Karv′, from the ashes 🇪🇺🇺🇦

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102 Posts

Opinions are my own.
Knowledge gatherer | Team #Science ⚛️
Wants to make the world a better place. With the 🍋s.

🥼 Science enthusiast
🖤 Goth/Metalhead
🎓 M.Sc. Business Informatics
🧑‍💻 Systems Architect & Software Engineer
📡 Distributed Systems
📦 Transport & Logistics
♻️ Environmentalist
🇪🇺 European
🏳️‍🌈 Ally
⚖️ Chaotic Good
🥋 Knows a trick or two
🌩️ Strikes w/o warning
🕵️ Investigative
㊙️ Silence is golden
⚕️ Ex-Paramedic
🪖 Ex-Military Guard Commander
🍕 Foodie
🍪 Sweets
🎮 Gamer

Webthinghttps://karvprime.github.io/
PronounsHe/They
LikesPrimes
BooleanMaybe

LinkGaslighting? - For several months now I’ve continued my project where every day I go back through my archives and clean up broken links in old posts. If something is broken and I can find it in the Wayback Machine (https://web.archive.org/), I replace the link. Lately I’m noticing something new and insidious. Of course there’s a lot of linkrot, where stuff is just gone. (In my archives, Yahoo News and Make’s Craftzine are the two biggest offenders.) Then there’s stuff that’s gone, but the domain has been repurposed by someone else. Sometimes it’s obvious (porn and gambling ahoy!) and other times they create a plausible looking site filled with SEO glurge. And then there’s this third dark pattern I don’t even have a name for yet, where the same entity is still in control of the domain and the link goes to a plausible looking URL, but it’s NOT the page I linked to originally.

Here’s an example. In 2001 I wrote a post (https://www.web-goddess.org/archive/554) about Jenna Bush, saying I sympathised with her and that she was just acting like a college student. In it, I linked to a Salon.com article (http://www.salon.com/mwt/wire/2001/05/30/jenna_bush/index.html) about her. If you follow that link now, you are silently redirected to an article about her beliefs about safe sex (https://www.salon.com/2007/09/25/jenna_bush/). If you don’t look closely, you might miss the fact that the safe sex article is from 2007. If you go to the Wayback Machine, you’ll see that the actual article I linked to was about her buying booze (https://web.archive.org/web/20010605091134/http://www.salon.com/mwt/wire/2001/05/30/jenna_bush/index.html). I’ve now found several other Salon.com links to that redirect to posts about the same general topic of the post, but aren’t the actual one I linked to.

Another example. In 2013 I linked to (https://www.web-goddess.org/archive/11354) a Serious Eats recipe for “tobacco cookies” (http://www.seriouseats.com/recipes/2013/05/tobacco-cookies-recipe.html). If you click that link now, you’re redirected to a recipe for Chocolate Dipped Tuile “Cigarettes” (https://www.seriouseats.com/chocolate-dipped-tuile-cigarettes-cookies-recipe). That one gave me pause. Is that what I originally linked to? If that’s what the recipe is called, why did I call it something else? Here’s the Wayback Machine to the rescue again, confirming that there really used to be a recipe for tobacco cookies (http://www.seriouseats.com/recipes/2013/05/tobacco-cookies-recipe.html). WTF.

I’m not clear on why or how this is happening. Maybe some sort of custom 404 logic that picks out a keyword and sends you to a likely recent link? It’s infuriating though that they don’t give you any warning that it might not be the page you’re looking for. It makes finding broken links that much harder, because they’re actively trying to gaslight me. Links are a contract and a promise. Silently redirecting https://www.web-goddess.org/archive/77747

Wayback Machine

In Germany we don’t say „Carmageddon“,
instead we say: „Berlin ist für alle da, auch für Autofahrer“, and I think that‘s aus der Zeit gefallen.
If at first you don't succeed, don't sweat it, your parents are rich.

Wait. Your parents aren't rich?

Oh, man. This is embarrassing. Sorry, all of these success aphorisms are meant for people with privilege and resources.

You're on your own. Good luck.



#success #SelfHelp #advice
tag yourself

Freedom in technology must include freedom from technology.

We must not create societies where the price of admission is owning a device controlled by one of two trillion-dollar US corporations.

We must safeguard people’s access to public services and the everyday necessities of life via alternate methods.

Technology should always be a progressive enhancement.

Do not let Silicon Valley privatise your access to modern life.

https://mastodon.ar.al/@lrvick@mastodon.social/112079059430275102

#technology #society #access #humanRights

Lance R. Vick (@[email protected])

It's official. After 3 months of back and forth, a major medical provider has elected to drop me as a patient for not having a Google or Apple device. It is unclear if this is legal, but it is very clearly discriminatory and unethical. Any tech journalists or lawyers interested in this? I would like to do anything I can to ensure this never happens to anyone else.

Mastodon

Großartige Sichtbarmachung unvorstellbaren Reichtums.

https://mkorostoff.github.io/1-pixel-wealth/

Wealth, shown to scale

Wealth inequality in the United States is out of control. Here we visualize the issue in a unique way.

The reason behind my block according to the on-screen message is that I've used a certain word or phrase. Well, the conversation with a friend was about their psychological health. I'm glad it wasn't anything critical, but it is very well possible that such a bullshit action stops someone helping a person in distress. This is dangerous. How many people did it take on either company to NOT think about the possible consequences using such an approach/platform?
Cloudflare blocks random Discord users right now. Apparently multiple people are affected. If the app fails, try the browser, and vice versa. I don't know about the quality of either service, but to me that looks really bad right now.
Last but not least: Don't allow engine usage without their full agreement to all these terms and conditions. They may think it exceeds what would be necessary to use the engine. But if they don't like it, it's their fault for not seeing the bigger picture.