thbb

joined 1 year ago
[–] thbb@lemmy.world 3 points 4 months ago (1 children)

No, numeracy is when you draw cards to see the future.

[–] thbb@lemmy.world 2 points 5 months ago

Which group in France is against? I consider making this issue a top priority for choosing who I vote for.

[–] thbb@lemmy.world 5 points 6 months ago

You forgot the /s

[–] thbb@lemmy.world 9 points 6 months ago (3 children)

At my modest scale, I was banned from reddit/worldnews for pointing out that the title of the stickied thread "Iran attacks Israel" was not suited anymore to the events in gaza, and that this thread's very low upvote count was a show that its content was not so consensual.

There are lots of efforts by Likud extremists to reshape the narrative and suppress dissent.

But I'm optimistic that their efforts won't work: the students protests are strong enough, alternative communities like r/internationalnews are developing, so that a more balanced perspective emerges, that doesn't downplay Israeli crimes against humanity.

[–] thbb@lemmy.world 10 points 6 months ago

My aunt visited Afghanistan as a tourist, in a christian group of women, in the 1960's. I really wish I could do the same when I retire.

[–] thbb@lemmy.world 11 points 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago) (4 children)

Usually, an impact study is made before such type of laws are made:

  • if this law is enacted, how much will it cost to the manufacturers to update their factory settings?
  • how will this be impacted on the device cost in the UK compared to other markets?
  • how many users will get stuck when losing the unique ID of the device, what are the recovery procedures, how costly is it to end users?
  • how many users will be protected by the measure and what cost for society does it represent?
  • how many users will set a dumb password anyhow and what is the cost for society?

I’d be curious to see the impact study, as many of those are actually botched.

[–] thbb@lemmy.world 6 points 6 months ago (1 children)

Indeed, and the legality has been challenged by the ACLU. Although they could not pursue to issue a condemnation.

The present case would be an excellent opportunity to resolve the question of whether or not a President is entitled to kill a US citizen and setup better checks and balances (because, in the case of Obama, there were definitely some, but those were disputable).

[–] thbb@lemmy.world 9 points 6 months ago

Note that they present the issue only as a financial problem rather than an actual threat to the environment or people.

[–] thbb@lemmy.world 14 points 6 months ago (7 children)

You wildly overestimate the danger nuclear waste represents.

First, transportation is done in small amounts at a time, completely encased in concrete and steel, and is of no risk of exploding: the only danger would be spillovers, which would call for expensive cleaning operations.

Next, storage. The whole waste produced by 60 years of nuclear waste in France amounts to only a few swimming pools of dangerous material. If this material was actually fully useless, we could ditch it in geological layers underground where it would become soon unreachable and dispersed, posing no discernable danger for the upcoming few billion years.

Furthermore, the only reason we don't ditch this nuclear waste right now is that this material can still be useful for plenty of uses that are not yet economically viable, but could be in the long term, such as energy generation with low-yield reactors.

 

A savoir le Centre de recherches internationales (Ceri) et le Laboratoire interdisciplinaire (Médialab) de Sciences-Po.

(Le MediaLab, j’en connais des membres, et pour moi, c’est un gage de sérieux).

[–] thbb@lemmy.world 2 points 6 months ago

Je ne connaissais pas l'institut pour la démocratie.

Ce qu'ils font à l'air interessant et mesuré.

Merci pour le lien.

[–] thbb@lemmy.world 5 points 6 months ago

Résumé:

Reconnaissance de la Palestine : Macron hésite encore Autour du président de la République, certains le pressent de reconnaître enfin la Palestine comme un État à part entière. Emmanuel Macron consulte, réfléchit, jure qu’il cherche le bon moment. Comme… François Hollande, dix ans avant lui.

Ilyes Ramdani et Rachida El Azzouzi - 27 avril 2024 à 17h35

 

Baku (AFP) – When Russian troops deployed to Nagorno-Karabakh four years ago, their task was clear: keep the peace between bitter foes Armenia and Azerbaijan and prevent another war in the volatile region.

But as Azerbaijani forces swept through mountainous Karabakh last September and crushed Armenian separatist forces in a matter of hours, the Russian mission looked lost.

The Kremlin this week quietly confirmed that the peacekeepers were withdrawing, taking with them their weapons and hardware, as well as Russian clout from a region it long considered its own backyard.

"We are witnessing a historic process -- Russians are leaving for the first time in two centuries," independent Azerbaijani analyst Elhan Shahinoglu told AFP.

[...]

"Russia has once again betrayed the Armenian people and sold us out. That's it," said Valery Harutyunyan, who lived in Karabakh before fleeing to Armenia in September.

"We can't rely on the Russians again. It's impossible. We should kick Russians out -- not only from Karabakh -- but also from Armenia," he told AFP.

 

Est-ce une prémonition du logiciel de traduction automatique qui a pondu ce magnifique titre?

Notre électroménager bardé d'IA viendra-t-il avec un guide permettant au système de mieux nous comprendre?

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