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25 votes
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Brothers | Official trailer
4 votes -
Atlanta Beltline Partnership receives $8 million gift for Westside Bike Park
11 votes -
London saw a surprising benefit to fining high-polluting cars: More active kids
28 votes -
English universities offer to curb foreign students if they can raise tuition fees
16 votes -
‘Hacks,’ ‘Shogun,’ and ‘Baby Reindeer’ win top prizes at the 2024 Emmy’s
15 votes -
Tildes should recognize the Gaza Genocide, and moderate accordingly
This has been on my mind for a while, and I've voiced a similar concern 1.5 months ago in the recurring topic, but it went unnoticed. Israel has been and still is actively committing genocide...
This has been on my mind for a while, and I've voiced a similar concern 1.5 months ago in the recurring topic, but it went unnoticed.
Israel has been and still is actively committing genocide against people of Gaza. You can read a summary of the reasons it's being called a genocide in the Wikipedia entry (and its sources) . Wikipedia itself has recognized it as genocide, naming the entry Gaza Genocide, and it's a major feat considering the contentious nature of the topic and the heavy regulation and debates in Wikipedia culture. Even a UN human rights experts said in March that there are reasonable grounds to think a genocide is being committed, and UN is dominated by US influence, and is much slower to act and react, especially when western or US interests are concerned (which applies in this case, because Israel is an ally).
Israel's online propaganda machine has been hard at work about this issue, in order to control the narrative (1, 2, 3, 4, 5). Israel also now ranks among the world’s leading jailers of journalists., another evidence of their commitment to suppress dissenting voices and control the narrative around this issue. It's also worth noting that western coverage of Israel's acts has been said to be legitimising Israel's behavior.
I think most things in the world are some shades of gray, and it's very understandable for people to have ambivalent attitudes about it, but I do not think this is one of those cases, for the following reasons.
- There is an active, ongoing genocide.
- The genocider nation-state has been spreading its propaganda to control the international narrative, especially in US (because US is its biggest ally and funder). It's doing this because it knows support from US and its allies is crucial to keep the genocide going. This involves manufacturing consent in the citizens of these nations.
- Tildes is heavily populated with citizens of US and other western nations.
- Not actively opposing this propaganda means one is helping -albeit indirectly but still significantly- the genocider nation.
I should clarify that, as of this moment, I'm not blaming the moderators, and I'm not saying they are doing this consciously and with full consideration. Instead, I'm trying to illustrate what is going on in the wider context, and what the actions in this mini-environment mean in the wider context. Simply put, genocidal propaganda is not an issue where you can follow the middle-ground, especially when you have power over a community.
For these reasons, I propose two changes in terms of moderation.
- Both from now on and retroactively, change the names of the "Israel-Hamas war megathreads" to "Gaza Genocide megathreads".
- Create and, both from now on and retroactively, use the tag "Gaza Genocide" when tagging.
The first point is self-explanatory. As for the second point, there comes up only 4 topics when I search for "Gaza Genocide" in the site, even though there have been numerous discussions about it. None of them have the mentioned tag, but they have the Gaza and Genocide tags separately. Furthermore, one of the topics is mine, and I had put the tag Gaza Genocide but it was later removed by moderation, and replaced with other tags mentioning this topic. Again, not throwing personal shade to anyone, but I think this is not a good way to go about this topic. A special tag would give it more visibility, which the victims of the genocide need.
These are my suggestions. If anyone can think of anything else, they are welcome to share as well.
64 votes -
Development finance done right
3 votes -
Getting shorter and going hungrier: how children in the UK live today
17 votes -
Dogs bring loads of joy but also perils on a leash
25 votes -
Silversun Pickups - The Royal We (2009)
6 votes -
iOS 18 is here with RCS and homepage customization features
36 votes -
Reports of the death of dental cavities are greatly exaggerated
14 votes -
What have you been watching / reading this week? (Anime/Manga)
What have you been watching and reading this week? You don't need to give us a whole essay if you don't want to, but please write something! Feel free to talk about something you saw that was...
What have you been watching and reading this week? You don't need to give us a whole essay if you don't want to, but please write something! Feel free to talk about something you saw that was cool, something that was bad, ask for recommendations, or anything else you can think of.
If you want to, feel free to find the thing you're talking about and link to its pages on Anilist, MAL, or any other database you use!
8 votes -
The confessions of Marcus Hutchins, the hacker who saved the internet (2020)
38 votes -
First-ever mRNA vaccine halts pancreatic cancer in its tracks
50 votes -
Amazon tells staff to get back in the office
43 votes -
Ig Nobel prizes 2024: The unexpected science that won this year
14 votes -
Data security help - SOC2ish
Hi Tilderinos, I head up a small startup and we're looking to get some support for our data security. Up until now we've worked with small mom and pops that didn't have any requirements, but a few...
Hi Tilderinos,
I head up a small startup and we're looking to get some support for our data security. Up until now we've worked with small mom and pops that didn't have any requirements, but a few of our new clients have full data security teams and our infrastructure and policies/protocols aren't up to snuff. We reached out to a few consulting firms and they quotes us between $80-100k to get things set up and run us through a full SOC2 review. As a small company we don't really have that type of budget, more like $40-50k. I stumbled upon Vanta and Drata as alternatives and had meetings with their sales folks last week. Both of their offerings from setting up our protocols to monitoring and getting us through a SOC2 were only $16k.
Are platform based companies like Vanta or Drata enough to get us off the ground while we're still getting set up? Has anyone worked with them before and have any feelings one way or the other? Should we be signing on with a security consulting company - be it at a lower rate if we can negotiate it?
This is all quite new to me and any insight folks here can provide would be incredible useful.12 votes -
Who’s afraid of Lorne Michaels?
21 votes -
NASA’s Europa Clipper mission looked doomed. Could engineers save it?
7 votes -
The Plucky Squire | Release date trailer
8 votes -
Scientists receive Ig Nobel Prize for discovering mammals can breathe through anuses
43 votes -
Helldivers 2's crucial 01.001.100 update completely reworks weapons, adds new Galactic War feature, and changes much more in bid to make the game easier
17 votes -
The “email is authentication” pattern
39 votes -
Data center emissions probably 662% higher than big tech claims
20 votes -
Norwegian matchdays have become a scene in which fans throw fishcakes, champagne corks and croissants onto the pitch against what they perceive to be the invasive technology of VAR
5 votes -
Tesla Cybertruck owners shocked that tires are barely lasting 6,000 miles
50 votes -
Doctors have urged Finland's rightwing government to change “problematic and damaging” plans to ban undocumented people from accessing non-emergency healthcare
13 votes -
Inside Iron Mountain: It’s time to talk about hard drives
23 votes -
Norway sees electric cars outnumber petrol models – sovereign wealth fund cushion has made it possible for government to offer green incentives to motorists
11 votes -
I became a Space Marine in real life
2 votes -
After a summer track season that ended just two days earlier, Jakob Ingebrigtsen's audacious half-marathon debut in Copenhagen fell apart after 10km
5 votes -
Storm Boris casualties rise as floods ravage Central Europe
8 votes -
Norway’s oil capital Stavanger feels the squeeze as krone slides. The krone has lost about 20% against the euro since 2022.
4 votes -
TikTok argues in federal appeals court that US ban would have ‘staggering’ impact on free speech
39 votes -
A message to our community: Unity is canceling the Runtime Fee
47 votes -
São Paulo mayoral candidate treated in hospital after getting clobbered with chair
7 votes -
When Rob Barrett surveyed one of Norway's largest seabird colonies in the '70s there were too many birds to count – stark before and after photographs reveal sharp decline
13 votes -
The Legend of Zelda: Dungeons of Infinity
21 votes -
Swedish government says excessive screen time is causing a severe health crisis for youth – new legislation in the works to require schools to ban access to digital devices
14 votes -
Computing and sustainability
21 votes -
How to handle a breakup?
I'm at the end of a decade long relationship. I didn't want it end but that's how it goes sometimes. Any suggestions for how to handle it? Right now all I'm really feeling is shock but I'm sure...
I'm at the end of a decade long relationship. I didn't want it end but that's how it goes sometimes. Any suggestions for how to handle it? Right now all I'm really feeling is shock but I'm sure that'll fade to sadness soon.
28 votes -
CO2 turned into fuel: Japan’s scientists convert captured carbon into green fuel
20 votes -
Salem's Lot | Official trailer
15 votes -
Does anyone have experience with tools for locally archiving the web, like Archivebox for example?
I found myself on the Archivebox website earlier today. After reading some of it, that's the kind of program I could use. The ephemerous nature of the web is bothersome, so much content is lost...
I found myself on the Archivebox website earlier today. After reading some of it, that's the kind of program I could use. The ephemerous nature of the web is bothersome, so much content is lost for one reason or another. Archivebox seems to be one of the most popular tools, and it can automatically mirror my locally downloaded website to archive.org, which is great. It seems complex though, maybe more complex than I usually tolerate these days. Which is why I am asking if anyone has personal experience with Archivebox or other similar programs. Do you find them useful and reliable? Have you ever found in your local storage a webpage that you really liked, which was gone from the web? How's your setup?
Thank ;)
19 votes -
Looking for some good creative woodshedders
I'm looking for some interesting artists/songwriters/writers/coders/inventors that try to make as many things in their discipline to "git gud". (for example:...
I'm looking for some interesting artists/songwriters/writers/coders/inventors that try to make as many things in their discipline to "git gud". (for example: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cI71c2GTLPs) Videos are good, but articles and podcasts are good too!
6 votes -
Voepass flight 2283 preliminary report released
6 votes -
Declassified memo from US codebreaker sheds light on Ethel Rosenberg's Cold War spy case
17 votes -
Shy Guy Surfing by LucasPucas
9 votes