. So what? Is the show being a one-sided PR piece any better? They could just interview normal non-Berlin-politics-bubble people instead. There are soooo many who have interesting things to say, much more interesting than some politician's prepared statements.

Unless there are actual consequences, like ending the interview right there and letting the viewers or readers know that answers were refused, acting tough does not matter if it can just be waited out.

ciabattabread · 2 months ago
> The guest only has to deflect the "tough" question a few times and then nothing else happens, they just move on.

How about 12 times? See BBC News’s Jeremy Paxman interview with Michael Howard - https://youtu.be/IqU77I40mS0?si=NpW7cSqi2eXsQt8s

ciabattabread commented on SEC approves Texas Stock Exchange, first new US integrated exchange in decades   cbsnews.com/texas/news/se... · Posted by u/pseudolus
throwway120385 · 2 months ago
> mental shackles of subordination to psychological abusers and manipulators that are constantly pushing the idea that state's rights are subsumed to federal rights

Wow. The inter-state commerce clause is a real thing and it does give the federal government broad lattitude to regulate "commerce" across state lines. Commerce seems to entail the flow of both goods and services. We are in this situation because people at the state level decided, democratically, that some decisions should be made federally so as to avoid a huge patchwork of differing laws. To put it bluntly, I don't want to have to carefully review and compare Oregon state law with say Texas state law before I undertake any travel lest I accidentally commit a felony in Texas by doing something that isn't against the law in Oregon, and that's a really good reason to try to limit the differences between the two. If you don't, you'll necessarily chill travel and commerce across state lines because those differences will present a huge barrier to entry and create a big suck on peoples' time and attention.

> These United States, and after the Civil War the de fact illegitimate federal government called itself The United States

This is getting into Soverign Citizen type reasoning.

ciabattabread · 2 months ago
> This is getting into Sovereign Citizen type reasoning

Getting? The dog whistle is a bullhorn.

ciabattabread commented on SEC approves Texas Stock Exchange, first new US integrated exchange in decades   cbsnews.com/texas/news/se... · Posted by u/pseudolus
ciabattabread · 2 months ago
Wow, a lot of words to say you wish you owned slaves. Usually, these types of arguments were cloaked by going after FDR.
ciabattabread commented on Apple has a private CSS property to add Liquid Glass effects to web content   alastair.is/apple-has-a-p... · Posted by u/_alastair
JakaJancar · 3 months ago
I often suspect things in Settings, esp. account/iCloud section to be webviews, just based on how they load (icons appearing a short moment after the page opens for example).
ciabattabread · 3 months ago
When you tap some of the menu items in the “Saved to iCloud” section, they don’t have the normal grey item highlight that happens with the rest of the settings app.
ciabattabread commented on What went wrong for Yahoo   dfarq.homeip.net/what-wen... · Posted by u/giuliomagnifico
WarOnPrivacy · 5 months ago
Another football in the Verizon Yahoo/Shuffle are those Verizon customers who were sold to Frontier but had verizon.net email addresses.

Verizon kept control of those lightly-maintained email accounts and pushed them into the Yahoo/AOL infrastructure. Users with a verizon.net email address had webmail access at mail.aol.com.

Verizon didn't make life easy. They changed POP/IMAP/SMTP servers every year or so. Just this May they changed again, from smtp.mail.yahoo.com to smtp.verizon.net - but the old servers still worked until the AOL outage 2 days ago.

During the years in between, customers got caught between AOL's mandate to use OAuth and Microsoft's refusal to support it in Outlook.

FF to now-ish and Verizon is purchasing those same FiOS customers back again. One more smack with the Verizon ping-ping paddle.

ciabattabread · 5 months ago
> but the old servers still worked until the AOL outage 2 days ago.

So that explains why my dad's email suddenly couldn't send outgoing messages (the configuration, for years, was outgoing.yahoo.verizon.net with normal password). After what felt like an hour, what worked was changing it to smtp.mail.yahoo.com and using OAuth.

ciabattabread commented on Do not download the app, use the website   idiallo.com/blog/dont-dow... · Posted by u/foxfired
tpmoney · 5 months ago
> of course Apple doesn't list the size of their own apps like Apple Maps, Photos, Music, etc...

You can find that in the phone storage settings:

    iOS:           12 G
    Keynote:      498 M
    Numbers:      482 M
    Pages:        455 M
    Clips:        213 M
    Maps:          81 M
    Watch:         70 M
    Find My:       60 M
    Music:         38 M
    iTunes U:      35 M
    Support:       34 M
    Podcasts:      32 M
    Books:         31 M
    iCloud Drive:  30 M
    Freeform:      19 M
    Fitness:       18 M
    Notes:         17 M
    Journal:       15 M
    Home:          10 M
    App Store:      8 M
    Weather:        8 M
    Mail:           7 M
    Files:          4 M
    Health:         3 M
    Measure:        3 M
    Voice Memos:    3 M
    Calendar:       2 M
    Clock:          2 M
    Safari:         2 M
    Shortcuts:      2 M
    Translate:      2 M
    TV:             2 M
    Calculator:     1 M
    Facetime:       1 M
    iTunes Store:   1 M
    Tips:           1 M
    Wallet:       934 K
    Messages:     860 K
    Photos:       791 K
    Compass:      712 K
    Camera:       635 K
    Contacts:     598 K
    Phone:        570 K
    Magnifier:    516 K
    Passwords:    213 K

There's also an "Apple Inc." listing, which appears to be "shared" between a lot of their apps which clocks in at 204M

My takeaway from having gone through the list and compared to the various 3rd party apps:

1) Apps can absolutely be smaller. Plenty of stuff in the <200MB range including things like Signal, OBD Fusion and Infuse

2) Games are often big, but there's a surprising number of "simple" apps that are larger than some of the games

3) The largest apps seem to be from companies that you would expect to be doing the most tracking of your data

4) Apple's first party app sizes probably explain a little about why they weren't in a hurry to upgrade storage sizes

ciabattabread · 5 months ago
> Maps: 81 M

Is MapKit considered iOS or Maps?

ciabattabread commented on Adobe deletes Bluesky posts after backlash   petapixel.com/2025/04/10/... · Posted by u/bookofjoe
55555 · 8 months ago
Adobe runs what must be one of the largest deceptive rebills. The vast majority of users signing up for a monthly plan do not realize that it is actually an "annual plan, billed monthly" and thus that if they cancel after one month (for example) they'll be billed for the remaining 11 immediately. I honestly don't know how they haven't faced FTC action for this, as it's been their primary model for 5-10 years now.
ciabattabread · 8 months ago
I have one of those "annual plan, billed monthly". How the hell do I figure out when I initially signed for it? Along the way, I got two free months for getting a Logitech mouse, does that change my annual month?
ciabattabread commented on 'Naive' science fan faces jail for plutonium import   au.news.yahoo.com/naive-s... · Posted by u/geox
aussieguy1234 · 9 months ago
And this is the biggest weakness of the current top down model of governance that we have.

Id like to see a system where judging those who have supposedly done wrong is done almost entirely by the community, not the government. Government/security forces (including police) intervention should be a last resort.

The law has little gaps like this where someone well meaning who is not intending to break a law inadvertently does so.

Minorities tend to have the law applied to them more harshly.

Not everyone has safe access to the legal system, i.e. undocumented migrants.

If you are in a marginalised group and have a crime committed against you, your experience will likely be different compared to what a white heterosexual christian male would experience.

ciabattabread · 9 months ago
> Id like to see a system where judging those who have supposedly done wrong is done almost entirely by the community, not the government. Government/security forces (including police) intervention should be a last resort.

I'm sure all those children abused by priests will agree with you.

ciabattabread commented on Help Identify the Photographer Who Captured Many Images of 1960s San Francisco   smithsonianmag.com/smart-... · Posted by u/gnabgib
ciabattabread · 9 months ago
I thought we had already solved this mystery, but I was thinking of a different 1960's San Francisco photo archive discovery -- the Kodachrome slides in a cabinet left on a street.[0]

[0] https://sfmemory.org/TiffanyCabinet/

ciabattabread commented on 43K fewer drivers on Manhattan roads after congestion pricing turned on   gothamist.com/news/43k-fe... · Posted by u/pseudolus
etrautmann · a year ago
wouldn't that increase driving relative to other forms of transportation?
ciabattabread · a year ago
Cold encourages suburbanites to stay in their warm home instead of going on a night out.

u/ciabattabread

KarmaCake day481October 5, 2019View Original