Peta Morton

111 Followers
188 Following
168 Posts
Endlessly curious. Reiki & mindfulness teacher, consciousness, cymatics & astrology geek. Author. Transparency advocate.
@nathanlovestrees There's a lot to be said for this approach. I get a real buzz when I see those first green shoots and everything bursting into life (I'm born at the end of March). Mind you, I'm massively into astrology too, not in a woo-woo New Age way, but as someone who loves to observe the cycles of Nature, the interplay of light and dark, of heat and coolness, contraction and expansion, the changing of the seasons and our relationship to them.
I just read another news article about why mastodon didn’t make it and is dying. It’s very sad to hear and probably explains why I have to keep adding more server capacity to handle all the people quitting mastodon.
Maja Kraljik – EXTREMEWEATHER.CLUB

EXTREMEWEATHER.CLUB
@Sarahw @JosephineCorcoran It just goes to show how dependent we've become on getting real-time information from platforms that can be easily destabilised or manipulated by one or two key people/organisations.

#Twitter going rogue has much deeper implications than the Musk saga with all of its daily bullshit.

Let's not forget that, before the buffoon oligarch took over, Twitter used to be a place where government and scientific entities used to post (and they still post) information that may be crucial for the population. Twitter used to be the primary place for announcements about earthquakes, eruptions, pandemics, tsunamis, weather alerts, shootings etc.

How does that cope with a reality where external APIs are basically shut down, their unofficial frontend API is no longer working either, viewing is only possible through registered accounts, and even those accounts have a cap on the number of posts that they can consume?

How can a service with such heavy constraints around monetization still be considered a viable way of delivering messages that matter for the whole population?

As an example, one of the few Twitter accounts that I still follow (mirrored on the Fedi) is the one of INGV - the Italian Institute for geology and vulcanology.

I've got my good reasons, as I was born in a city (Naples) that may be soon blown up by the eruption of the largest European supervolcano (Campi Flegrei).

As my parents and relatives are now sitting just 1-2 km above several square km of magma, I obviously follow any updates that the INGV Twitter account posts about earthquakes in the area, with an automated system of alerts in place.

How does that cope with a service that lets users see only a few hundreds of tweets per day, and where you need bullshit like being registered, verified etc. to reliably access the content?

Can you imagine a tsunami alert system in Japan that alerts only those who paid for a platinum alert subscription, and only if they haven't already consumed their budget of 5 yearly alerts?

Twitter must be abandoned RIGHT NOW by any institutional accounts that post stuff that can make the difference between life and death of people.

@Sarahw @JosephineCorcoran Hello 'neighbour'. My daughter lives in Rennes too, not far from Sainte Anne, so she's been in the thick of all the recent protests. It hasn't been too bad in the centre over the weekend.
@RussInCheshire It'll sort itself out soon enough, I guess. There's a lot to be said for a set-up that can't be totally destabilised by one individual or organisation.
Good news: we're not raising the retirement age.
Bad news: it's because we've shaved several years off your life expectancy.
@JosephineCorcoran @Sarahw I am, yes. Neighbours tell me it kicked off in Saint Brieuc and Brest Last night.
@JosephineCorcoran @Sarahw Try using #emeutes in your searches.