Suuuper rough sketch for anyone interested. Basically we'll have a list of accounts you follow in localStorage, then ingest their outboxes into this. Then we'll set up fully p2p identities and use the #DistributedPress #SocialInbox as another source to ingest stuff like followers only posts and replies from people you don't follow.
https://github.com/hyphacoop/reader.distributed.press/pull/3
https://soundcloud.com/mixmag-1/premiere-oyubi-tomys-siren
Music to review code to. 🤓
Bouta start a new database for client side indexing of ActivityPub data and making user curated timelines that much easier.
Hot take that I only partially believe, but that is made unnecessarily inflammatory for the sake of social media brevity:
Nearly every bad thing in tech traces back to that the tech sector is one of the first to grow in post-Reagan disruption of labor rights and antitrust regulations, such that it is uniquely concentrated in a few unaccountable effective monopolies.
Been playing with continue.dev in Visual Studio Code hooked up to lmstudio.ai running OpenHermes 2.5. It works *okay* but I think the default prompts aren't exactly tuned for the ChatML format from the Mistral 7b model. So far editing code has been a shitshow but it's been useful to be able to ask it for python syntax instead of looking it up on duck duck go every time. I have it running on a mac mini in my closet so the dedicated M2 chip makes it pretty speedy.
1. New default: Your phone number will no longer be visible in Signal
2. You can create an optional username to connect without sharing your phone number
3. You can enable a new, optional privacy setting to require people to connect with you via username instead of phone number
Our fully remote team at @hyphacoop does a weekly coffee break. This year I've updated it from a Google Meet room to a Mozilla Hubs virtual office space complete with a giant water cooler and zany avatars. Since hubs is going to be closing down due to the layoffs I might start self hosting it or migrate to another platform like Thirdroom.
btw here is something cool - the 3 of us watching on @monsterdon were making the #p2p thing of peertube happen. i was a little behind because i kept going back to watch scenes again, so i mostly downloaded from whoever was ahead rather than uploaded, but like this is so sick to me because if it had to serve the whole movie to everyone it probably wouldn't be able to handle many more than this, but with p2p we can basically have as many people watching as we want.
first pic is from like 2/3 of the way through the movie, second is from the end, so most of that server download happened at the beginning when i was the only peer.
#monsterdon
One trend I keep noticing about interviews with Gargron or any article about “Mastodon” is how often they ask Gargron about “competing” or they write about competing and growth.
Gargron, to his credit, usually semi-dismisses it, but it shows just how lost in the hypercapitalist techno-feudalism sauce tech journos are that they still make it out to be about growth.
It’s been over year since Mastodon and the Fediverse gained mindshare… It’s clear that while they vaguely understand the technical underpinnings, they do not understand the social underpinnings that make it all possible.
It’s like they believe that each Fediverse server is a micro-Twitter that wants to be purchased by a technocorp, and all admins are in it because they want fifty billion users on their instance.
The Fediverse is the “next Twitter” in the same way that the tram is the “next car”.
It’s a trap. More code is not your friend, it’s your enemy.
Don’t add the dependency. Don’t generate 8000 lines of JavaScript. Replace JS with CSS. Don’t accept the digital grey goo spewed out of tools such as Copilot.
Code is a liability. Anything that helps you make more, quickly, with no effort, is leading you down a very dark path.
(muting this now; sorry, but it’s too noisy)
Everything about Apple the company pisses me off so much. They're some of the most abusive companies out there with how they treat the needs of others.
https://open-web-advocacy.org/blog/its-official-apple-kills-web-apps-in-the-eu/
The Chaos Computer Club is giving out art grants!
If you're an artist/writer/creator of whatever type, you can apply for 420–4200 EUR, to work on your visions and utopias for the Chaos Community! ✨
See https://42.ccc.de for details. Application deadline is already the 2024-02-29! ⏰
If you have more questions, join the @callforstories "office hours" next Thursday!
The racism behind chatGPT we are not talking about....
This year, I learned that students use chatGPT because they believe it helps them sound more respectable. And I learned that it absolutely does not work. A thread.
A few weeks ago, I was working on a paper with one of my RAs. I have permission from them to share this story. They had done the research and the draft. I was to come in and make minor edits, clarify the method, add some background literature, and we were to refine the discussion together.
The draft was incomprehensible. Whole paragraphs were vague, repetitive, and bewildering. It was like listening to a politician. I could not edit it. I had to rewrite nearly every section. We were on a tight deadline, and I was struggling to articulate what was wrong and how the student could fix it, so I sent them on to further sections while I cleaned up ... this.
As I edited, I had to keep my mind from wandering. I had written with this student before, and this was not normal. I usually did some light edits for phrasing, though sometimes with major restructuring.
I was worried about my student. They had been going through some complicated domestic issues. They were disabled. They'd had a prior head injury. They had done excellent on their prelims, which of course I couldn't edit for them. What was going on!?
We were co-writing the day before the deadline. I could tell they were struggling with how much I had to rewrite. I tried to be encouraging and remind them that this was their research project and they had done all of the interviews and analysis. And they were doing great.
In fact, the qualitative write-up they had done the night before was better, and I was back to just adjusting minor grammar and structure. I complimented their new work and noted it was different from the other parts of the draft that I had struggled to edit.
Quietly, they asked, "is it okay to use chatGPT to fix sentences to make you sound more white?"
"... is... is that what you did with the earlier draft?"
They had, a few sentences at a time, completely ruined their own work, and they couldnt tell, because they believed that the chatGPT output had to be better writing. Because it sounded smarter. It sounded fluent. It seemed fluent. But it was nonsense!
I nearly cried with relief. I told them I had been so worried. I was going to check in with them when we were done, because I could not figure out what was wrong. I showed them the clear differences between their raw drafting and their "corrected" draft.
I told them that I believed in them. They do great work. When I asked them why they felt they had to do that, they told me that another faculty member had told the class that they should use it to make their papers better, and that he and his RAs were doing it.
The student also told me that in therapy, their therapist had been misunderstanding them, blaming them, and denying that these misunderstandings were because of a language barrier.
They felt that they were so bad at communicating, because of their language, and their culture, and their head injury, that they would never be a good scholar. They thought they had to use chatGPT to make them sound like an American, or they would never get a job.
They also told me that when they used chatGPT to help them write emails, they got more responses, which helped them with research recruitment.
I've heard this from other students too. That faculty only respond to their emails when they use chatGPT. The great irony of my viral autistic email thread was always that had I actually used AI to write it, I would have sounded decidedly less robotic.
ChatGPT is probably pretty good at spitting out the meaningless pleasantries that people associate with respectability. But it's terrible at making coherent, complex, academic arguments!
Last semester, I gave my graduate students an assignment. They were to read some reports on labor exploitation and environmental impact of chatGPT and other language models. Then they were to write a reflection on why they have used chatGPT in the past, and how they might chose to use it in the future.
I told them I would not be policing their LLM use. But I wanted them to know things about it they were unlikely to know, and I warned them about the ways that using an LLM could cause them to submit inadequate work (incoherent methods and fake references, for example).
In their reflections, many international students reported that they used chatGPT to help them correct grammar, and to make their writing "more polished".
I was sad that so many students seemed to be relying on chatGPT to make them feel more confident in their writing, because I felt that the real problem was faculty attitudes toward multilingual scholars.
I have worked with a number of graduate international students who are told by other faculty that their writing is "bad", or are given bad grades for writing that is reflective of English as a second language, but still clearly demonstrates comprehension of the subject matter.
I believe that written communication is important. However, I also believe in focused feedback. As a professor of design, I am grading people's ability to demonstrate that they understand concepts and can apply them in design research and then communicate that process to me.
I do not require that communication to read like a first language student, when I am perfectly capable of understanding the intent. When I am confused about meaning, I suggest clarifying edits.
I can speak and write in one language with competence. How dare I punish international students for their bravery? Fixation on normative communication chronically suppresses their grades and their confidence. And, most importantly, it doesn't improve their language skills!
If I were teaching rhetoric and comp it might be different. But not THAT different. I'm a scholar of neurodivergent and Mad rhetorics. I can't in good conscience support Divergent rhetorics while supressing transnational rhetoric!
Anyway, if you want your students to stop using chatGPT then stop being racist and ableist when you grade.
#chatGPT #LLM #academic #graduateStudents #internationalStudents #ESL
Occult Enby that's making local-first software with peer to peer protocols, mesh networks, and the web.
Exploring what a local-first cyberspace might look like in my spare time.