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11 votes
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Borgarhraun eruption – magma speed record set by Icelandic volcano
7 votes -
How Finland is coping with an ageing population – online lunch clubs are the start of a remote care revolution
9 votes -
Researchers in Norway have found a freshwater pond on the seabed outside the country's western coast
7 votes -
The people who develop the long-lost camera films of strangers
9 votes -
Facebook’s Libra and national monetary sovereignty: A tale of two monopolies
4 votes -
Colorado isn’t the desert. A sustainable lawn doesn’t have to be rocks, cacti and ugly
10 votes -
What you should know about the Equifax data breach settlement
7 votes -
Original Apollo 11 landing videotapes sell for $1.8M
8 votes -
The Nintendo Switch’s Joy-Con drift problem, explained
13 votes -
The board game of the alpha nerds. Before Risk, before Dungeons & Dragons, before Magic: The Gathering, there was Diplomacy.
15 votes -
Pateros and North Central Washington continue rebuilding five years after Carlton Complex
4 votes -
Men who ate raw, dead, squirrels outside vegan food stall are convicted in England
16 votes -
Humans aren’t designed to be happy – so stop trying
17 votes -
Extraordinary story of how the man who said he was the victim of a VIP paedophile ring ended up on the run in Sweden
4 votes -
Jo Swinson becomes new Liberal Democrat leader
9 votes -
Apple in advanced talks to buy Intel’s smartphone-modem chip business
5 votes -
Santas from as far away as Japan and El Salvador are attending 62nd World Santa Claus Congress in Copenhagen
5 votes -
Origins of the current outbreak of multidrug-resistant malaria in southeast Asia: a retrospective genetic study
4 votes -
What's the community's opinion on "The Right to be Forgotten?"
This is kind of a question for Tildes as well as a discussion topic on Social Media more generally. For context, "The Right to be Forgotten" is an idea being kicked around in international law and...
This is kind of a question for Tildes as well as a discussion topic on Social Media more generally. For context, "The Right to be Forgotten" is an idea being kicked around in international law and human rights circles. It's kind of a corollary to the "right to privacy" and focuses on putting some guardrails around the downsides of having all information about you being archived, searchable, and publicly available forever and ever. It's usually phrased as a sense that people shouldn't be tied down indefinitely by stigmatizing actions they've done in "the past" (which is usually interpreted as long enough ago that you're not the same person anymore).
This manifests in some examples large and small. Felony convictions or drug offenses are a pretty big one. Another public issue was James Gunn getting raked over the coals for homophobic quotes from a long time ago. Even on a smaller scale, I think plenty of young people have some generalized anxiety about embarrassing videos, photos, Facebook statuses, forum posts, etc. that they made when they were young following them around the rest of their lives. For example, Alexandria Ocasio Cortez had people try to shame her for dancing to a Phoenix song in an amateur music video. An even darker version of this happens with people who might be the victims of targeted harassment. Often doxxing happens by people digging through peoples' histories and piecing together clues to figure out who they are or at least narrow down where they're from, where they work, etc.
In the context of Tildes, this would basically be a question of how do we feel about peoples' comment history lingering forever? Do we care about/agree with this "right" in principle and if we do, what should be done about putting it into practice?
The root of the issue is the existence of archives of data about yourself that is 1.) searchable, 2.) publicly viewable, 3.) under someone else's control, 4.) forever. Even if the ability to delete comments exists, it's infeasible for any individual to pore over the reams of data they create about themselves to find the stuff that might be problematic. The solutions would revolve around addressing any one of those numbered items. Unfortunately, hitting any of those has upsides and downsizes. Some examples:
Some people like being able to look back on old contributions and having them get deleted after a period of time (hitting problem #4) would be a bummer unless there is a system to selectively archive stuff you want to save from atrophy, which would be a function/feature that would take a ton of thought and development. What's more, there is no point in just saving your own comment if everyone else's stuff is gone because comments without context are indecipherable. It could work in a more selective way, so rather than a blanket atrophying of posts, but then you have the context issue again. Someone you were having a discussion with might choose to delete their entire comment history and there goes any sense of logic or coherence to your posts.
We could address the searchable bit by automatically or selectively having posts pseudonymed after a period of time. But in a lot of cases a pseudonym won't work. People tend to refer to each other by username at times, and some people have a distinctive enough style that you could probably figure it out if they're well known and long-tenured.
That's just some general food for thought. I'll yield the floor
38 votes -
Whistling while they work: Cooperative laguna dolphins have a unique accent
6 votes -
I can't stop ghosting my therapists
12 votes -
/r/AskHistorians is doing a special on Age Of Empires, analyzing its elements from a historian's perspective
10 votes -
Fearing for his life: Ramsey Orta filmed the killing of Eric Garner, so the police punished him
11 votes -
Oregon will allow students to take “mental health days” just as they would sick days, expanding the reasons for excused school absences to include mental or behavioral health
24 votes -
Bookstores: How to read more books in the golden age of content
7 votes -
Absolute English - Science once communicated in a polyglot of tongues, but now English rules alone. How did this happen – and at what cost?
6 votes -
Denver wants more trees, but arborists say the workforce can’t keep up
8 votes -
Blasting work has started in Bergen on building the longest bicycle and pedestrian tunnel in the world
10 votes -
US Department of Justice tells Robert Mueller to limit testimony to his report
9 votes -
Art Neville -- All of These Things (1962)
4 votes -
The UA Regents were wrong to think help was on the way—and this weekend proved it
6 votes -
iOS 12.4 is released today
9 votes -
Here are the coolest science fiction weapons of all time, ranked
5 votes -
Abbey Robot or, Fun With Artificial Beatles
3 votes -
The bizarre, true story of Metal Gear Solid’s English translation
14 votes -
'We're Really Like Them': Somali Book Authors Write About Experience Settling In Green Bay
6 votes -
Any candidates to take over "What are you reading currently?" threads in ~books?
I've been posting these since time immemorial 9 months by now. Since almost the first post my plan was to hand the responsibility of posting them over to someone; as of recent it seems to me that...
I've been posting these since
time immemorial9 months by now. Since almost the first post my plan was to hand the responsibility of posting them over to someone; as of recent it seems to me that soon I'll lack the time to properly participate in them as the organiser that keeps the discussion alive and fruitful. In fact, the last few posts I've either posted one comment or none at all.So maybe the 25th or the 26th topic should be posted by the New Guy™? Has the time come? My answer is yes, TBH. In the comments, you can criticise my decision, call me lazy, or name yourself as a candidate freely. I guess we'll use votes on candidate comments to determine the next guy. If there is a tie, I'll name one of them as the next guy (tell me in the comments if you disagree with this). Voting will be over roughly when this post becomes three days old. I don't think too much precision is required, or else we can try something else.
IDK if this is a nice way to do it, but I don't want to do this Guido van Rossum style—say "bye, figure this out for yourselves, you lot" and leave. Hope I'm not over- or underdoing it. I'll ask a few prolific posters to name themselves as candidates through PMs.
Edit: I'll close voting around 3 PM UTC+3 24th of July, which means I'll edit to record votes I see by that time, including a timestamp. I'll then speak to the user with the highest amount of votes, informing them of the (rather simple) process of posting and maintaining these threads. Most probably, from #25 onwards, the new guy will take over.
Thanks a lot for taking this seriously and helping this nice feature of ~books move on with a new maintainer!
Edit 2: I'm closing votes, it's 24th of July 2019, 18:20 UTC+3. @acdw has 10 votes, @iiv has 6. I'll contact @acdw, and the next WAYRC topic will include an announcement. Thanks a lot for your participation and interest in the future of this fun little thing we do!
18 votes -
Firearms register, halved gun license durations, and more announced for tranche two of New Zealand gun reform: "firearm ownership is a privilege and not a right"
14 votes -
Swedish Committee for Afghanistan – Afghan clinics reopening days after Taliban forced closure
4 votes -
The case of Al Franken
10 votes -
Kind Words: A game of lo-fi beats, writing nice letters to strangers, and feeling less alone
20 votes -
Boris Johnson is already shedding allies before he's touted to take Britain's top job
7 votes -
Breaking up is harder to do in Denmark after divorce law changes
10 votes -
Scientists are memorializing Iceland's first glacier lost to global warming with a poignant letter to the future
6 votes -
Fire at notorious Brooklyn federal jail as NYC enters heat wave
4 votes -
It’s official: Electric scooters in Denver aren’t going anywhere
5 votes -
Hong Kong police criticized over failure to stop attacks on protesters
7 votes -
Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness with Benedict Cumberbatch and Elizabeth Olsen. Scott Derrickson returns as director. In theaters May 7, 2021
7 votes -
'We are sexual beings': Why Australian disability advocates want the NDIS to cover sexual services
11 votes