LOL thanks for checking that out. i was on mobile and didn’t want to figure out how to read the contents.
early 30s dog - pnw
LOL thanks for checking that out. i was on mobile and didn’t want to figure out how to read the contents.
No problem. It’s probably jerboa doing that lol. It’s not the best at handling links yet.
That makes sense, thanks. Btw you might want to remove that link, it just points to a site that tries to download a file.
It’s funny - I thought the pricing changes had to do with following Twitter’s lead, but I had no idea he would be that down with Musk. If I were an employee at Reddit now, I’d take this as a serious red flag and start looking.
I’m not sure what you mean here. the_donald was shut down in June 2020 according to wikipedia. And the insurrection happened 6 months later, Jan 2021.
Sometimes being at a company in the end times can be fun and chaotic. You have a sense of comeraderie with everyone who’s going through the same thing. With the amount of overwork Musk mandates to keep his ego going, I could see everyone pretending to work hard while he’s around, then fucking around, looking for new jobs, etc the rest of the time.
Well said.
I used to go out and purposefully look for new music from time to time. Lately I’ve just been playing Spotify radios of artists I like and finding new artists through that. They have a new feature on the mobile app that’s kinda like TikTok. You click on tropicalia or norm core or whatever and it plays you similarly tagged songs. After 10-20 songs, it recommends new related hashtags to try out.
A good way to find new music if you’re into less popular stuff is to go by the label. If you like an artist, check out the labels they’ve released their albums on! chances are that you’ll find a few other artists you’ll like too.
That’s why I miss foobar so much!! You could sort and soft through your library in so many ways. I used to go through everything year by year. I’m surprised there aren’t any good standalone apps that do something similar.
I remember thinking this was sooooo funny
Section 230 (often called the 26 words that created the internet) reads:
Wikipedia also says:
I’m also not a lawyer so I have no clue what the ramifications for this are, but I’m guessing that Reddit isn’t liable for stuff people upload as long as the illegal stuff gets removed.
If Reddit undeletes a post, could they be treated as the publisher? At the very least it sounds not very good-samaritan-y of them to do that, so maybe they wouldn’t be protected in that case.
BTW, the supreme court heard a few cases centered around section 230 a few months ago! And Biden called for it to be reformed! So depending on how that goes, the internet could get shaken up soon. We’re in some interesting times.