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CEO All-Hands Q&A: That part of a status affirmation event where the CEO gets to call you a liar.

So much of corporate direction is structured around getting free labor from the workers, especially when it concerns innovation. Innovation adds much more to the corporate profit than they are willing to compensate the innovators.

It's always fun to ask the CEO questions, during their dog and pony shows, that imply their workforce might not be happy with their management. You get the CEO tapdance and soft shoe shuffle where they fumble at words to answer the question in corporate approved boilerplate.

CEO talking about Trading Window, which appears to be a path to insider trading only available to corporate officers and boards.

@dynamic IANAL; ethical vs legal implies two different things. I think it is unethical to attribute a quote from someone who confided something in private without permission. I also think it is unethical to quote someone out of context. Neither of these views may legally constrain publishers. As far as rights to pull context, I would ethically want to honor that right, but understand that a public post already grants permission to share. A link is more ethical, but ???

Forgot I had preordered this, JELLO BIAFRA AND THE GUANTANAMO SCHOOL OF MEDICINE "Tea Party Revenge Porn" LP + Shirt Bundle. What a nice surprise!

I'm involved in a project at work, where two wrongs don't make a right, but we're going to do it anyway. I've seen this so often in companies, that I don't even bother fighting it once direction is set; I also don't put in any unpaid overtime on it, because I told you so. You can't build quality in at the late stages of a project. You can't build maintainability in at the late stages of a project. If you fuck up the front end, you get a steaming pile of shit.

I believe that anyone who uses the term, "cancel culture", is not worth reading/conversation. While I don't believe in broad censorship rights, I do believe in focused censorship rights. i.e., by an individual or community. You can't always choose your neighbors, but you can ignore them.

@dynamic I may have phrased it badly; by "use", I meant the ability to republish it on the internet, not personal use.

I continue to be wary, but increasingly my view is "no, I'm just going to put stuff out there and be myself. The world is burning and we don't have time to frack around pretending that there is even such a thing as an unbiased view."

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@dynamic Of course archiving and using are two different things. If you archive someone else's content, you should have to obtain permission to use it. Public posting with removal rights might theoretically have different rights to usage than public posting without removal rights.

@dynamic OTOH, the problem with centralized services is that when you leave them, your content often disappears. I've seen this with LinkedIn and Twitter. Especially disheartening was LinkedIn groups content, where a person gets removed from whole conversations. Usenet is a caution on decentralized services. It hasn't survived unscathed. There are valuable technical conversations lost due to lack of support. I guess the lesson is to archive anything you find of value yourself.

@freakazoid The USA needs laws that limit the size and reach of companies period. Our antitrust remedies have proven inadequate and getting weaker. Microsoft got barely a slap on the wrist. This won't happen until we see a government for the people trend. i.e., drastic reduction of the wealth gap, voting rights protections, stiffer health, safety, and environmental regulation, and adequate social supports. Tech freedom requires people freedom. Until then, we are just .

Given the long history of police retribution and reprisals against people exercising their First Amendment right to record interactions with authorities, a U.S. court has upheld the ability of the public to secretly record police encounters.

eff.org/deeplinks/2021/04/firs

Ridiculous political, scaremongering, email about Trump winning Nobel Prize; like I really give a shit about any kind of societal awards.

A little over a week before her first scheduled vaccine shot, my wife gets COVID-19. The rest of the household has tested negative, so she's quarantined to the our bedroom. At least she has her own TV and bathroom. (Funny how I still consider TV in this age of internet.) More fortunately the symptoms are about the same as a head cold for her. I get my first vaccine shot tomorrow.

just had a worrying "covid in context" leaflet through the door. the usual risible anti-science nonsense, but what's striking is that neither the leaflet, nor the associated Web site, has any info about who is behind this. just pathetic cowards, or something more sinister...?

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