• 0 Posts
  • 25 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
cake
Cake day: June 26th, 2024

help-circle


  • Which of these should be contested and which should be validated?

    Identities don’t really need to be either validated or contested, especially if the person didn’t ask for it. Validation will likely win you more friends, though.

    Obv use their preferred names and pronouns to be respectful, as with any person. But beyond that, there’s really no need to get involved in their identity at all. It’s a deeply personal thing and it’s unlikely they’ll change it for anyone other than themselves.








  • I know the author will probably never read this, but in the off chance they or someone else working on open source accessibility reads it:

    Thank you. So much ❤️ Your hard work and dedication keeps me going when times get rough.

    And thanks for the rant. Nobody should have to suffer in silence, and that includes you. So any time you want to rant at us leeches about working in open source, please don’t hesitate to put us in our place.

    I hope that we find a way to make the internet a more positive and celebratory place for people like you who do hard work the rest of us don’t have the time or energy for.







  • On any site with unverified signups (all of them) you can’t.

    If you want to talk to real people, you’d have to use a platform that has in-person ID verification. Like a pub, or a park.

    Good luck finding a bot free place on your phone. It’d have to involve zero-sum proofs and biometrics. And even then you can’t really be sure that person isn’t using a bot to write without full root access to their system and a live webcam feed.




  • minoscopede@lemmy.worldtoTechnology@lemmy.world*Permanently Deleted*
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    0
    ·
    edit-2
    5 months ago

    I read the article, and it’s way less bad than the title made it sound. They just set company chats to disappear after some number of days and told employees to not “comment before you have all the facts.” This has been the policy of every company I’ve worked at, including university IT and Amazon.

    The title made it sound like they were deleting specifically chats related to open court cases, which is like level 10 ultra-illegal.