Especially those of us who prefer to read over watching videos.
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WhoIzDisIz@lemmy.todayto
Technology@lemmy.world•Amazon employees are inflating AI usage to top leaderboards and impress managersEnglish
1·3 days agoa.k.a. “business as usual” when the government that’s supposed to be policing such behavior had become primarily focused upon doing it themselves.
WhoIzDisIz@lemmy.todayto
Technology@lemmy.world•Amazon employees are inflating AI usage to top leaderboards and impress managersEnglish
4·3 days agoThose who make for the best leaders very rarely want to be leaders.
WhoIzDisIz@lemmy.todayto
Technology@lemmy.world•Android adds a feature to stop you from doomscrollingEnglish
2·3 days agoIf I knew about that beforehand, I’d probably be much less likely turn it on to begin with. If I learned the hard way, I’d likely be dissuaded from ever trying it again & just get one of those other apps. Conversely, the fact that my current phone boots much faster than older ones did makes it not really as off-putting an issue at it once was. It sounds like a major PITA until you realize that.
WhoIzDisIz@lemmy.todayto
Technology@lemmy.world•Android adds a feature to stop you from doomscrollingEnglish
47·4 days agoYou have control over it so it’ll soon be just like all the other pre-installed crap that you never use, but still eats up limited storage space.
With the addition, Google isn’t only thinking of users’ well-being, of course.
It’s reacting to increasing regulatory pressure around social media harms and algorithmic dangers. Today, many countries and U.S. states have created laws to restrict or ban minors from using social media, as the impacts of these apps on young people’s mental well-being have become better understood.
Google can now point to a feature like Pause Point to claim it’s part of the solution, not the problem.
Ahhh - there it is.
The thing that is much more concerning to me, tho: if this is pre-installed as a standard part of Android, then it could potentially be abused by work, carriers, governments, malware, etc. to control what you can and can’t easily do.
WhoIzDisIz@lemmy.todayto
Technology@lemmy.world•EU to crack down on TikTok, Instagram ‘addictive design’ hooking kidsEnglish
28·4 days agoPlease do (even though I personally don’t use those apps). Including imposing more of the incredibly large fines the EU has become known for, and applying the bulk of them towards mental health services & initiatives. It’s long past time those companies were held responsible for what they’ve done to rake in such insane profits.
WhoIzDisIz@lemmy.todayto
Technology@lemmy.world•AI chatbots could be making you stupiderEnglish
2·4 days agoIf you’re relying on AI, well then…
(Yes, I know they can have their uses if done properly, but for too many that’s a HUGE “if”.)
WhoIzDisIz@lemmy.todayto
Technology@lemmy.world•AI data centers face increasing complaints about inaudible but 'felt' infrasound — citizens complain high- and low-frequency sounds do not register on decibel meters but cause adverse health effectsEnglish
2·4 days agoDid you get too close to a 5G tower?
WhoIzDisIz@lemmy.todayto
Technology@lemmy.world•Tesla Has 39 Unsupervised Robotaxis Nearly a Year After Launch. At This Rate, They’ll Catch Up to Waymo in 85 Years.English
11·4 days agoIf anyone is still invested in Tesla at this point, they deserve to lose their shi®t.
Now if they’re newly invested, that may be another story entirely. Assuming the battery & solar biz doesn’t get spun off.
WhoIzDisIz@lemmy.todayto
Not The Onion@lemmy.world•Florida surgeon ‘devastated’ over death of patient after removing liver instead of spleenEnglish
9·4 days agoI soooo wanna know about the implied non-consensual operations…
WhoIzDisIz@lemmy.todayto
Not The Onion@lemmy.world•Florida surgeon ‘devastated’ over death of patient after removing liver instead of spleenEnglish
124·5 days agoApparently you should have failed your medical board exam. How TF did he pass it?
WhoIzDisIz@lemmy.todayto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Linux 7.1: Kicinski Called It ‘LLM-pocalypse.’ Then Deleted 138,000 Lines
14·5 days agoAt this point, it feels like there’s very little left that isn’t malicious.
WhoIzDisIz@lemmy.todayto
Technology@lemmy.world•Thousands of Vibe-Coded Apps Expose Corporate and Personal Data on the Open WebEnglish
6·8 days agoSure. If we had a properly functioning justice system. We no longer do.
WhoIzDisIz@lemmy.todayto
Technology@lemmy.world•GrapheneOS patches an Android VPN bypass that Google decided to leave aloneEnglish
7·9 days agoIt’s definitely meant for their Enterprise customers.
WhoIzDisIz@lemmy.todayto
Technology@lemmy.world•Google's next-gen reCAPTCHA system could spell trouble for de-Googled phonesEnglish
41·9 days agoIt’s not just anti-competition, but anti-privacy - Google will know exactly who is going to what sites, regardless of your browser.
WhoIzDisIz@lemmy.todayto
Technology@lemmy.world•Google's next-gen reCAPTCHA system could spell trouble for de-Googled phonesEnglish
51·9 days agoEveryone with a technically inclined, logical, forward-thinking brain did. Unfortunately, that probably at best describes no more than roughly 10-15% of people.
WhoIzDisIz@lemmy.todayto
Technology@lemmy.world•Built a privacy-first social battery tracker (no email, instant friend pairing via link sharing)English
2·11 days agoRegarding spoiling the fun, were this a world without enshitification and/or corporate malfeasance that might be a good consideration. For the world we currently actually DO live in, my initial reaction is usually one of mistrust - and I strongly suspect I’m far from alone in that.
As such, I normally might’ve not ventured forth with exploring your offering, but instead waited for someone to give me more of an idea what I was walking into before potentiality giving out information I didn’t want to inadvertently. However, at the moment I came across your post I guess I was feeling gregarious enough (and less concerned with this identity since I’ve only recently created it) to toss my normal inhibitions aside, and share the kind of info I myself would have been wanting to see before taking the risk.
TL;DR: There are an number of psychological factors at play here as well as real-world concerns, so IMHO the more up-front you are in letting potential users know what to expect, the more comfortable they’ll be with giving it a shot. They’ll also be better informed about what to look for in features they might not have otherwise discovered with a quick spin.
WhoIzDisIz@lemmy.todayto
Technology@lemmy.world•Built a privacy-first social battery tracker (no email, instant friend pairing via link sharing)English
1·12 days agoIsn’t teletherapy the same? It can work IF done right (and, yes - that’s a BIG “if”).
WhoIzDisIz@lemmy.todayto
Technology@lemmy.world•Built a privacy-first social battery tracker (no email, instant friend pairing via link sharing)English
8·12 days agoIronic: I think the idea is to indicate how open you feel at that moment to being social. I get how doing that without actually socializing seems ironic, but I can also see how this would help avoid social interactions going needlessly bad because one participant just wasn’t in the right mood.
I have strong doubts about people keeping this up to date, however. I could see it being used as a kind of S.O.S. by someone who needs some support, but doesn’t want to impose on others who might not be up for providing it.
You’re absolutely right about the lack of integration into other platforms that actually facilitate that socialization, however.
We don’t need Copilot for that - our politicians are doing the job on their own just fine.