@cosine I turned off DMs, because I think they give a misleading impression of privacy (similar to Twitter). People can still contact me directly via other systems.
It may also be that Google has just decided that advertisers don't get any ROI on Linux videos. Many GNU/Linux users may be smart enough to use pi-hole or other ad blockers anyway.
Bob Mottram (bob@social.freedombone.net)'s status on Friday, 19-Jan-2018 06:22:29 EST
Bob MottramMaybe at some point I'll get around to writing a second version of the genetic programming system. Probably things could be simplified. There are a couple of nice things about GP. First, it's deeply unfashionable and so it's not surrounded by the same type of corporate BS as deep learning currently is. Second, it's more general than neural nets. Neural nets are a subset of GP.
@acrata DNS is a problem with the currently existing internet. It's why I also support onion addresses on !Freedombone. If this article is anything to go by then nation states are shaping up for a future DNS war. Control the index of names and you can control how the average user sees the internet.
Susan Kare, graphic designer who created many familiar icons & fonts for Apple, NeXT, Microsoft, and IBM.
Her creations include most of the iconography and fonts which shipped with the original Macintosh, and many icons which persisted in Windows from version 3 until XP.
"Private ownership of land, and in particular absolute private ownership, is a modern idea, only a few hundred years old. 'The idea that one man could possess all rights to one stretch of land to the exclusion of everybody else' was outside the comprehension of most tribespeople, or indeed of medieval peasants. The king, or the Lord of the Manor, might have owned an estate in one sense of the word, but the peasant enjoyed all sorts of so-called 'usufructory' rights which enabled him, or her, to graze stock, cut wood or peat, draw water or grow crops, on various plots of land at specified times of year."
"'The Tragedy of the Commons' became one of the most cited academic papers ever published and its title a catch phrase. It has framed the debate about common property for the last 30 years, and has exerted a baleful influence upon international development and environmental policy, even after Hardin himself admitted that he had got it wrong, and rephrased his entire theory."