Manticore

joined 2 years ago
[–] Manticore@lemmy.nz 5 points 10 hours ago (1 children)

Thanks.

Holy shit, it's so many. Days apart, so I'd guess like half my comments in the last few months? I stopped scrolling.

Som of them I can assume why. The discussion might be about gendered experiences and I'd use a word like 'sexism', 'rape' or 'bitch' in intellectual discussion. Bots can't know the difference and might think it's harassment (or not ad-friendly).

But so many of them are informative responses to questions in subs like TooAfraidToAsk. Sex, relationships, escaping abuse. Most of them are long comments discussing controversial topics in a nuanced, analytical way. Almost all of them are correcting misinformation, providing empathetic context, or teaching somebody who asked for help.

Shadowbanning comments removes the user's ability to appeal. Jesus, I hope some of these people still managed to get the help they needed.

Literally the only things I still posted there were supposed to answer people's questions and instruct. If I can't warn an 18yr boy that his relationship sounds unhealthy and recommend resources to him, there's no fucking point me being there.

Thanks for the link. I've got stuff to think about.

[–] Manticore@lemmy.nz 2 points 19 hours ago (3 children)

How do you know? I'm curious to see how my old accounts might be shadpwbanned. Is there a tool that makes it easy to tell or something?

[–] Manticore@lemmy.nz 4 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

Modern PCs don't truly hibernate, they sleep. If the tower loses power its considered a hard reset.

If anything, Windows machines often have 'fast boot' enabled which saves certain things to state, so today's manual shutdown (without power loss) is closer to old school hibernation than today's 'sleep' is.

You can shutdownyour PC each night, but depending on what you're working on it can disrupt workflow, so I understand why many people prefer to sleep instead.

[–] Manticore@lemmy.nz 1 points 2 years ago

The more ad-riddled they make the platform to try and monetise users, the more they make adblocks necessary to even be usable.

I didn't use to both with adblockers. I didn't like ads, but they didn't affect me enough for me to go through any effort blocking them.

Now I use blockers everywhere, on every platform. Even for creators I like, because I know how little they actually make for ads - so how bout instead of watching 12 hours of ads so they can get 2c, I just send them a dollar or buy their merch every once in a while to not watch ads at all? Etc.

Ads could have had a place. There are ads that serve a purpose, that have minimal disruption but still give businesses a way to develop awareness for those who might want to use them.

Movie trailers (including when they stopped trailing movies and started leading them) are examples of 'acceptable ads' to me. When I purchase something from a store and they include a printed card from their sponsor. When sports teams have logos for being sponsored. A work van with the business logo parked while out on call. Etc.

But the internet's online ads? Email spam? Telemarketing? These are forms of advertising that are actively hostile, and they've become the default. So now a user that wants to be on the internet at all is best served by block all ads, including the ones that would've otherwise been reasonable.

Google will never make me feel guilty for blocking ads when they're already making their search engine unusable, too.