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Cake day: July 1st, 2023

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  • Your suggestion being that they take loss after loss for some undefined period of time in the hope that it gains a sudden boost in popularity, and should this not occur, presumably also issue the same refunds, to more people, and the extra costs can be handled by… someone?

    The ideal would be covering server costs with a subscription; building in peer-to-peer play; or release a self-hosted server application alongside like the old days, but in those cases, nobody would be getting a refund. Clearly these weren’t considered options - I have no familiarity with the game itself - so what’s the plan? Someone risks their livelihood on the offchance it’s suddenly Among Us?

    Edit: Oh, It’s Mister Beast. In which case I’d take some issue with calling it “Indie” but certainly they should have the financial stability to keep it going a while, and a much better chance of convincing people to play it. On the other hand if that level of advantage couldn’t make this game worth playing, maybe it’s for the best.


  • I work for a telecom supplying software to the contact centre.

    “Training” here is a euphemism for telling the agent what they did wrong. There are both manual reviews (when a second agent has to deal with the fallout from another agent’s fuck up) and random reviews by the “Quality”/audit team. They’ll check for example that agents aren’t trying to get good feedback scores by giving the customers soft refunds/credits.

    Our software is expressly to make agent’s jobs easier but I end up listening to a fair few calls to see how we can do this and by God they do a much harder and more cruelly measured job than I do.


  • No but it isn’t wise to generalise two of Europe’s less… regulated countries to just “Europe”. Pretty much every European country north of the Alps and west of the Vistula have mandatory smoke alarms/fire detection. It’s not a mystery why. 5000 Europeans a year die in residential fires and social housing, ie paid for by the tax payers, is disproportionately damaged by fire every year.

    You can say where you’re from. Nobody’s coming to find you.

    And yes, I’m probably more emotive about this issue than average. I’m sure that’s not a mystery why either.



  • Instantly?

    Hospitals, telecoms, schools, universities, research labs the world over would be left without security updates or tech support. Businesses would crash out, access to everything from Sharepoint to Outlook to Entra ID SSO cut off rendering tens of millions unable to work and likely furloughed or redundant.

    Enjoy your accelerationist fantasies if you like, daring to assume that the void would be filled by fucking Linux Mint or something and not literally just Apple. But the idea that it would be instant is even more unhinged than the average .ml stammering about the misunderstood virtues of Russian anti-Imperialism.






  • All code uploaded to Github is scraped

    This is the very simple statement that I was responding to, along with the next line about how using Github is implicit consent to feeding your data to an LLM. If the poster wants nuance, they are free to provide it themselves. You can see in subsequent responses there is none.

    Of course them being different matters. That’s my point. Not all code uploaded to Github is being fed into an LLM. It is not consent if you are signing a contract demanding that something not be done. It’s preposterous even at a surface level.

    Github Enterprise Server is different from Github Enterprise Cloud, which is what I was talking about, and which is explicitly not used for training LLMs, and if it were, would absolutely kill Github as a product and likely mire Microsoft in years of litigation.

    Frankly I don’t know of any software company using Github Enterprise on-prem but I suppose there are probably some CEOs out there who haven’t taken the OpEx pill. Maybe deep in the rainforest with Mokele-Mbembe. Certainly in my sliver of the tech industry, telecoms, the idea of owning a server is akin to having a deskphone and an outgoing mail room.


  • Sure. Any day now.

    Being embarrassed by association with people who say things like “all code uploaded to Github is subject to being scraped” might be childish. Not sure it’s as childish as being embarrassed by “cringe” though. That would imply I care about your opinion on my communication. I don’t.

    I do care that you understand that a half dozen people in this thread are actively outing themselves as completely ignorant about the real world of software development and the software industry in general. Probably not surprising given the words “Gentoo” and “Codeberg” in the title of the post.









  • African-American is pretty awkward but it fits the similarly awkward model of Irish-American, Italian-American. The reason those are more specific should be obvious and horrifying - the vast majority of black Americans have little record of their ancestry before cross-Atlantic transportation. It would be nice if Americans just focused on the American part but these labels were often imposed on them from outside before they were adopted as a matter of spiteful pride from inside. Like LGTBQ Pride, St Patrick’s Day parades originally had an element of defiance and protest.

    It’s useful in AAVE though because it is specifically American as opposed to just “black”. There are black slang/vernaculars in the Caribbean, Britain and France for example. Some of it bleeds into AAVE/Global English too - e.g. fam, bruv.