it doesn't actually work like this, you know...
on Mastodon, where there's a polling function, so far the tally is 61% favor Canada, 39% Mexico, 0% USA! (that's from a total 18 votes counted from a nonrandom sample not representative of anything. so you know that it's reliable!)
Suppose (inspired by recent Trumpery) that Canada, Mexico, and the US were going to merge. One of the three existing Federal governments would incorporate the other countries states or provinces. The other two would be unwound. Which government would you favor to govern the combined territory?
my complaint isn't fundamentally about ad views. and i don't claim indexers should ignore specimen links. i claim indexers should understand them. 1/
What if we could distinguish, when we link or quote, between citation and specimen? 1/
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The default that hypertext is built around is citation: We are engaged together a collaborative exercise to construct some approximation of truth. 2/
As humans, we frequently err. So much of our conversation is necessarily, and constructively, critique. Critique can be dry and civil. It can be cutting, bitter, hilarious. We may be naughty, we may be nice. But we understand ourselves as speaking to one another, critic, critiqued, audience. 3/
But sometimes that presumed relationship is just not accurate, is not what we intend. Sometimes we are not in conversation at all. Sometimes a piece of text is a mere artifact, a specimen we are conversing about but not at all with. 4/
Even bitter critique implies a modicum of good faith on the part of author critiqued. There is a mind which, however biased by virtue of position or commitments, has given the matter some thought, and believes what it has written. 5/
If we think that behind the document we are addressing there is no such good faith, citation — inclusion in our collaborative project of truth production — is not the appropriate relationship. 6/
If a document is pure propaganda, if it has been tailored instrumentally to affect or manipulate, represents no coauthor's imperfect but sincere yearning towards an edifice we might productively settle upon as truth, then we should not cite it. 7/
But we might still wish to refer to it, to converse about (rather than with) it. We should be able to quote or link it in a way that makes the specimen relationship explicit, and imposes informative friction (e.g. some interstitial) to people who might naively follow it as citation. 8/
Our scheme should prevent naive indexers (e.g. "page rank") from following such links as citations. (Indexers sophisticated enough to work around the block would have an opportunity to choose how they want to interpret such very distinct links.) 9/
Screenshotting but not linking a source is the closest approximation of this in current practice, I think. There's also HTML's rel="nofollow" attribute. Neither sufficiently expresses and fully enables what we should want of a specimen link. I think there's some scope for innovation here! /fin
(i was promiscuously following back by default for some time… turns out that was a mistake. sorry to complicate things!)
you say you are for treating everyone fairly, regardless of their identity. yet you also say we must punish the wicked while entirely exempting the good? the bankruptcy of your philosophy is obvious.
there’s a certain — maybe irony? cautionary tale? — in reading this excellent @pkrugman.bsky.social thread, about mutually reinforcing roles rendering the US dollar difficult to dislodge as the central currency, here on BlueSky.
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personalism is the antithesis of democracy, never an expression of democracy, no matter how popular the person may be.
please add a dash of (ideally a dollop of) azithromycin while you take your hot toddies. is this a “walking pneumonia” pandemic? just an “outbreak”? should we not use words like that, because they’ll take away our freedom to ensicken one another?
this “walking pneumonia” is “walking” in the sense of “the walking dead”.
i mean, the french all have mistresses. it’s the same thing, right?
if the problem is we pissed off the plutocrats, the problem is the plutocrats, not the pissing off.
let them eat banana. uk.news.yahoo.com/crypto-boss-...
Crypto boss eats banana art he bought for $6.2 million
Link Preview: Crypto boss eats banana art he bought for $6.2 million: Crypto entrepreneur Justin Sun on Friday fulfilled a promise he made after spending $6.2 million on an artwork featuring a banana duct-taped to a wall -- by eating the fruit.On Friday Sun denied that ...On the one hand, prioritizing everything is prioritizing nothing. On the other hand, we can walk and chew gum at the same time.

