@404mediaco setting aside that this shouldn’t be possible, now I want to know if I can do that to them.
haste@mastodon.social
Posts
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An internal DHS document obtained by 404 Media shows for the first time CBP used location data sourced from the online advertising industry to track phone locations. -
The MacBook Neo is such an interesting machine that it coaxed a thousand-word-essay out of me: https://samhenri.gold/blog/20260312-this-is-not-the-computer-for-you/@samhenrigold I’m glad you wrote this. It was really touching.
Somewhere around the midpoint I thought, that was me, too. Except you were probably a little cooler. Lol
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One of the most impressive things about Stardew Valley is that even in the 10 years since and countless copycats, there's still never been one that I'd play again.@JessTheUnstill Same, though I will say I think Fields of Mistria is on the right track! I stopped playing it til its out of early access cause I don’t wanna burn out on it early
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As age-verification bullshit becomes more common, I am determined to simply not participate in any service or video game that requires it.@violetmadder well, I’m happy to be in community with you then.
Let’s do our best.
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As age-verification bullshit becomes more common, I am determined to simply not participate in any service or video game that requires it.@tk it’s funny you mention that, I was recently taught how to build a radio to join a mesh network, and will be contributing as soon as I can source the parts.
Hopefully I don’t electrocute myself, I’m not exactly an engineer. lol
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As age-verification bullshit becomes more common, I am determined to simply not participate in any service or video game that requires it.So yeah, bottom line: I will not tolerate this identity verification bullshit on any platform.
I will not allow my absence from said platforms to dictate my ability to participate in public life.
And I will build spaces that respect and empower my neighbors.
It’s going to be inconvenient, but it’s also punk as hell, and the right thing to do.
Finally, to the authoritarian pricks trying to destroy my home, online and off; fuck you, I hope you choke.
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As age-verification bullshit becomes more common, I am determined to simply not participate in any service or video game that requires it.I understand that my own corner of the internet is not particularly important, but I only have to be one brick in the wall.
And I can even become a *couple* of bricks by extending those principles to the other sites and tools that I use, and refusing to participate in ones that cave to pressure to erode our civil rights.
No one will notice that I’m not using Floop or Glorm or whatever. It’s true that I won’t cause the owners to change their behavior. But neither will I help them build power.
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As age-verification bullshit becomes more common, I am determined to simply not participate in any service or video game that requires it.All I know is that the internet is absolutely the most important thing humanity has ever created, and is maybe the only tool that we have today which is capable of equalizing the insane wealth, information, and power inequalities in my country.
Our ability to communicate freely, to exchange ideas, and to organize terrifies all of the right people. Good. It should.
I will not participate in destroying my own home— and yes, I do consider the Internet my home. I’m corny like that.
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As age-verification bullshit becomes more common, I am determined to simply not participate in any service or video game that requires it.At this point, I believe there’s more value in being loud and public about resistance.
The legal system already does not function, specifically for me. I have no reason to believe that the Constitution will protect me, or that plausible deniability will keep me out of jail. At this point, if the fash wants to put me there, they will reverse engineer a reason to do so, or even do so illegally.
But if others see me making noise, they might decide to push back, too. Corporations certainly aren’t!
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As age-verification bullshit becomes more common, I am determined to simply not participate in any service or video game that requires it.It may be inadvisable to put this in writing, but I’m serious about this: if I am ever required to put up an age-gate, I intend to defy that law.
You’re going to have to break into my house and physically remove the server, when it comes down to it.
And it’s not that I doubt they can. I don’t have the same kind of resources that the state does. It’s more that I intend to make them do so publicly, in the sunlight.
I solemnly swear to be the biggest pain in the ass for fascists possible.
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As age-verification bullshit becomes more common, I am determined to simply not participate in any service or video game that requires it.As age-verification bullshit becomes more common, I am determined to simply not participate in any service or video game that requires it. The day I see the prompt, is the day I leave.
Maybe the government’s hope is that I stop participating in society, but I assure you that I will not. I’ll find or build alternatives, and refuse to comply with bad law.
I hope you will, too.
And as a silver lining, maybe the weird internet we end up creating as a result will suck less than the current one.
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A new twist in the "AI license laundering of chardet" story https://github.com/chardet/chardet/issues/327@cwebber I love the idea of weaponizing their reasoning in support of the working class.
Cynically though, I think there’s a third outcome: rules for thee, but not for me. In which Microsoft uses the full weight of their wallet to crush the common person, but is free to steal themselves, to profit off of the open source community. The rest of us are left to victimize each other with little legal recourse.
Is it logically consistent? Nope, but that’s the weird timeline we live in.