front page of nytimes.com right now. remarkable.

Image of nytimes.com front page.

It's 10:46 pm EDT Thursday 4/18/2024. NPR confirmed at 10:00 pm that Israel is bombing targets in Iran in retaliation for Iran's weekend (also retaliatory) strike. Financial markets clearly reflected this by 9:30 pm. The nytimes.com front page has nothing about it. Image of nytimes.com front page. It's 10:46 pm EDT Thursday 4/18/2024. NPR confirmed at 10:00 pm that Israel is bombing targets in Iran in retaliation for Iran's weekend (also retaliatory) strike. Financial markets clearly reflected this by 9:30 pm. The nytimes.com front page has nothing about it.

@drahardja how do novice users become advanced users? that’s the issue. the web at its start was explicitly designed to invite even casual users to learn and explore. newer practices hide every next step. you either choose to “become a web developer” or you stay at the surface.

that’s bad, ethically. the original ethos, rendering transparent the tools needed to incrementally grow into knowledge and creative capacity was good. 1/

@drahardja if you want, like firefox, to highlight the hostname for novice users, great. but if novices can only learn more by going into conplicated browser settings, you’ve created a cliff. 2/

in reply to self

@drahardja you can’t “empower” users. as soon as you say that, you’ve lied to yourself. users can only empower themselves. the commodity they are increasingly depleted of is agency. you can tell them more or less clearly security related information. that’s fine, and more clearly is better. but if you want an ethical web, made of participants and citizens rather than users and consumers, then you want an infrastructure that instructs and unfurls as people spend time. /fin

in reply to self

@djc apartment communities sometimes offer lower intro rates to new tenants, then increase at renewal. (this idea only really makes sense for apartment communities, where there are standard, pretty much apples-to-apples floor plans.) basically the proposed reg wld prevent that practice, either give renewals at the intro rates or prevent straight up intro rates. (landlords might substitute with “first two months free” for new tenants, but that at least makes clear the longer term resident price.)

@ben of course most users don’t understand URLs. most users don’t view source either. the point is that deeper information should be more accessible, and becoming more deeply informed should always be encouraged. if “broad adoption” is your *sole* lodestar, then whatever. this is ultimately an ethical stance, consistent with broad adoption, but not remotely motivated by it.

@khleedril URLs are more elementary than request and response headers. one should learn how to share a link, even without a little button. familiarity with URLs is not mostly about observing "nasty shit". it's understanding the most basic physics of the information systems that structure our world.

Rather than the vague, anecdotal path he favors, the right approach is to collectively lobby the government to conduct rigorous trials of what would become an inexpensive, public domain remedy. twitter.com/yishan/status/1780

@mark the mobile form factor is generally harder to invite agency within. but people should try! it’d be great if when clicking into a URL in a mobile browser, for example, an editable box wrapping the whole URL appeared, rather than just a narrow truncation that is hard both to see and edit.

@mark every bad idea can be smuggled through as a safety feature. destroying people’s capacity to replace parts in the products they purchase and own, or use whatever ink cartridge they choose, is for “safety”. a world of people completely incapable of understanding or exercising agency with the most basic elements of their world is the least safe kind of world, even if individual withdrawals of agency are in some narrow sense protective.

@mark there are thoughtful ways to balance safety and encouragements to agency, eg z0ne.social/notes/9s8x1hzmu3

in reply to self

@mark you don’t have to be a nerd. but things should teach you about them if you are open to learning. hermetic sealing is a bad heuristic for “user friendliness”. cars are more user friendly when you can open their hoods and replace their parts. they are becoming far less user friendly now. preserving handcranks would teach nothing, relative to electronic ignition, which is better. things should get better. but they shouldn’t be hidden just for the sake of hiding.

“Greene also submitted an amendment to the Israel funding package, calling for using proposed funds for ‘the development of space laser technology’ on the US-Mexico border.” pravda.com.ua/eng/news/2024/04 ht @SocraticEthics

the practice many browsers have adopted of truncating URLs in the address bar to the hostname is emblematic of the decline and commercially driven infantilization of the web.

understanding URLs — their roles and the ways and whys of how they are constructed — was an elementary skill of the original view-source web.

hiding complete URLs encourages people to become ignorant consumers of mysterious information services, rather than informed participants in a public forum.

Would it be a good or bad regulation if landlords were required to offer continuing residents the same rates they offer new residents?

@lme @stefano aye.

@Alon @BenRossTransit So far the one success I think Biden really deserves credit for so far is mostly preventing a broader conflict. I hope that behind the scenes the “take the win” line is being more forcefully prosecuted than it is in public.

@Alon @BenRossTransit Not for the first time, I think you are both caricaturing and underestimating the unhappiness with Israel among many Americans.

in reply to self

@BenRossTransit @Alon Biden hasn’t actively supplied a high-collateral-damage campaign to bomb the Kurds as a part of his diplomatic strategy with Erdogan.

@Alon @BenRossTransit maybe the “bear hug” will work this time.

i’m in terror, though, that the personal calculation from Bibi (who is served by delayed accountability) and the politicoreligious calculation from the right is that there will never be a better time for what they perceive an inevitable war with Iran, a formula of “defensive participation” only by the US ceases to be credible once Americans are hit, future administrations may not be so deferential.

@Alon @BenRossTransit i guess i’m a latent antisemite who’s learned not to say ZOG but still think it? this seems more a kind of defense mechanism than a reasonable take on what’s happening. A very large fraction of the US public, I think the majority, believes Israel has behaved badly in Gaza in ways we ought not to have enabled, and think leaving decisions on Iran to Israel but promising ironclad defensive participation invites getting drawn into a foolish war.

@Alon @BenRossTransit i sure hope Hebrew language media is aware of how much Bibi is risking the Israel-US relationship post Biden (or perhaps post a shift in approach from Biden).

Biden is not serving that relationship well, when much of the US public sees the administration as unaccountably enabling indefensible behavior. To use an overworn analogy, Biden has been the kind of “ironclad” friend who never fails to hand a drunk friend the car keys.

@BenRossTransit @Alon he doesn’t defer to Erdogan in ways that much of the US political community perceives as adverse to US interests.

conducting diplomacy quietly is quite different than deference. there was no question the US was seeking Turkish acquiescence to Sweden’s accession. with Israel, the US is actively participating under terms many of us view as dangerously adverse to US interests, whatever quiet armtwisting there is or isn’t.

@BenRossTransit @Alon none to which Biden is so unaccountably deferential despite maintaining a patina of critical independence in public relations terms.

trump : erdogan is maybe analogous to trump : putin, since trump was oddly, counterproductively deferential to both figures (in different ways).