YouWillNeverBeAWoman

joined 2 years ago
[–] YouWillNeverBeAWoman@lemmy.ml 0 points 2 years ago (1 children)

This is indeed a difficult problem. Especially as laws and their interpretation are highly dependent on the hosting location.

Hiding posts behind warnings or only showing them only on user request are on the top of my head.

[–] YouWillNeverBeAWoman@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Very interesting blog post! Thanks for sharing.

[–] YouWillNeverBeAWoman@lemmy.ml 2 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) (7 children)

I'm not saying there shouldn't be any moderation. But there's a difference between deleting a post and preventing whole communities to be accessed because of a subjective sense of what is the correct viewpoint on [topic], be it political, ideological or else.

I could imagine a setting where other instances' posts/communities aren't shown on the All page, but could still be subscribed / viewed by the user if he requests it.

[–] YouWillNeverBeAWoman@lemmy.ml 2 points 2 years ago (14 children)

Even though I don't particularly like or agree with the attitude or points of lemmygrad users, I still think there should be no blocking/defederation on instance level.

IMHO it's a fundamental design flaw of lemmy, that the instance administrators have the ability to prevent their users from accessing content from certain other instances just because of their different (political/ideological) orientation. Being exposed to other opinions, even though you don't like or agree with them, is very important. Yet this seems to become an increasingly rare phenomenon. Even if an instance doesn't want to promote the posts of another, the users should still be able to decide on their own, which community to subscribe or block. I'd love to see more features for that.

From reading the comments in this or other threads, I can see that it wont take long until lemmy will go the same echo chambered and biased way reddit went and ultimately this will be its demise. Alienating everyone who questions the current development with "Just go somewhere else" or "Get lost and host your own instance" is certainly the best way to go for ensuring only the right people stay for the infinite circle jerk...

[–] YouWillNeverBeAWoman@lemmy.ml 3 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Slightly off topic, but I would welcome an .onion of .i2p link as an alternative mirror for lemmy.ml.

If the configuration isn't too difficult, it would allow users of tor or i2p to browse with more anonymity.

I'm certainly more of an exception than a rule regarding those types of relationships, but I use a personal website instead of any social media to publish my projects (I also refer to it when applying to jobs) and frankly don't give a damn about any childhood friends.

But I can see why, this approach may already be too "radical" for many people.

I still predict, self-driving will be pushed into series production. Even more, they will make the technology mandatory to use in every car in quite near future.

The shots are called by someone else. The moment self-driving cars reach the point of being less risky than human drivers on paper, no inusrance company will insure you.

[–] YouWillNeverBeAWoman@lemmy.ml 3 points 2 years ago (2 children)

you’re interested maintaining some sort of connection with them but you don’t have their phone number

Well I'm not an expert on any form of relationships, but why not simply ask for the number?

[–] YouWillNeverBeAWoman@lemmy.ml 2 points 2 years ago (1 children)

So, which crypto did they use?

Having to work while being in school is not ideal, but also not uncommon. Lots of people (me included) have done it successfully, so it's absolutely possible with the right strategy.

If you already have problems with your mental health, this should be a priority. Make absolutely sure you are fit for uni, before starting! Otherwise the additional stress of the course load can have a big toll on your overall health and make you drop out. Seek counseling before attending.

The problem with multitasking (for a computer as well as for a human) is context switching. Constantly having to change between tasks (e.g. studying/work) costs a lot of mental resources, because you basically always have to focus anew on the current situation. So try to work and save the money during the lecture breaks and vacations, to focus solely on studying during the semesters.

Depending on your program, you might choose which classes to take for your degree. Find out exactly what classes are available and how they will be graded. In my experience classes that have final exams in the end of the semester are harder compared to those requiring the submission of a paper/essay or (group) projects. Exams always stressed the hell out of me, because no matter how good you were during the semester, the last few weeks always boil down to cramming books for different courses while the task of writing papers or doing projects can be distributed over a longer timespan. Choose the classes by the easiest grading methods, not so much by their topics.

[–] YouWillNeverBeAWoman@lemmy.ml 5 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

That is highly dependent on your University / program. I went to a German Uni where you can often show Professors your transcript of classes and they can acknowledge them for the program.

It helped that both Masters were at the same department and many courses / Professors overlapped.

[–] YouWillNeverBeAWoman@lemmy.ml 6 points 2 years ago (2 children)

One was in general Comp Sci., the other focused on Statistics and Data Science, which was a brand new (basically unknown) field at the time. Good thing was, I was able to transfer more than half my credits to this program, so I only had to do the few math/statistics focused ones (and a second thesis).

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