[-] glowing_hans@sopuli.xyz 2 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

That is why I already ask it to generate unit tests for its AI generated functions as well, which are also wrong semantically sometimes....

[-] glowing_hans@sopuli.xyz 1 points 1 month ago

Your writing style and word frequency table allow doxing yourself without even realizing it ๐Ÿ•ต.

[-] glowing_hans@sopuli.xyz 1 points 1 month ago

no! Have we already reached peak lemmy?

[-] glowing_hans@sopuli.xyz 1 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

tldr: Pagan Mongol tribes

I theorize: Nomadic mongol tribes (horsemen who used bow and arrow to hunt ๐Ÿ‡๐Ÿน) converted quite quickly to the religion of the people they conquered. But the Mongols where mostly pagan shamanistic tribes in the beginning (they believed in the Sky god Tengri) and transferred some of their culture into ruling elites of their subject countries and killed many monotheistic farmers people greatly altering east asian and central asian demographics at a scale of 40.000.000 people ๐Ÿ’€. Also the Mongol conquests acted as a buffer that kept Islam or Orthodox Christianity spreading beyond central asia into east asia for 500 years:

  • Mongol tribes captured Moscow and beyond, preventing orthodox Christianity to expand to China faster
  • Mongol empire captured the Chinese capital Beijing. Maybe their shamanistic believes influenced locals.
  • Timurid (emperor Timur was grandson of Mongol Ghengis Khan) empire only expanded west not to China by their luck. They defeated mostly muslim empires like Persians and Ottomans. This prevented larger muslim expansion into east Asia. Even Europeans viewed the muslim timurids as a great threat, but also as a ally against Persian and Ottoman empires.
  • The siege of Baghdad in the year 1258 by the Mongol empire with Chinese siege-craft destroyed the Muslim "golden age" destroying a chance of their expansion to east asia

Additional theory: Shamanistic Mongol tribe invasions might have deeply altered the subconscious of the religious people they annexed in central Asia/Eastern russia and Persia, what is known that they replaced the ruling elites and subtly influenced hierarchy to make taxation easier.

[-] glowing_hans@sopuli.xyz 2 points 1 month ago

Don't the Scottish men wear short skirts? But they seem rather the exception than the rule. Maybe the native Americans also wore skirts of some kind, or sometimes nothing at all.

[-] glowing_hans@sopuli.xyz 2 points 1 month ago

2010s: xml

<xml>
   <a href="oh no">
</xml>
[-] glowing_hans@sopuli.xyz 5 points 1 month ago

Yep I agree now the analysis is wrong on the extrovert/introvert part and it is totally uncorrelated. Many "business types" who love the Elons, Peter Thiels, or Viveks out there seem management types who want short term stock prices to go up, by any means needed.

Also I would not describe Donald Trump or Steve Banon as introverts.

[-] glowing_hans@sopuli.xyz 6 points 1 month ago

Unpopular Opinion: Trump represents a demographic transition in the U.S. as the old people go into retirement new young people emerge. The retiring and now dying people had the following properties:

  • did not use social media, reads popular newspapers
  • extrovert, wanted to dominate international institutions and create new international rules
  • pro free markets, wanted to achieve global systems dominance, containment of enemies (Soviet Union)
  • unionized working class (example: Boeing employee)
  • majority Protestant, Catholic or Mormon

Meanwhile Peter Thiel, Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy and other Silicon Valley emperors captured a new demographic:

  • uses social media, isolated in select bubbles
  • introvert, isolationist
  • pro tariffs, local markets, walls as a symbolic and total solution to societies openness, what I would describe as "self containment protectionism"
  • not in a union, does not even dream of a union. (example: Fruit picker in Florida/Texas)
  • Catholic, majority is atheist now

This might represent the final shift away from the old cold war era to a new war(?) era. To my understanding South America is majority introvert conservative catholic in its foreign policy and North america is (was) majority extrovert unionized protestant in its foreign policy. And now North America starts to look more like an isolationist version of Argentinia or Brazil to me with heavy protestant tones (think of Milei of Argentinia or Bolsonaro of Brazil, who are ironically more protestant than catholic in their support base). I am not american so proudly correct me where I am totally wrong in my analysis.

[-] glowing_hans@sopuli.xyz 1 points 1 month ago

I guess the fastest growing tree in my region is spruce ๐ŸŒฒ.

[-] glowing_hans@sopuli.xyz 2 points 1 month ago

Whatever tree grows fastest in my region ๐ŸŒณ๐ŸŒณ.

  • they provide shade after 10 years
  • fast growth removes CO2 from the air
  • block vision
  • root system stabilizes ground
  • wood can be sold after 30 years, replant
[-] glowing_hans@sopuli.xyz 5 points 1 month ago

First: Mass Surveillance is possible without computing technology. The Stasi secret police in the DDR or secret police of the Soviet Union and North Korea demonstrate this. Normal citizens where secret spies that reported their family members or "friends" activity. In your wording of your text I notice you are mostly concerned with computational surveillance with modern technology, why not expand this to other human based surveillance systems?

Now to the computing aspects: Standardization Whatever is possible with technology will be implemented by someone, even if it was meant as a temporary test it might become permanent apparatus for surveillance. A good example of that is the http protocol which through its faulty design allows some surveillance: cookies, user-Agent headers, IP-Addresses, Domain name systems. Someone in the surveilance agency of China understood http stack and its vulnerabilities, otherwise there would be no great chinese firewall that can block all foreign traffic ๐Ÿฐ๐Ÿฏ๐Ÿฐ.

No one wants to go away from http, eventhough it enables chinese mass surveillance, because it became a convenient standard. This is why it became permanent, even though more private systems are possible (onion/i2p sites), very few use them. Lazy Convenience > Privacy.

All communication will yield metadata.

Tldr:

Knowledge is power.

Human organizations: It is free real estate.

[-] glowing_hans@sopuli.xyz 2 points 1 month ago

I am the Senate now!

~ Chancelor Palpetine

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glowing_hans

joined 1 month ago