I think you misunderstand the original author’s point.
That must have been devastating. I’m sorry to hear that.
I am 26 and have been in the workforce for a few years.
In short, is there something I’m missing here, or is work-eat-sleep-repeat all there is until I retire?
Yes, except for the fact that you and I will not be able to retire.
It’s so cute!
I think they make a good point, regardless.
Society respects a man who knows what he wants.
Maybe if they’d fix their work culture this wouldn’t be as big of an issue.
I would like to know this for KBin as well.
Lemmy is so much better than Reddit! Anyway, the admins of this instance are deciding what you’re allowed to see, just like Reddit.
So I thought I’d share. It’s simple, but here we are. To find them (in Android 13)
Android Settings > Apps > See All Apps > top corner Show System
I’m running Android 13, and this path does not exist. There is no “see all apps” option.
I agree, human.
I append “site:Reddit.com” (I know, I know) to basically every search I perform. It’s the only reliable way at this point to see things written genuinely by real people.
To be honest, I would be really tempted to do this if I could afford it and guarantee that it would kickstart a YouTube career.
How would that possibly work?
Pay $44 billion for a brand
Literally destroy the brand
This is more baffling than accidentally destroying the brand, like he’s been doing.
We oughtta arrest the people who pave roads because human traffickers use them to commit crimes.
I don’t really know the details of how they would translate from app to app, but I do know that ActivityPub is specifically designed to allow all of its apps to pull the same information. If an app utilizes ActivityPub, it inherently has the capability of displaying all of its components.
If anyone sees that I’m wrong on something here, please feel free to correct me.
My understanding is that any service that uses ActivityPub can see everything from every other service, unless the developers choose not to show it. As for whether Lemmy’s developers choose to show stuff from Mastodon, I’m not really sure.
Alternative take: Piracy is, at worst, morally neutral, and does not have a significant adverse effect on the profits of the people who produce media.