armpit_sweaty

joined 1 week ago
[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

For me Zelda Tears of the Kingdom, my fav game - so much stuff to do , and I love Zelda

I am so tired that came out last year

Zelda wisdom was cute , I started switch dark souls 1 this year and it's been my fav

Maybe balatro

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 week ago

For me it's #2 , wish it won GOTY this year - love the music and game play , when I saw a pixel game was in the running I knew it would be amazing and full of heart and soul , no shiny graphics to hide behind 💕

[–] [email protected] 28 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Its really easy to spread HIV between gay men and people who do anal because your butts main job is to absorb water from crap and it can absorb semen and hiv virus -

But it's not a gay disease - in some communities where gay people are testing a lot, using condoms and or prep tablets - more straight people are spreading HIV than gay people

And in homophobic societies , there will still be gay and bi people , but less likely to be tested as much because people aren't allowed to ask at the clinic 'do you have sex with men m4m" / can't run campaigns telling gay people to use protection and get tested , so it's a mess , and can spread through society quickly

[–] [email protected] 10 points 1 week ago

Yes , very very this - I've posted this around the public internet and so many knee jerk reactions like , don't criticise my guns , gun laws and Luigi have nothing to do with each other how dare you

[–] [email protected] 11 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Never believe what the ISS is telling you , everything that space station does is an i s s u e

 

Calligraphy and fountain pens

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 week ago

**Avarage reading time of article: 84 minutes, **

AI_Summary:

Ed Zitron’s “Where’s Your Ed At” criticizes the tech industry’s relentless pursuit of growth at the user’s expense. Zitron argues that the digital world has become adversarial, with companies like Meta, Spotify, and Google prioritizing short-term profits over user experience. He describes a “Rot Economy” where constant updates and redesigns frustrate users, degrade product quality, and extract more value—through ads, notifications, and manipulative designs—without giving users anything in return.

Zitron asserts that this creates widespread “low-grade trauma,” as billions are subtly exploited, distracted, and frustrated daily. People wrongly blame themselves for failing to keep up with tech, but the real issue lies in the ecosystem’s exploitative practices. From intrusive ads to chaotic work software, modern digital tools have become hostile, leading to societal stress, decreased well-being, and fractured attention. He calls for a reckoning with the pervasive and harmful ways tech companies interfere in our lives.

The internet has become an exploitative, manipulative, and deeply frustrating environment due to a capitalist system focused solely on growth. Users are bombarded by scams, ads, and misinformation, even on reputable platforms like CNN, which prioritize profit over vetting content. Cheap laptops with underpowered hardware and intrusive operating systems (like Windows S Mode) force users into ecosystems filled with ads and data collection, illustrating the hostile nature of modern computing.

Once online, users face algorithm-driven feeds (e.g., Facebook, YouTube) designed to keep them engaged, regardless of the harm caused. Websites themselves prioritize monetization, cluttering experiences with ads and slow, broken functionality. This hostile environment drives people toward tech giants like Google, Apple, and Meta, which offer "cleaner" but still manipulative digital experiences.

Even essential tools like Gmail, YouTube, and Google Search have degraded, yet users tolerate them because alternatives are often worse. Growth capitalism prioritizes profit over service, pushing companies to exploit users through frustrating and predatory experiences while hiding behind the veneer of convenience.

"Rot Economy" critique - a growth-at-all-costs mindset driven by corporate greed and short-term thinking, which degrades our digital lives. Unlike Cory Doctorow's "enshittification" theory, which focuses on platform decline, the Rot Economy extends to the entire digital ecosystem, manipulating users, exploiting ignorance, and prioritizing profits over user experience or dignity.

Big tech companies — like Meta, Google, Microsoft, and Apple — are held responsible for turning tools that once connected and empowered people into mechanisms of exploitation. Algorithms, invasive ads, manipulative design, and AI-generated content have eroded trust and polluted the internet, trapping users in a cycle of dodging scams, notifications, and digital debris.

The author emphasizes that individuals are not to blame for struggling with modern technology but are victims of exploitative systems that prioritize growth over stability or ethics. Personal experiences with technology, once transformative and positive, have been soured by these corporations' harmful decisions, which the author describes as selfish, cruel, and morally wrong.

In conclusion, the author calls for accountability for tech leaders like Sam Altman, Sundar Pichai, Tim Cook, Satya Nadella, and Mark Zuckerberg, condemning their actions as destructive and unrepentant. While they profit, users endure frustration, harm, and manipulation — conditions that society wrongly accepts as "just how things are."

Continued: deep frustration and anger over the negative impacts of corporate greed, particularly in the tech industry, and the way digital platforms have become exploitative and harmful. The writer describes how systems that once enabled personal growth and expression have been corrupted by managerial figures who prioritize profit over humanity. The writer urges others to recognize the damage being done and to speak out about the individuals and companies responsible for the deterioration of services like social media, search engines, and AI.

They stress the importance of awareness and sharing knowledge about the harmful practices of tech companies, arguing that even small acts of speaking out or explaining the truth can disrupt the status quo and build pressure for change. The text emphasizes solidarity among those affected by the so-called "Rot Economy" and encourages people to reject the manipulative systems in place, urging everyone to hold these entities accountable through collective action and awareness. The writer promises to continue fighting for change in 2025 and invites others to join in the effort.

 

Waterproof fountain pen ink, Noodler's Rachmaninoff, and Czech Kohinoor watercolours