[shaking your hand] hey you ever hear about the scorpion and the frog [not letting go] exciting friends and a good adventure
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@giovanh
[shaking your hand] hey you ever hear about the scorpion and the frog [not letting go] exciting friends and a good adventure
my position on the Toby Fox Situation:
this is an interesting lens to analyze the production and distribution of video games and culture, especially with regard to the USA's language imperialism. but it is not special.
the reason it's "special" is because Toby Fox enjoys a reputation among "leftist" gamers and fandom that other gamedevs who are much more openly rancid U.S. right-wingers (like FNAF Guy) don't.
everyone feels like they are on friendly terms with Toby Fox (once you notice we call him "Toby", i.e. first-name basis, you can't unsee it) because he's creative, progressive, polite, funny and successful. but this is not a reason to trust/expect him to be politically conscious.
now, it's true that this also reveals a lot about fandom racism and people's ability to polarize themselves, often joining the side of the property-owning U.S. millionaire to "defend" him from the global south.
but on the other hand, the people who side "against" his translation decisions are either clearly elated to have a reason to hate on this beloved cinnamon roll (because he's too progressive or not enough). and importantly, to have a reason to indulge petty liberal discourse about individual product consumption/production choices. some of that discourse is openly racist and reactionary, but some is painted under the colors of anti-imperialism and anti-racism.
notably though, i think people with solid anti-imperialist politics made the mistake of extending them into a moral framework here, as if it's the U.S. American bourgeois artist's responsibility to make his (quality)slop available to the global south. this is not a very coherent position. in fact it would be less appealing, but equally coherent to argue we should prevent U.S. games and culture from dominating the world further, and the language barrier must remain to prevent this!
in the end it's nice to be able to participate in the dominant U.S. culture and consume their exports, yes. but that should be a personal struggle. to integrate this into the class struggle is to slip on the banana peel of assimilationism! (of course, blanket rejection of all U.S. cultural production would be a form of reaction, and a mistake as well.)
i think it's evident that Toby Fox's real position is "well i don't wanna! and you can't force me to make art the way you want!", which is his only coherent and defensible position. but he can't say that openly, he's a non-confrontational guy, he wants to be loved and forgiven by his fans in Latin America. so instead he makes mediocre factual claims about game translation and development, which (true or false) just so happen to align with the status quo of culture and language imperialism.
cue, of course, the sound of someone stepping on a rake.
so what now? (this leads to my main point and only real political position on this matter, which i mentioned in a previous post.)
we can argue about the artist's right to create how he wants or the consumer's right to have culture accessible to them, but in any case Toby Fox cannot choose without betraying either his values about "artistic integrity" or his values about "being niceys to fans".
the thing is, these are not opposite values. they are only in conflict for a very specific reason: because people who aren't Toby Fox are barred from making his cultural production accessible. because he reserves that right for himself, and no one else, in the first place. i am of course talking about a legal barrier and a legal right, made into tangible forces because they're backed by cops, lawyers, state violence: copyright law.
Toby Fox finds the responsibility of translating his games unbearable and crushing, but he will not relinquish his exclusive right to do so. he will not relinquish his power to destroy fan translators with a lawsuit the moment he stops feeling Niceys. say, for example... because they've started seeking a fair wage for this unpaid labor. getting paid for real work performed to transform his intellectual property.
the real issue at play is that fan translations are uncompensated work, and this work can never be fairly funded or compensated because of copyright. the fundamental inequality is the implicit threat of a C&D and lawsuit hanging over the head of anyone who might attempt this.
it took Toby a long time to rein in Materia Collective after they proved ruthlessly overprotective of his intellectual property. no one wants to try and see whether Toby could pull the equivalent of Nintendo condemning Gary Bowser to debt slavery for life. he certainly has the wealth and goodwill to get away with it, if he doesn't feel merciful.
he could change this and make it safe, for example by releasing Undertale/Deltarune's dialogue files under CC-BY-SA. but he won't. with that decision he has, knowingly or not, followed in the footsteps of every bourgeois artist before him, and manufactured this entire nonsense moral quandary and the various rakes he keeps stepping on!
this is the lesson we should be drawing from this situation, all in all. your artistic integrity, making your work accessible to fans, your class interests as a bourgeois millionaire: you can pick two and only two.
Mr. Fox, if you're reading this, i'm sure this situation is stressful to you. it doesn't have to be. relinquish this small part of your intellectual property rights, and you will be reincarnated as a lotus flower. <3
good discussion in the second half of this of the problems with promoting fan translations
another post about noterook.net
hi tumblrites!
have you been burned by tumblr clone after tumblr clone telling you that they are going to be up forever and be a social media platform you can use for good but then dying either due to sucking or running out of money? well i have some great news.
Your notebook, your posts. A social platform where your content lives on your device.
noterook dot net (https://noterook.net) is a privacy first social media platform that is air quotes like tumblr, but what if we removed the parts that were bad, and added parts that were good? here is what we have
global pvp via an @ everyone feed - some websites would call this a "firehose" - that exposes everyone's posts to everyone else (outside of private posts, of course)
a personal reverse-chrono latest-post-first feed.
privacy features allowing you to cleanly restrict who you want able to see and respond and interact with your posts
blocks and mutes that function basically as you would expect them to instead of having dozens of weird stupid edge cases
you are allowed to post pornography on noterook dot net
noterook costs me like sixty bucks a month right now to keep up and our devops bottleneck is mostly in traffic not on computer stuff or storage so. believe me when i say this; it is not going to get that much more expensive for me. it scales linearly.
active development of features you want and no development of features you don't want.
notifications
friendly moderation (me)
here's what we don't have
likes (instead, you can put physical stickers on other people's posts)
your data stored anywhere on our database (we use magic programming to ensure that none of your data is stored in a permanent form on our servers).
monetization
ads * (user self-service ads will come, we have no intent of signing onto a big ad network nor would we probably be allowed to.)
the ability to feed your posts en masse to any sort of ai algorithm (see above about data storage)
ownership over your data
image hosting (see: server costs). but you can still embed images!
noterook: it's a website that's like tumblr, but different in good ways.
ok thank you bye!
Their barbaric dystopian surveillance, vs our helpful preventative surveillance
no no no bro. we're the in-group this time. that's to protect us from the out-group. the out-group doesn't post on the internet sounding as reasonable and alive as you do, or exist or anything, so that's how I know you're the in-group with me. no one's the out-group. I'm the in-group bc they said it's for me. they promised. and you seem like a real human, so don't even worry about it, they wouldn't out-group you.
WHY DO YOU PEOPLE TORMENT ME ? !
how it's feeling rn
gosh they look fantastic!!
Why we need OS-level age attestation systems even though age verification tech is unbelievably dangerous.
Identity verification online is a growing danger, but there's a way to get ahead of it without compromising with authoritarians or creating dangerous infrastructure. Let’s talk about age signals and how California’s already passed attestation bill might be a strong path forward.
I am currently writing my own article that I realized had some elements that were similar to your writing style. It made me realize that I wanted to look into Markdown. Do you have any recommended resources, especially since your own Gio Flavored markdown project is gone with the death of Glitch?
Content is more important than how you encode the information, so wanting to write an article in the first place is the most important step.
For Markdown resources, a lot of software supports markdown now, even stuff like Discord. My basic suggestions, from minimal to complex, are:
A text editor! You can just write text, and any editor that has "syntax highlighting" for Markdown will show you if you're writing links and emphasis correctly
I was going to recommend Abricrotine in this slot but I see that it's been discontinued, so I'll look at its recommendations instead
StackEdit is a browser-based markdown editor with live preview
Ghostwriter is a KDE markdown editor with Windows support
Obsidian, which is a whole writing/notetaking framework. It uses Markdown as the editing format and stores documents in Markdown, but also has an embedded workspace manager and tag system that's part of Obsidian and isn't a markdown thing. It's nice but unlike other editors it expects a workspace, so you can't just open and edit an individual file
The real power of Markdown is that it's a simple standard that can be understood by many different programs, so feel free to experiment. If you're just learning I'd recommend focusing on draft first and then look at how you want to lay it out.
my adblocker prevented the nyt from loading the paywall banner so all i got was this
new usa flag
hang on I dropped my "modular operating system"
Anthropic's token negotiation deeply offends the misanthropes
Trump people like Pete Hegseth don't care nearly as much about killbots as authoritarianism. The Anthropic conflict isn't about a negotiation, it's about making a show of rejecting the idea of consensual trade altogether.
We will not win the “the internet should be an unregulated anarchy” war. We can win the “no identification” war.
Age signaling information attached to the OS — an opt-in controlled by the device owner, who is the parent — is far and away the best age verification system in terms of privacy and abuse prevention. I have a draft of an example proposal to do exactly that I wrote myself.
You don’t need individual services collecting and maintaining identifying information. Use the existing agency of parents over devices and send a low-entropy signal that proactively informs sites not to serve devices that are voluntarily excluded.
Any policing of expression is dangerous but a privacy-conscious system like OS-level age signals are the right move. It gives parents an easy toggle, makes compliance easy for services, and cuts off a lot of excuses for invasive and dangerous identify verification from gov/corps.
Proposals like AB 1043 and SB26-051 are buried in the muck of a dangerous political movement to censor speech and create tools to attack targets, but despite having the same "age verification" euphemism in the title they're the best defense. And they need support so they outweigh the evil ones.
When you see the movement for "user accounts set up with age brackets at the operating system level", that's not a euphemism for digital identity or backdoored chips, that is a ray of sunshine to a world falling into darkness. So long as it stays limited we need to push for it. It's the good one.
ah yes, let's give the controls to the people most likely to control and abuse children, especially by restricting access to information on sex education, queerness, and abuse!
Actually, no! Parents ARE extremely bad but that’s one of the reasons this is a particularly good standard! It’s not a content filtering system, it gives the SITES the information THEY need to be minimally compliant with data privacy and adult content laws. Every existing child safety product is worse than this, and this system is the most structurally resistant to parental abuse.
Age signaling information attached to the OS — an opt-in controlled by the device owner, who is the parent — is far and away the best age verification system in terms of privacy and abuse prevention. I have a draft of an example proposal to do exactly that I wrote myself.
You don’t need individual services collecting and maintaining identifying information. Use the existing agency of parents over devices and send a low-entropy signal that proactively informs sites not to serve devices that are voluntarily excluded.
Any policing of expression is dangerous but a privacy-conscious system like OS-level age signals are the right move. It gives parents an easy toggle, makes compliance easy for services, and cuts off a lot of excuses for invasive and dangerous identify verification from gov/corps.
Proposals like AB 1043 and SB26-051 are buried in the muck of a dangerous political movement to censor speech and create tools to attack targets, but despite having the same "age verification" euphemism in the title they're the best defense. And they need support so they outweigh the evil ones.
When you see the movement for "user accounts set up with age brackets at the operating system level", that's not a euphemism for digital identity or backdoored chips, that is a ray of sunshine to a world falling into darkness. So long as it stays limited we need to push for it. It's the good one.