Star Trek: The Next Generation - Season 5, Vol 4 VHS Box Art


#world cup#world cup 2026#fifa world cup#england nt#bukayo saka



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Star Trek: The Next Generation - Season 5, Vol 4 VHS Box Art
All QSMP2's fanart I made so far :D
Star Trek: Year Five #23 Cover Art (Alternate Cover Concept by Stephen Thompson)
Bluesky creates the world’s weirdest, hardest-to-understand binding arbitration clause
If you'd like an essay-formatted version of this post to read or share, here's a link to it on pluralistic.net, my surveillance-free, ad-free, tracker-free blog:
https://pluralistic.net/2025/08/15/dogs-breakfast/#by-clicking-this-you-agree-on-behalf-of-your-employer-to-release-me-from-all-obligations-and-waivers-arising-from-any-and-all-NON-NEGOTIATED-agreements
I can't wait to use Bluesky, but I will not be joining Bluesky. As much as I trust and respect the Bluesky executives and board members I am acquainted with, I believe the service itself is insufficiently enshittification-resistant to trust:
https://pluralistic.net/2024/12/14/fire-exits/#graceful-failure-modes
I've met Bluesky's CEO Jay Graber on a few occasions and heard her speak several times and I'm hugely impressed with her documented commitment to make "enshittification-resistant" social media:
https://www.wired.com/story/bluesky-ceo-jay-graber-wont-enshittify-ads/
Some of Bluesky's most innovative and well-developed features are extremely enshittification-resistant, like "composable moderation," which gives users an extraordinary degree of control over their feeds, which means that the service's owners can't readily dial down the amount of desirable information in those feeds in order to create space for ads or posts that someone has paid to boost (or, as is the case with Twitter, the personal maunderings of the service's boss and whichever esoteric fascist crony talked to him last):
https://bsky.social/about/blog/4-13-2023-moderation
What's more, this composable moderation, along with an open API for clients, allows Bluesky (the company) to adhere to its legal obligations to block content, while allowing Bluesky users to sidestep those blocks. For example, Bluesky has a labeling service that flags content that has to be blocked under Turkey's system of authoritarian censorship, and, by default, the Bluesky client blocks anything with that flag for Turkish users. But users can turn off that block, and/or use an alternative Bluesky client that doesn't pay attention to the blocked-in-Turkey flag.
Same goes for the new British system of mass censorship under the Online Safety Act: Bluesky the company will do an age-verification process with users of its official client (like all age verification, this system is janky and it sucks), but UK users who choose a different client (one that isn't worried about being sanctioned by the UK government) can access all of Bluesky without any age verification.
But the key anti-enshittification measure – federation – has lagged on Bluesky. For most of Bluesky's history, it's been impossible to participate in the Bluesky service without being a Bluesky user, because the most critical parts of the Bluesky network were incredibly expensive to operate (tens of millions of dollars per year), and lacked any tooling to make it easy to create independent, federated servers.
Without the ability to participate on the Bluesky network without having to create an account with Bluesky (the company), users would have to subject themselves to Bluesky's terms of service, and could have their access to the Bluesky network unilaterally terminated by Bluesky (the company).
Now, I happen to think pretty highly of the management of Bluesky (the company) at the moment. But Bluesky has outside investors – the distressingly stupid- and sinister-sounding Blockchain Capital – and if these people get it into their heads to enshittify Bluesky, then can force good actors off the board of directors, fire the management, and replace them with standard-issue corporate sociopaths.
What's more, the fact that users are hostage to Bluesky – that they have no way to part ways with the company without parting ways with the people they value on the service – means that new management can torment Bluesky users with impunity, so long as these torments are kept to a level such that Bluesky users hate the company less than they love one another.
By contrast, with federation – the ability to part ways with the Bluesky company without losing access to the service – investors might understand that if they turn the screws on users, those users will find it trivial to leave the company's servers, because doing so won't cost them access to the service. And if the investors don't understand this, well, users can leave – without enduring any switching costs.
The good news here is that Bluesky has made enormous progress in true federation. The cost of operating a full Bluesky stack has fallen from tens of millions of dollars per year to tens of dollars per month:
https://whtwnd.com/bnewbold.net/3lo7a2a4qxg2l
This is an extremely welcome development and it goes a long way toward enshittification-proofing the Bluesky service, and some way to enshittification-proofing Bluesky, the company.
But Bluesky, the company, still needs serious work.
Ash was set free by a man on the inside, either when he was a kid or a few years back, his memories were forcibly wiped and forgot his time in the federations. Or maybe he it was a trauma response.
When he was being tortured he re-told it as if it was normal, this implies he is used to the torture? It could be the same techniques they used when he was a kid. He was brought up within the federation and the pain is all he knew. id like to imagine his pain tolerance is crazy high and just doesn't realize it. 'Like oops i broke a bone! Better just continue walking and pacing liek nothibg happened.'
He was made to be the perfect weapon, he cant give in to torture, he cant feel emotions, he has to be nothing.
When he was on that weird machine thing and then being put in the black swirl room he knew what was coming. The emptiness. He kept repeating "not again", he must have been their perfect weapon at one point before becoming the ashswag we know.
One thing i dont understand is how the feds didn't realise ashswag is their escaped weapon. Their missing experiment. Unless they do know. Unless they LET him escape. But that his freedom from beginning to end was all a facade. The feds knew he was the escaped experiment, how could they not? They brought him up. Everything he knew was because they aloud him to know. But that leaves the question as to why they didn't immediately take him back when they saw him on day 1. My guess it that they wanted to make him feel powerful, so when they eventually take him back he feels even weaker. So when they take him back "home" he feels as useless as before ir even more so. They let him have his fun, they let him get it all out of his system
"They gave me a bigger room" meaning this is not his old room. Maybe once they convert and hypnotized him to become Pro fed, they would have been kinder to him. Making it seem like they are all he has.
Also making him watch ads of his abuser selling miniature plushie versions of himself. Strapped to a chair with burning acidic crying obsidian. I know it was funny but like that is awful...maybe not the worst thing he went through but still...
"The Voyage Home"
Star Trek V: The Final Frontier (1989), directed by William Shatner