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I love @robtaber 's 's new essay about ending his first semester of World History survey in 1763. I wanted to share a few thoughts about the essay.
ageofrevolutions.com/2022/12/1

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I see so many posts about how problematic it is to remain on the birdsite as if raising awareness is the only step needed to migrate off it.

Off boarding communities from Twitter is going to take a lot of work. It will require champions and concerted attention and effort to do.

Not to mention a bunch more dev and product work.

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For those who are unfamiliar, "Measuring Worth" does a decent job of providing the market value of #historical transactions in today's prices. For those interested in the nuts and bolts, it includes a user guide and a methodological essay.
#histodons #history #EconHist @histodons measuringworth.com/

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My suggestion if you want the Fediverse to work, follow and favorite and boost the absolute hell out of people. It’s not about dopamine or clout chasing, it’s about letting people know they’re not just typing into a void.

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“You can find us anywhere you get your podcasts.”

I *adore* this phrase, because it has been like two whole-ass decades and not one single venture capital darling has managed to unseat plain RSS as the distribution method for podcasts. Not one. (And they have really tried!)

Podcasts are just out there, like air. You don’t go to one place to get them; you get them from everywhere and anywhere. You can choose how you want to engage with them and manage them and it is legitimately heartwarming that nothing has ever gotten in the way of that being a fundamental fact.

This is the best of what the web is. It will never have a stock ticker or even a marketing scheme. Most people don’t even know it is there. But it endures (past the many, many attempts by squillionaire corporates to kill it) because of its absolute unshakable utility.

My suggestion: any time you hear “anywhere you get your podcasts”, send a little thanks to RSS for keeping the real web alive.

#RSS #Podcasts #ProtocolsNotProducts

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We have to deromanticize community. It's not some pristine untouched forest of soft moss and good vibes. The corporations count on that misconception to stripmine us for content.

Community has always been as weird and messy as humans are. It's work. It's relationships. It's hard. There isn't a magic number. They aren't inherently anticommercial. They don't all look or act the same.

That's one of the reasons I wrote this and am driven to write more: powazek.com/posts/3571

@fraying Really glad to see more embracing the "Fediverse is a bar" idea. I've seen a few people articulate this before but I think this is perhaps the most fully fleshed out piece I've read. I also really appreciate that you mentioned the money part of the analogy.

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i’m starting to have a lot of doubts about the continued viability of a globally open fediverse.

between having to squash bigot-run instances on a daily basis, determining if new instances are run by known threat actors, and being defederated by so called “allies” because our candid conversations rubbed their white tendencies the wrong way, i just don’t see how safe participation in the fediverse for marginalized communities is sustainable.

and that’s sad. it’s sad because whiteness has ruined yet another idea with great potential.

@kyle I know that there's several forks on GitLab for different services with Librem One (I've seen the mobile app forked from Tusky)

Which one is the right place to look/track?

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Hello!, friends! There are lots of great resources out there about using this site, but here are 4 things about 🐘 that have made the difference for me, with details on each in my replies:
1. Finding the right server (Terms of Service crucial!) for you.
2. Following people as you would elsewhere – being curious and intentional about what you want to read in your feed.
3. Using the different feeds.
4. Patience!

Hey @kyle just wanted to ask about the future of the Librem Social instance. I've been here for a few years now but it doesn't seem that the platform has been updated in a long time. I've noticed that you are an avid user so I'm not worried about everything disappearing one night just hoping to know if there's ever going to be an update to v4 of Mastodon. In addition to the new features I know that there's been several security updates in releases that it seems we're missing here. Any plans?

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fedi, for all its problems, has proven the value of the structural advantages of a decentralized system built on public standards and open source software. it is immune to capture and sabotage and monetization alike, in ways that corporate services can never achieve. we design distributed systems like this not only because it befits our values of autonomy and free association, but because it works, it scales — it fucking wins

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We're hiring a Staff Frontend Engineer for Glitch — an extraordinary role, because we intend to keep innovating wildly on the frontend experience of Glitch, and because the team is deeply caring & thoughtful. The role is U.S. remote, salary is $169,000 to $245,000, I've found Fastly's benefits to be exceptional, well-managed & inclusive, and we have a warm, collaborative ethos within both the team and community. Consider joining us if you want to make something wonderful!
fastly.com/about/jobs/apply/?g

@heidilifeldman @krisnelson @drustevenson while independent voters are the largest block, most of them all lean one way or the other. Very few are "truly" independent few people are actually independents (usually somewhere around 9% according to some polls).

Let's put it this way. There were enough Democrats and Dem leaning votes to elect Mark Kelly in November who ran to the left of Sinema.

pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2019

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Then along came Elinor "Lin" Ostrom and her 1990 work "Governing the Commons." In it, Ostrom presented game theory approach to commonly owned resources, explaining how people as self-interested rational actors could avoid the logical trap of over exploitation. And then she did Hardin one better: she detailed the workings of actual extant commons which, according to Hardin and every neoliberal since, should not exist.

Ostrom illustrated what anthropologists and people in stateless societies have known for generations: people are perfectly capable of working out rules to sustainably manage shared resources. In her book, Ostrom detailed one common pasture in Switzerland that has been in continuous use since the 1500s. She also described shared fishing rights in Turkey, shared agricultural and forest land in Japan, and shared irrigation systems in Spain. There is no tragedy.

6/

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@HeavenlyPossum Its worth noting that Elinor Ostrom won a Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences in 2009 for her work on the subject.

nobelprize.org/prizes/economic

Is there any specific reason why you didn't include the screenshots for posterity in the event that the posts are deleted?

I originally assumed it's b/c you don't want to show the content which got them de-federated, but the text content is there.

@annaecook it's a bit disturbing how often I hear that sentiment from people who choose to go back to school. It's definitely not just you

hey Fediverse, question: do you use any software to keep track of your wins and losses at work? If so what do you use. Work is moving off of the tool we currently use (15Five, its fine overall) so I need to find something new. I had previously just kept a journal of MD files organized by week but I found that hard to keep writing in. When you don't end your day at defined times I find its difficult to journal consistently.

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