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I guess they’re discovering that your grocery store trip on Feb 17, 2017 does not help them target ads.
I guess they’re discovering that your grocery store trip on Feb 17, 2017 does not help them target ads.
The data has costs associated with it: they’ll want to back it up, they need to migrate it when they change formats, they need to maintain the hardware it resides on.
And, as the article mentions, there are liabilities around law enforcement requests, costs due to data breaches, and regulatory requirements.
Three months is plenty for them to target ads.
That was an interesting read. Thanks for linking to it.
That’s pretty interesting. It looks like they define inaccessible links as urls that get a 404 or the server doesn’t resolve.
I wonder if there are any real implications of this. We seem to know it and work around it in some cases, e.g. StackOverflow saying answers need to contain quotes from pages they reference.
needing a login that would require an email address is sketchy as hell on the surface, and there’s no explanation given.
The link to the explanation is right beside the text saying you need an account.
https://www.404media.co/why-404-media-needs-your-email-address/
I don’t think software releases tell the story. From a non-mod perspective, Lemmy is an okay Reddit replacement.
But, recently, there seem to be fewer non-bot posts. The communities I follow have a handful of active users. It feels like it’s stagnant at best.
That was a nice read. Thanks for writing it.
From a comment on the original: https://fogofworld.app/
Holy shit, they just lost a pregnancy! Leave them alone! They need time!
I dunno. He didn’t want to make up a kid. Now you’re saying he should make up a girlfriend?
things want to mimic the X interface and that promotes more following of individuals and whatever they post about rather than ideas. I do much better over here because you follow a general topic and the posts are about that thing or related things
That’s a really insightful comment. I bounce off Twitter/Mastodon, but really enjoy the Reddit/Lemmy interface. The focus on topics rather than people is probably why.
Low effort but honest Lemmy users unite!
I’m too lazy to read this, but the title fits my preconceptions. 👍
Why, I couldn’t even get into the article before it faded into a paywall.
I get people want to be paid but splashing cash on every page is not the internet as I knew it.
Speaking solely about news, the Internet as you knew it was unsustainable. For the first decade or so of online news, the ad-supported newspaper publishing business subsidized free online news, because they couldn’t figure out payment.
Then Google and the other ad-tech companies took the advertising dollars, and the old publishing companies took on debt to try and switch to ad-supported online publications. And failed miserably.
Then the old publishing started running out of money, and slowly switched to online first.
The remaining published are a shadow of themselves, drowning in debt, and low readership.
There are alternative models that sort of work, maybe, but they haven’t gone mainstream. They’re held back by the belief that content should be free.
If platforms like flattr had taken off then the conversation would probably be different.
I found one of mine developed a crackle after a year. It would eventually go away if I put it in the case and took it out a few times which seemed kind of silly.
Stuff like the Fairphone Buds seems like a good alternative.
Like other commenters here, I got something like three years out of my AirPods until they wouldn’t hold a charge.
I think there are much better social media platforms for sharing clips. From what I’ve seen, most of Twitter is people angrily typing opinions at each other, so your target demographic may not be there. The UI is designed for text rather than video, and responses/reactions don’t integrate nicely with videos.
Sharing game clips on video-oriented social media makes a tonne sense, however.