Good choice, but sadly, I already know and read that one. And it’s lately falling into the will-they-wont-they trap
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Oh yeah? Then name me an action manga that also has a proper romance and no will-the-wont-they bullshit.
Quacksalber@sh.itjust.worksOPto
Showerthoughts@lemmy.world•You know who I haven't heard of in a while? Edward Snowden. I hope he does well.
2·24 days agoDude, you keep arguing as if the Snowden leaks haven’t been scrutinized to hell and back. I need to only search once for the US reading the communication of americans and it brings up countless articles like this one making reference to the Snowden leaks. You keep dissing Snowden and Greenwald, as if those two were the only ones analyzing the files. In truth, entire teams of journalists from multiple outlets worked on different parts of those stories. Do I trust you, who can’t even provide a source, or hundreds of journalists and the obviously scummy and sometimes downright illegal behavior of the US government to shut those journalists down? And just because it isn’t “illegal”, because the government gave itself the right to fuck you over, doesn’t mean that it is morally permissible. You didn’t even address the fact that the US forced the plane of the president of Ecuador to land in Europe due to pressure from the US, because it flies in the face of your narrative that the US is a righteous place where you can trust the law, even when the government itself wants to silence you. You know how they got around not being able to spy on Americans? They got the brits and other countries to do it for them. That is what the Five-Eyes organization is all about. The Wikipedia article I linked detailing the Snowden leaks even break down in which direction the data transfer went between the different spy agencies.
Quacksalber@sh.itjust.worksOPto
Showerthoughts@lemmy.world•You know who I haven't heard of in a while? Edward Snowden. I hope he does well.
2·24 days agoI don’t see how your edit changes anything. You just claim stuff without any sources. I for one didn’t find anything relating to Snowden misinterpreting PRISM. Just a bunch of newspapers explaining how PRISM works based on the data Snowden released. And why exactly should he trust the US whistleblower laws, when the US government is the one breaking the law and Snowden is the one exposing them? The US has prosecuted plenty of whistleblowers trying to expose government wrongdoing. He was right not to trust the US government and he was proven right by the US even going to so far as to force a plane carrying the Bolivian president to land, because they suspected Snowden on board. Him having to live in Russia is more a testament to how far the US is willing to go to catch him, rather than him being naive or “stupid”.
Quacksalber@sh.itjust.worksOPto
Showerthoughts@lemmy.world•You know who I haven't heard of in a while? Edward Snowden. I hope he does well.
2·24 days agoLike I said, different definitions of what it means to be patriotic. But don’t call Snowden simple-minded, that is just plain stupid.
Quacksalber@sh.itjust.worksOPto
Showerthoughts@lemmy.world•You know who I haven't heard of in a while? Edward Snowden. I hope he does well.
3·24 days agoThing with patriotism is that everyone understands something different. Some may think that not questioning your leaders and doing what they tell you is what it means to be patriotic. Others may think that fighting injustice and corruption in your own country, so that every citizen may live in a free and just society, is what being patriotic is about. Some may even go so far as to say that fighting for your country to be fair and honest not only to your own citizens, but also other countries is patriotic. Snowden is part the latter group. You seem to be part of the first.
And of course leaking that amount of material is not a spur-of-the-moment decision. He clearly planned carefully for a long time. How is this even a point you are trying to make? He did exactly what conscientious whistleblower should do.
And calling Snowden simple-minded truly betrays your ignorance. It is you, in fact, who is simple-minded, as you jump to conclusions based on conjecture devoid of facts.
Quacksalber@sh.itjust.worksOPto
Showerthoughts@lemmy.world•You know who I haven't heard of in a while? Edward Snowden. I hope he does well.
4·24 days agoThe conspiracy-brain is strong in you. But there are perfectly rational arguments for all your allegations. Snowden went to Hong Kong, because it offers comparably high living standards to the US and was still somewhat free back then, while being squarely outside of the US sphere of influence. So he didn’t need to fear being extradited or kidnapped while being able to take advantage of the freedom of the press that existed back then in Hong Kong.
He absolutely had some idea of what information he had at hand, as he was able to give the journalists pointers on what to report on first. Furthermore, the first reporting that SCMP did that you linked was on June 13th. The first reporting done on the leaked material was done by the Guardian on June 5th, so by the time Snowden gave the interview to SCMP, he and the journalists had to have dug through the material already.
The SCMP is, as you said, a chinese newspaper. So it absolutely makes sense that they’d ask China-focussed questions like “Were there chinese systems compromised?”
There has been absolutely no reporting on Snowden meeting with chinese officials.
Quacksalber@sh.itjust.worksOPto
Showerthoughts@lemmy.world•You know who I haven't heard of in a while? Edward Snowden. I hope he does well.
4·24 days agoThose sources still don’t say that Snowden gave information to china. He talked to a newspaper. And to that newspaper he confirmed that, among other places, the NSA hacked chinese computers. No mention of a quid pro quo.
Quacksalber@sh.itjust.worksOPto
Showerthoughts@lemmy.world•You know who I haven't heard of in a while? Edward Snowden. I hope he does well.
4·24 days agoYes. The Snowden leaks happened in the pre-brain-snap era. Back then Greenwald was a respected investigative journalist.
Quacksalber@sh.itjust.worksOPto
Showerthoughts@lemmy.world•You know who I haven't heard of in a while? Edward Snowden. I hope he does well.
10·24 days agoWtf is that dude’s reading comprehension? Good on you for debunking him lol.
Quacksalber@sh.itjust.worksOPto
Showerthoughts@lemmy.world•You know who I haven't heard of in a while? Edward Snowden. I hope he does well.
4·25 days agoHow do you read into that article that he handed a list of compromised systems to chinese authorities?
Quacksalber@sh.itjust.worksOPto
Showerthoughts@lemmy.world•You know who I haven't heard of in a while? Edward Snowden. I hope he does well.
251·25 days agoIt’s good you wrote here then, because you are wrong. Snowden wasn’t being specific in what he grabbed, but he closely worked with Glenn Greenwald and The Guardian to publicize what he grabbed. There is a whole Wikipedia article of the release, which makes only one mention of irresponsible disclosure putting an agent at risk: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snowden_disclosures . Also Snowden himself was demanding agents not be exposed.
Now, who most likely got a lot of agents killed is the leaker in chief, Trump himself.
Quacksalber@sh.itjust.worksOPto
Showerthoughts@lemmy.world•You know who I haven't heard of in a while? Edward Snowden. I hope he does well.
201·26 days agoThe Europeans bucking the US would require them to not be vassals. But right now we see Germany trying to placate Trump and while France does a lot of saber rattling, they also aren’t going specifically against the US. Only Spain is currently defying the US, but only insofar that they don’t allow the US to conduct its war of choice with Iran from spanish soil. They are not opposing the US on anything that isn’t as clear cut morally. That’s a lot of words for saying yes, unfortunately, Europe, and Germany above all, is too cowardly to defend what is right against the US. The only opposition allowed against the US is bureaucratic opposition. And even that is failing.
Quacksalber@sh.itjust.worksOPto
Showerthoughts@lemmy.world•You know who I haven't heard of in a while? Edward Snowden. I hope he does well.
451·26 days agoThanks for the update. I didn’t know he had children, but I guess life moves on. I still think it is absolutely shameful that Europe wasn’t and isn’t able to allow Snowden to live in Europe.
SAP hat doch auch die Corona Warn App gebaut, oder? Man könnte Hoffnung haben.
For ladders, yes. But take Horizon Forbidden West for example. Most rocks and cliff faces are climbable, but you can’t tell by just looking at them. You have to use your focus, their version of yellow paint, to see where you can and can’t go.
I find the whole yellow paint argument to be stupid. Back in the day, level design was so spartan, that if you saw a ladder, you could reasonably infer that you could climb the ladder. Nowadays, level design has become so rich in detail that you need a way to differentiate between objects you can interact with and objects that are just placed for fluff.
One idea I’ve seen floated was a certificate-based authentication. Providers that know your age by design, such as banks, could hand out certificates in bulk. That way, only those institutions would know that you have received certificates, but they can’t tell for what exactly. Source: https://ec.social-network.europa.eu/@EUCommission/114852402217569321





And it has not enough users. If the fediverse ever became popular enough to hold significant marketshare, we’d see similar issues. The upside to the fediverse is that you can defederate from misinformation peddlers.