đŽWill Pam Bondi Resign Tonight? (Vertical)
đŽWill Pam Bondi Resign Tonight? (Vertical)
Pam Bondi Is Going To Lose Her Job
Using roman numerals is an attempt to obfuscate communication.
The Aftermath of The Superbowl Halftime Show
Overwatch is Detransitioning
So, I am a Computational Biologist. Keep that in mind. Iâm an actual scientist who works with ecological concepts, specifically the microbiome. One of the most insufferable reactions to the cyberpunk era we inhabit is the emergence of anti-science ideas from the left in response to techno-fascism. The strange part is that many people on the left do not even recognize them as anti-science, because they assume the left is aligned with science and the right opposed to it; ergo, if the left says it, it must be scientific. It is insane: washing your hands is technology. Medicine is technology.
I think, because the Internet has hijacked peopleâs brains, many conflate technology with electronics or machines. Anthropologically, technology consists of material objects, techniques, and organized practices through which humans intentionally intervene in their environments. Technology is culture, and human culture is technology. When someone learns a skill or a discipline from someone else, that is an extension of technology.
Technology encompasses craft traditions (blacksmithing), agriculture, and institutionalized processes of teaching and learning. Agriculture is one of the oldest forms of technology. Yes, farmers are tech workers. I write code, but I also spent a large amount of time on a farm, and I can tell you that many tech workers who pride themselves on writing code would not know what to do with farm equipment.
So, from that broad perspective, we can sum technology up in one word: education. A basic heuristic for determining if something is cultural or not is: can it be taught and learned? These words? I was taught English, and I am using an invented language to transmit knowledge to you; ergo, I am using technology to transmit cultural knowledge to you. Reading a book is thus using a piece of human technology. So, being anti-tech connotes being anti-education.
What got me thinking about this is a toot I read on Mastodon:
The truth is that society needs to develop ethically and ecologically more than it does technologically. Thatâs not to say that we should shun technology, but our development along other lines lags far behind our technological capacity.
Sounds valid, right? That is the distinct smell of bull shit.This is a clear example of what is called a platitude. Platitudes are memetically hijacking peopleâs brains. Memetics actually hijack your brainâthey change it. Itâs similar to how a retrovirus can alter the genome of its host. So, trying to have conversations with these people is pointless, which is why I avoid the chronically online Internet scene and arguing with them.
It made me want to scream. As I mentioned earlier, technology is basically a set of things you learn from other humansâtypically within a cultureâthat helps you do or make something. You know what else is learned within human society? A normative set of cultural values about how we ought to behave. So, both technology and culture emerge from the same thing simultaneously and mutually. You cannot have humans intervening in things to achieve ecological development, because that is technology, and you cannot educate humans on ethics without an invented language. It is literally an anti-education argument.
Ethics and technology arise together from the same human conditions and social processes. It makes little sense to claim that technology is âoutpacingâ ethics. The two do not develop independently. We form ethical norms in response to new capacities and circumstances. There would be no cultural norms about how to use the Internet if the Internet did not exist. And, there would be no ethical debates about AI if AI did not exist. Ethical reflection emerges alongside technological change because both are products of human culture.
As new problems create new technologies that create new problems, societies respond by negotiating norms, rules, and expectations appropriate to those contexts. The same pattern appears in politics. Politics concerns who gets what, when, and howâit is the negotiation of power, rights, and resources. Without resources or competing claims, there would be nothing to negotiate. Ethics and politics are not trailing behind technology because they are co-emergent responses to the same underlying realities.
Stepping Back From Social Media To Read a Book
Iâm taking a break. After spending like two years in the worst parts of the Internet modeling the memetic spread of conspiracy-driven behavioral patterns and developing social media software as a side hustle, I think Iâm going to take a step back and⊠I donât know⊠maybe read a book? lol.
Iâm a Computational Biologist who pretty much studies the memetics of conspiracy theories and how they act as another vector/epidemiological layer. Iâve also been working on various contracts for social media development stuff. Working on the shit Iâve been working on for years forces you to see the worst parts of people that they split off. It makes you hate everyone â and I mean everyone.
Stink Bug
https://sabilewcreates.com/stink-bug/The second I use a VPN, half the internet acts like I'm a hacker. Logins fail, I can't see cat memes on Reddit, and to update my email Twitter makes me swear not to clear their cookies for a week. And heaven forbid I use anything but Chrome.
But the moment they want my credit card? Suddenly, VPNs, ad-blockers, and tracking protection are my birthright. Want to use Netscape for nostalgia? Sure, why not. It's almost as if security concerns disappear when they want my money.
https://m.ai6yr.org/@exador23/116050618727339401
So when wild animals have #privacy practices and use #e2ee to shelter themselves from predators, it's cool, but when us people (still wild animals) try have a bit of privacy, it suddenly "needs backdoors" and "totes safe verification systems" to "protect the children", only used by "the good guys" to "catch criminals" as if the real predators weren't the big corporations all along.
đŽWho Up Yoinking They Spoinky ? (Vertical)
Nick Fuentes Has Gone Woke
BlueSkyâs Solution To Moderating Is Moderating Without Moderating via Social Proximity
I have noticed a lot of people are confused about why some posts donât show up on threads, though they are not labeled by the moderation layer. Bluesky has begun using what it calls social neighborhoods (or network proximity) as a ranking signal for replies in threads. Replies from people who are closer to you in the social graph, accounts you follow, interact with, or share mutual connections with, are prioritized and shown more prominently. Replies from accounts that are farther away in that network are down-ranked. They are pushed far down the thread or placed behind âhidden replies.â
Each person gets their own unique view of a thread based on their social graph. It creates the impression that replies from distant users simply donât exist. This is true even though theyâre still technically public and viewable if you expand the thread or adjust filters. Bluesky is explicitly using features of subgraphs to moderate without moderating. Their reasoning is that if you canât see each other, you canât harass each other. Ergo, there is nothing to moderate.
Bluesky mentions that here:
https://bsky.social/about/blog/10-31-2025-building-healthier-social-media-update
As a digression, Iâm not going to lie: I really enjoyed working on software built on the AT protocol, but their fucking users are so goddamn weird. Itâs sort of like enjoying building houses, but hating every single person who moves into them. But, you donât have to deal with them because youâre just the contractor. That is how I feel about Bluesky. I hate the people. I really like the protocol and infrastructure.
I sort of am a sadist who does enjoy drama, so I do get schadenfreude from people with social media addictions and parasocial fixations who reply to random people on Bluesky, because they donât realize their replies are disconnected from the authorâs thread unless that person is within their network. They arenât part of the conversation they think they are. Theyâre algorithmically isolated from everyone else. Their replies arenât viewable from the authorâs thread because of how Bluesky handles social neighborhoods.
Blueskyâs idea of social neighborhoods is about grouping users into overlapping clusters based on real interaction patterns rather than just the follow graph. Unlike Twitter, it does not treat the network as one big public square. Instead, it models networks of âsocial neighborhoodsâ made up of people you follow, people who follow you, people you frequently interact with, and people who are closely connected to those groups. Theyâre soft, probabilistic groupings rather than strict labels.
Everyone does not see the same replies. Bluesky is being a bit vague with âhidden.â Hidden means your reply is still anchored to the thread and can be expanded. There is another way Bluesky can handle this. Bluesky uses social neighborhoods to judge contextual relevance. Replies from people inside or near your social neighborhood are more likely to be shown inline with a thread, expanded by default, or served in feeds. Replies from outside your neighborhood are still public and still indexed, but theyâre treated as lower-context contributions.
Basically, if you reply to a thread, you will see it anchored to the conversation, and everyone will see it in search results, as a hashtag, or from your profile, but it will not be accessible via the thread of the person you were replying to. It is like shadow-banning people from threads unless they are strongly networked.
Because people have not been working with the AT Protocol like I have, they assume they are shadow-banned across the entire Bluesky app view. Noâeveryone is automatically shadow-banned from everyone else unless they are within the same social neighborhood. In other words, you are not part of the conversation you think you are joining because you are not part of their social group.
Your replies will appear in profiles, hashtag feeds, or search results without being visually anchored to the full thread. Discovery impressions are neighborhood-agnostic: they serve content because it matches a query, tag, or activity stream. Once the reply is shown, the app then decides whether itâs worth pulling in the rest of the conversation for you. If the original author and most participants fall outside your neighborhood, Bluesky often chooses not to expand that context automatically.
Bluesky really is trying to avoid having to moderate, so this is their solution. Instead of banning or issuing takedown labels to DIDs, the system lets replies exist everywhere, but not in that particular instance of the thread.
I find this ironic because a large reason why many people are staying on Bluesky and not moving to the fediverseâthank God, because I do not want them thereâis discoverability, virality, and engagement.
In case anyone is asking how I know so much about how these algorithms work: I was a consultant on a lot of these types of algorithms, so I certainly hope Iâd know how they work, lol. No, you get no more details about the work Iâve done. I have no hand in the algorithm Bluesky is using, but I have proposed and implemented that type of algorithm before.
I have an interest in noetics and the noosphere. A large amount of my ontological work is an extension of my attempts to model domains that have no spatial or temporal coordinates. The question is how do you generalize a metric space that has no physically, spatial properties. I went to school to try to formalize those ideas. Turns out theyâre rather useful for digital social networks, too. The ontological analog to spatial distance, when you have no space, is a graph of similarities.
This can be modeled by representing each item as a node in a weighted graph, where edges are weighted by dissimilarity rather than similarity. Highly similar items are connected by low-weight edges, while less similar items are connected by higher-weight edges. Distances in the graph, computed using standard shortest-path algorithms, then correspond to degrees of similarity. Closely related items are separated by short path lengths, while increasingly dissimilar items require longer paths through the graph. It turns out that attempts to generalize metric spaces for noetic domainsâto model noetic/psychic spacesâare actually pretty useful for social media algorithms, lol.
The Virulent Infection of BlueSky by Extremely Online, Brain-Rotten Zombies from X Continues
So, it appears a new migration from Twitter to Bluesky is underway. It appears to be some of the most virulent former 4chan users possible. Yep, I got off Bluesky just in time, lol. Iâve been keeping tabs on a particularly virulent and toxic subgraph on Twitter for years. It pretty much stayed off Bluesky because they couldnât act like abusive dumpster fires there. Welp, looks like theyâre becoming more active on Bluesky. Itâs not looking good over there.
That they are on the move says something. Itâs sort of like how the US is suddenly a place that is hospitable to measles. It was all but eradicated here.
My husband likes to say that you can tell where not to be by where I am looking from somewhere else. I like fires. So if I am observing your platform or community from a distance, you probably donât want to be there.
Edit:
I had originally posted the above on a now-defunct federated blog. It got blasted to Mastodon. Someone replied and asked what I think is causing this. I debated actually answering, then decided that Iâve had enough of the dumpster fire that is social media. I decided not to wade through social media tech discourse into what will mostly likely be an Internet argument with a complete stranger. I am a techie dragon, and I engage with things to learn how they work so I can tinker with them. I only engaged with tech discourse to get my hands on how the tech works. Thereâs nothing in it for me to be part of larger conversations. Arguing with random strangers on social media is not an epistemically useful format. I do think I should answer, though. Just on my blog.
I treat social media like I do an addictive substance. I do not believe in abstinence, but I do believe in harm-reduction paradigms, so when I see everyone overdosing on social media, I pull back and shut down a lot of accounts. The Fediverse instance where the first part of this blog post was posted has been taken down, moved to this blog, and this section appended to it.
I often use the word weeb pejoratively. Here, I am using it categorically. There really isnât an âofficialâ name outside of otaku or weeb culture. I am at the fringes and intersections of it as a furry. My husband is a millennial weeb. With that being saidâ
The migration is in large part because Bluesky is capturing the otaku/weeb niche of X. X hosted networks that were ecosystems of âanime fans.â These included anime and manga artists, doujin and hentai artists, VTuber fans, NSFW illustrators, fandom shitposters, niche fetish communities, and other chronically and extremely online content creators and influencers. That culture relied heavily on timelines, informal networks, and discovery through reposts, replies, and algorithmic amplification.
Elon Musk pretty much destabilized Xâs ecosystems and social networks from multiple directions at once. Algorithm changes made reach inconsistent. Moderation created anxiety and uncertainty about what would get suppressed or unintentionally âviralâ. Bots, engagement farming, and blue-check reply spam actively poisoned fandom conversations.
Bluesky is the memetic and cultural progeny of early imageboard cultures. I conducted a phylogenetic analysis of the memetics, which you can check out here:
Bluesky is a competitor of X for otaku and fandom communities. Bluesky has a lot of the aspects of old Twitter dynamics around which fandom culture evolved. Recently, Bluesky introduced something big in those communities: going live. Since X is no longer habitable for weebs, they are moving to Bluesky.
For example, the AT protocol already has PinkSea:
And, of course, there is WAFRN:
I cope and deal with issues via personal, private sublimation and not so much exhibitionism of my art or consumption of art. So, while I do make comic books and do a shit ton of weeby art, itâs for the purpose of sublimation, so Iâm not too interested in being a part of a community. Thatâs a large reason I am not active in those spaces. Iâm quite cynical, in general, so I am suspicious of any community â and I mean any community, at all. Honestly, I am mildly contemptuous of mass participation or any sense of belonging. So, my art stays private, because it is created for me â and just me.
GIMP, c'est quand mĂȘme trĂšs sympa, mais c'est vraiment pas adaptĂ© pour modifier des captures d'Ă©cran, juste pour entourer les zones oĂč l'on doit saisir des informations ou cliquer.
J'ai quand mĂȘme galĂ©rĂ© une bonne heure, et devoir regarder sur Internet juste pour faire un cadre rouge autour d'un bouton pour une documentation. en gros, faut sĂ©lectionner la zone Ă encadrer, puis faire Tracer la sĂ©lection.
Perso, c'est pas le truc le plus intuitif je trouve. Avec Paint.net, c'est bien plus simple.
Et pourquoi je n'utilise pas Paint.net ? Tout simplement parce qu'il ne fait pas partie des logiciels autorisĂ©s par mon employeur đ
AprÚs, Gimp, c'est bien pour de la retouche photo ou pour du dessin, je dis pas le contraire, mais pour certains besoins ultra basique, c'est vraiment pas l'outil le plus adapté.
#GIMP #Rant
// Rant of the day:
It's 2026 and still Wayland doesn't implement properly ICC color profiles for loading monitor's calibration.
It's not just for professional color work, once you have calibrated your monitors with a tool like Spyder, and you've seen the difference before/after loading the calibration, you just can't go back, you can see your monitor looking like shit with no calibration, it hurts your eyes.
And they wonder why people stick with X11...