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        27 votes
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Denmark seeks to make spread of deepfake images illegal, citing misinformation concerns
32 votes - 
        
Managers say they are having trouble finding candidates for nearly 400,000 US manufacturing and technical jobs
37 votes - 
        
South Korea banned dog meat. So what happens to the dogs?
32 votes - 
        
Puerto Rico’s solar microgrids power through blackout meanwhile, feds redirect $365 million away from solar toward grid fixes
12 votes - 
        
The plan to vaccinate all Americans, despite Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
28 votes - 
        
How does tiny Denmark defy the odds to become one of the richest nations?
7 votes - 
        
Norway launches full-scale industrial carbon capture project with billions in subsidies – carbon dioxide shipped to North Sea and injected into reservoirs of oil majors
12 votes - 
        
When a notable face disappears
Disclaimer: I don't quite know how to address the topic, so I want to state I'm trying to approach this with sensitivity; I hope this might lead to a helpful and insightful conversation on a...
Disclaimer: I don't quite know how to address the topic, so I want to state I'm trying to approach this with sensitivity; I hope this might lead to a helpful and insightful conversation on a potentially difficult issue. Apologies if I don't quite get it right!
I noticed the absence of a name I'd become familiar with on Tildes and wanted to start a discussion on how the community should handle situations where a person of community renowned abruptly departs.
The user in question is @daychilde, who is one of the users I'd seen around quite a bit. I've been on Tildes for quite a while now, and would like to think I've had a positive - if not vast - contribution. Overall, I probably read more than I respond; I bring this up because I am aware that I probably represent the voice of a significant portion of the userbase here: I'm figuring stuff out as I go and probably am not in the loop on the majority of stuff going on on Tildes. All in all, I don't recognise a lot of names on Tildes, but @daychilde is/was a character who stuck out and seemed to have a significant impact on the community.
From what I deduce, @daychilde has been banned some time in the past week, and I thought it worth discussing given there are at least a couple of things left in the lurch as a result that people might seek information on. The ones that have crossed my vision are the following:
https://tildes.net/~tech/1od9/personal_offer_do_you_have_a_website_based_project_youve_been_wanting_to_do_but_worried_about_cost
and
https://tildes.net/~life/1n7e/daychildes_walking_threadAt the risk of broaching a difficult topic - I'm not looking to cause drama or speculate - we should probably discuss the fallout of a situation like this. Hopefully at the very least this topic might be something others can find if they also become aware of the departure of a notable person and are looking for confirmation or where might be appropriate to discuss any fallout that might occur.
For @daychilde in particular, this website seemed to be a resource that helped him manage his life. I wonder if we should consider whether there is some duty of care to users to depend on Tildes in some capacity?
There are also people who might be looking to discuss the hosting that he had offered/agreed, and might now be left in the lurch.
Unfortunately I don't have solutions, but I didn't see any discussion or information on this kind of a topic, nor any precedent for this kind of a situation!
34 votes - 
        
US Supreme Court upholds Tennessee ban on youth gender-affirming care
34 votes - 
        
Trans people can obtain US passport that aligns with their gender identity, judge rules
37 votes - 
        
Bergen in Norway has been building one of the world's most advanced trash systems, using vacuum tubes to whisk waste away
13 votes - 
        
Before the government announced its move, Denmark's largest cities of Copenhagen and Aarhus had already announced plans to phase out Microsoft software and cloud services. Here's why.
48 votes - 
        
YouTube silently loosens rules guiding the moderation of videos
29 votes - 
        
EU needs single regulatory framework and to break down fragmentation across its business, tax, debt issuance and securities law systems, according to Norway's sovereign wealth fund
15 votes - 
        
OpenAI featured chatbot is pushing extreme surgeries to “subhuman” men
35 votes - 
        
Norway to introduce tourist tax amid record visitor numbers and overtourism concerns – allows municipalities to introduce a 3% tax on overnight stays
19 votes - 
        
Hollywood has left Los Angeles. For years, studios found it cheaper to shoot elsewhere. Post-industry-collapse, elsewhere is the only place they’ll shoot.
16 votes - 
        
Danish PM Mette Frederiksen is seeking to extend 2018 niqab ban to educational institutions and remove prayer rooms, citing concerns about social control and oppression
5 votes - 
        
Right to repair is now law in Washington state
53 votes - 
        
Retailer Temu's daily US users halve following end of 'de minimis' loophole
20 votes - 
        
Norway's party buses for school-leavers have become a trend that worries schools and parents alike
14 votes - 
        
Most new cars in Norway are EVs – how a freezing country beat range anxiety
11 votes - 
        
US Supreme Court narrows scope of National Environmental Policy Act review
10 votes - 
        
The US EV and hybrid vehicle tax increase tucked into Donald Trump’s ‘Big Beautiful Bill’
26 votes - 
        
Sweden passes bill on providing state aid to companies that want to invest in new nuclear reactors – new law will enter into force later this year
10 votes - 
        
Utah lawmakers’ own study found gender-affirming care benefits transgender youth
27 votes - 
        
Republicans pass bill stripping transgender Americans of health care
84 votes - 
        
US Food and Drug Administration to limit covid shot approval to elderly, those with medical conditions
52 votes - 
        
Diseases are spreading. The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention isn't warning the public like it was months ago.
31 votes - 
        
How redefining just one word could strip the US Endangered Species Act’s ability to protect vital habitat - short deadline to comment
18 votes - 
        
Norway is the 55th country to sign the Artemis Accords – document outlines best practices for responsible space exploration
8 votes - 
        
Two unrelated stories that make me even more cynical about AI
I saw both of these stories on Lemmy today. They show two different facets to the topic of AI. This first story is from the perspective of cynicism about AI and how it has been overhyped. If AI is...
I saw both of these stories on Lemmy today. They show two different facets to the topic of AI.
This first story is from the perspective of cynicism about AI and how it has been overhyped.
If AI is so good, where are the open source contributionsBut if AI is so obviously superior … show us the code. Where’s the receipts? Let’s say, where’s the open source code contributions using AI?
The second story is about crony capitalism, deregulation, and politics around AI:
GOP sneaks decades long AI regulation ban into spending bill
On Sunday night, House Republicans added language to the Budget Reconciliation bill that would block all state and local governments from regulating AI for 10 years, 404 Media reports. The provision, introduced by Representative Brett Guthrie of Kentucky, states that "no State or political subdivision thereof may enforce any law or regulation regulating artificial intelligence models, artificial intelligence systems, or automated decision systems during the 10 year period beginning on the date of the enactment of this Act
I saw these stories minutes apart, and they really make me feel even more cynical and annoyed by AI than I was yesterday. Because:
- In the short term AI is largely a boondoggle, which won’t work as advertised but still humans will be replaced by it because the people who hire don’t understand it’s limitations but they fear missing out on a gold rush.
 - The same shady people at the AI companies who are stealing your art and content, in order to sell a product that will replace you, are writing legislation to protect themselves from being held accountable
 - They also are going to be protected from any skynet-style disasters caused by their recklessness
 
28 votes - 
        
Denmark eyes lifting ban on nuclear power – examining pros and cons of using small modular reactors to balance renewables in its energy mix
20 votes - 
        
The first ships carrying Chinese goods with 145% tariffs are arriving in Los Angeles. Shipments are down.
27 votes - 
        
Nearly 70% of Swedish territory is covered by forests, with half belonging to the private sector – what does that mean for the nation's economic and environmental ambitions
8 votes - 
        
Nintendo updates user account agreement to prevent users from filing class action lawsuits
41 votes - 
        
US President Donald Trump seeks to cancel NASA’s Mars Sample Return
34 votes - 
        
That time France went "all nuclear"
10 votes - 
        
United Airlines cuts thirty-five daily flights at Newark airport, citing shortage of air traffic controllers
10 votes - 
        
Chinese factories are more automated
13 votes - 
        
US economy shrinks 0.3% in first quarter
46 votes - 
        
Finland is under pressure to switch its rail to standard gauge – planned train line to run between Kemi and Haparanda in Sweden is the first phase
17 votes - 
        
All ships passing through European waters must now provide proof of insurance
25 votes - 
        
Paradox Interactive's return-to-office policy may be driving employees away from the studio
25 votes - 
        
Government censorship comes to Bluesky, but not its third-party apps … yet
26 votes - 
        
US National Institutes of Health guts its first and largest study centered on women
19 votes - 
        
Norway has launched a new scheme to lure top international researchers amid growing pressure on academic freedom in the US
11 votes - 
        
Is it possible to make a country healthier one slice of rye bread at a time? If the rocketing wholegrain consumption of the Danes is anything to go by, absolutely.
17 votes - 
        
Smartphones and tablets in the EU to get a new label in June
21 votes