Rev3rze

joined 10 months ago
[–] [email protected] 4 points 19 hours ago

I literally ragequit that captcha. Mine was showing floor plans and grainy "pictures" of a room asking me to pick which floor plan matched the picture from that perspective. I swear to you, none of them actually matched, progress reset constantly because I'd invariably pick the wrong one. It provoked such a primal rage in me, it felt like I was being gaslit into believing I was wrong when actually that captcha was cursed to hell and back. Thankfully my very patient partner managed to get through them for me and I only had to do it once to get the launcher to recognise my new pc.

[–] [email protected] 24 points 6 days ago

Don't know about you, but preteen me wouldn't be very impressed by an adult saying something as vague as "it can be dangerous". We understand the danger and even then fall victim to it in some way or other, how can we expect a child to navigate that landscape of insecurities and marketing in any healthy way.

The answer is we can't and we're all suckers for letting predatory marketing techniques such as influencers and highly targeted ads run rampant in our daily lives.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Exactly, that's what the little bin next to the toilet is for.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 1 week ago

The point they're making is that what you're looking at in the picture isn't NSFW. The title is deliberately misrepresenting an advert to make it seem NSFW, a classic shitposting tradition.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 week ago (1 children)

If you're talking early 2000s I know exactly what dance you mean. That was a short but intense fad.

[–] [email protected] 23 points 2 weeks ago (5 children)

As a guy who used to be on bumble (met my partner there) I will say that any conversation that started with 'hey how's it going' just went nowhere 100% of the time. It's so easy to ask literally anything else. We don't know each other, what's the point in asking how it's going if all you'll ever get as a reply is either "good, and you?" which doesn't break any ice and introduces a lull on the conversation 4 messages into the chat or if it's an honest "pretty shit, actually" the tone of the conversation becomes immediately weird because you don't know each other enough to pry into that.

Things you could ask:

  • cuddled any cats lately?
  • what made you smile today/this week?
  • what song have you played on repeat lately?
  • play any games lately? (depending on if they list games as their interest, most matches I got listed board games)

This way you'll immediately either find common ground or find differences between your everyday experiences that you can talk about.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 weeks ago (5 children)

The existence of God is a metaphysical kind of thing, so any stance on this (whether belief in existence OR non-existence) is a religious belief.

See, that's where I disagree. I'm an atheist and I don't believe or claim to know that there is no god. I don't believe that there isn't a god at all. All I believe is that there's no sufficient proof at this time that there positively is a god. Much less a god that demands certain behaviours/rituals, diets and dress codes and whatnot. You can't prove a negative after all.

acting like I've committed blasphemy by saying atheism is a religion.

I never did this, though. We're just talking as far as I'm aware, I'm not offended by your stance in the slightest, I just took your first comment as an invitation to discuss this matter.

I very much agree with you that many atheists take their belief too far. Any atheist that claims to know there is 100% certainly no god is taking their belief to dogmatic and religious belief levels. Since you can't prove a negative we'll never have proof that there's no god in the same way we'll never have proof that there's no flying spaghetti monster. I don't think the existence of a god or a flying spaghetti monster has been demonstrated sufficiently for me to adopt that belief. To me it seems an unnecessary (indeed metaphysical) invention to explain physical phenomena that have already been explained with physical evidence. And that leads me to being an atheist. For all intents and purposes there is no god until there is proof that there is. Excuse me for yet another metaphor, but I hope to explain my way of thinking better through an example: I also believe there's no dogshit under my shoe until I can smell, see or otherwise detect it. Unless that's the case I'm going to act as if my shoes are clean but that's different than me saying there's no shit under my shoe and there never will be. The former is a working hypothesis that can change depending on circumstances and the latter is holding on to a belief no matter what (religiously, one might say).

[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 weeks ago (7 children)

Belief isn't religion. I also believe you're being intentionally obtuse about this. That's also just a belief and not a religion. Rhetorical question: do you believe the world is round? Would you call that a religion?

[–] [email protected] 2 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

Literally did this 10 hours ago using this guide: https://lemmy.world/post/857701. You need an earlier version apk than APKpure has though (19.16.39). I was surprised with how easy it is tbh. Just had to find a decent site to get that particular apk from but that's a simple Google search away.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 3 weeks ago (9 children)

Atheism is a religion like spectating is a sport. It isn't.

[–] [email protected] 13 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago)

racism on the fediverse can be solved if Black people shitpost more

This indeed makes no sense. Exactly as much sense as the implication that white people posting less solves racism somehow. The article explains that that rule should be "if you're white, post less on topics about race and if you do want to post, think about what you're about to say".

In conclusion: shitposting remains a free for all.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago)

~~It's a secret third option, I suspect. You stated that everyone is equal so (by my interpretation) they meant to show you the difference between theory and practice. As in "if you've ever worked in the service industry you'd have experienced first-hand that often you are not treated as an equal".~~

Everybody is equal, but many assholes don't see it that way.

Edit: nevermind. Just got to the other comments further down and am shown, again, the folly of giving the benefit of the doubt.

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