Arthur Besse
cultural reviewer and dabbler in stylistic premonitions
- 397 Posts
- 804 Comments
Arthur Besse@lemmy.mltoUnited States | News & Politics@lemmy.ml•EXPOSED: Graham Platner Linked to Israeli IntelligenceEnglish
2·2 months agoFridge Magnets have a practical use
why do you think it’s a magnet? it looks like a sticker.
Arthur Besse@lemmy.mlto
Programmer Humor@programming.dev•Well, hello waterfox and librewolfEnglish
103·2 months agoImportant context!
They had to change this because newer laws like the CCPA classify some ways of transferring/processing data as a “sale”, even if no money is exchanged.
What? No. Do you really think their “sharing” with “partners” who are “providing sponsored suggestions” doesn’t involve money being exchanged? 🤔
Here is an abridged version of that FAQ entry consisting only of substrings of it:
The reason we’ve stepped away from making blanket claims that “We never sell your data” is because […] to make Firefox commercially viable […] we collect and share some data with our partners, including our optional ads on New Tab and providing sponsored suggestions in the search bar
All of the other words in there implying that they had to stop promising not to sell user data because of some (implied to be unreasonable) “LEGAL definition” of “sale” is imo insulting to the reader.
Arthur Besse@lemmy.mlto
Programmer Humor@programming.dev•you guys are paying for git?English
6·2 months agoit works for me. did you forget to pay your git bill?
Arthur Besse@lemmy.mlOPto
Technology@lemmy.world•The Economist on using phrenology for hiring and lending decisions: "Some might argue that face-based analysis is more meritocratic" […] "For people without access to credit, that could be a blessing"English
2·2 months agoI haven’t heard of academics and/or media from China advocating for applications of phrenology/physiognomy or other related racist pseudosciences. Have you?
Arthur Besse@lemmy.mlOPto
Technology@lemmy.world•The Economist on using phrenology for hiring and lending decisions: "Some might argue that face-based analysis is more meritocratic" […] "For people without access to credit, that could be a blessing"English
31·2 months agoone can also get the full paper directly from yale here without needing to solve a google captcha:
I don’t have the time nor the expertise to read everything to understand how they take into account the bias that good looking white men with educated parents are way more likely to succeed at life.
i admittedly did not read the entire 61 pages but i read enough to answer this:
spoiler
they don’t
Arthur Besse@lemmy.mlOPto
Technology@lemmy.world•The Economist on using phrenology for hiring and lending decisions: "Some might argue that face-based analysis is more meritocratic" […] "For people without access to credit, that could be a blessing"English
18·2 months agoPlastic surgery would become more popular.
One of the paper’s authors had the same thought:
“Suppose this type of technology gets used in labor market screening, or maybe dating markets,” Shue muses. “Going forward, you could imagine a reaction in which people then start modifying their pictures to look a certain way. Or they could modify their actual faces through cosmetic procedures.”
She also bizarrely says that:
“we are very much not advocating that this technology be used by firms as part of their hiring process.”
and yet, for some reason:
The next step for Shue and her colleagues is to explore whether certain personality types are drawn to specific industries or whether those personality types are more likely to succeed within given industries.
Arthur Besse@lemmy.mlto
Science Memes@mander.xyz•What's the main device to hammer in a nail?English
321·2 months ago
that's six by my count
0 ✊
1 👍
2 ☝️
3 👆
4 🖕
Arthur Besse@lemmy.mlMto
Linux@lemmy.ml•How Forward Text messages (SMS) in 2025 ??English
3·2 months agoi haven’t used it myself but https://jmp.chat/ looks good if you’re OK with a US or Canadian number.
there is a lemmy community about it here: !sopranica@lemmy.ml.
The bears definitely took notice of the drone. The animals’ heart rate skyrocketed when the UAV flew overhead, and their stress response was stronger when the quadcopter flew in windy conditions that masked the sound of its approach — apparently bears do not like being surprised. One bear started moving faster after the quadcopter flew by. And the bear that had experienced the greatest increase in heart rate — from 41 beats per minute to 162 — moved nearly 7 kilometers in the next 28 hours, encroaching into a neighboring female’s territory.
All in all, though, the bears weren’t stressed all that much, the researchers concluded.
🤌
At least there is this:
Ditmer’s team says that their results reinforce the NPS ban on drones in parks.
Arthur Besse@lemmy.mlto
A Boring Dystopia@lemmy.world•They even do Price Discrimination on video games nowEnglish
2·2 months agoWhen Miamoto died,
Myamoto isn’t dead
Arthur Besse@lemmy.mlto
ADHD memes@lemmy.dbzer0.com•he truly has a quote for everythingEnglish
7·2 months ago😭
this report actually just now came in:

Arthur Besse@lemmy.mlto
No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•Why don't cars have a way to contact nearby cars like fictional spaceships do?English
3·2 months agoIs the communications holofilter ready?
Engage the overlay. Put them on screen.

Arthur Besse@lemmy.mlto
ADHD memes@lemmy.dbzer0.com•he truly has a quote for everythingEnglish
49·2 months agospoiler

Arthur Besse@lemmy.mlOPto
You Should Know@lemmy.world•YSK: you can stop Microsoft users from sending 'reactions' to your email by adding a "x-ms-reactions: disallow" headerEnglish
12·3 months agoOr, you know, just block domains that use Microsoft email
I’m guessing you probably don’t realize how many organizations host their email with Microsoft.






















https://xkcd.com/37/