BassmanBiff
BassmanBiff t1_j6lnjlb wrote
Reply to comment by MrFartyBottom in Chinese Nuclear Lab Uses Intel, Nvidia Chips Despite Ban | Blacklisted Chinese entities obtain American hardware on the open market. by chrisdh79
Artificially reducing demand would make them cheaper, if they're even targeted by these sanctions (I have no idea).
BassmanBiff t1_j6lncz1 wrote
Reply to comment by Useless_Advice_Guy in Chinese Nuclear Lab Uses Intel, Nvidia Chips Despite Ban | Blacklisted Chinese entities obtain American hardware on the open market. by chrisdh79
Including the feds, though. The point is just to make it harder, they know sanctions aren't perfect.
BassmanBiff t1_izzn7f4 wrote
Reply to comment by foldingcouch in Former FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried refuses to testify before Senate, committee says. by AdamCannon
Hope you come back to check on this comment in a few days
BassmanBiff t1_izaz2hn wrote
Reply to comment by ResoluteClover in Ethereum’s energy switch saves as much electricity as entire Ireland uses | The success of The Merge concept may now serve as a roadmap to enable a switch from Proof of Work to Proof of Stake in Bitcoin. by chrisdh79
Most of cryptocurrency is this way: responding to the problems of modern financial systems by streamlining them and labeling it a feature.
BassmanBiff t1_iyezslj wrote
Reply to comment by Whitewing424 in Forced Uyghur labor is being used in China's solar panel supply chain, researchers say by chrisdh79
Attention is limited, but also fragile. It comes from whatever people are passionate about, and shutting that down just makes people disengage, it doesn't get them fired up about something else -- least of all the thing that was important to whoever shut them down. So it's not a decision about "we have 10 attention, where do we put it," it's about "what generates more attention for us to use in the first place."
It's obviously selfish for people to disengage just because their feelings are hurt, but it's also just how people work whether we like it or not. I think it's important to acknowledge that, stoke whatever passions people have around this topic in general, and then encourage that passion to go further by redirecting it where it can do the most good.
Just policing which topics people get to feel passionate about, telling them to shut up and do better when they choose the wrong ones, doesn't really make anyone active for our preferred cause even if it's objectively more important. It does make us feel good to shout people down, though, by feeling like we're more aware than they are. I think it's very easy to convince ourselves that we're fighting the good fight when we're really just stoking our own ego.
BassmanBiff t1_iyewssd wrote
Reply to comment by Whitewing424 in Forced Uyghur labor is being used in China's solar panel supply chain, researchers say by chrisdh79
I was talking about ones we already have.
I'm under no illusion that those will fix anything, or that they're perfectly designed to target large and small companies equally, or that they're somehow more important than addressing our own problems. I'm saying that we can and should do both at once, and whichever front people choose to yell about, they should be encouraged so that we can redirect that energy instead of simply stamping it out whenever people choose the "wrong" issue.
BassmanBiff t1_iye5zxh wrote
Reply to comment by Whitewing424 in Forced Uyghur labor is being used in China's solar panel supply chain, researchers say by chrisdh79
It's not either/or. Totally agreed that the best way to fix this is to fix it at home first, and we are trying to do that. But that goes both ways; we can use people yelling about China as leverage to encourage change at home, too.
I think it's self-defeating to only mention either of these problems when we're trying to call somebody a hypocrite for caring about the other one. It just shuts people down, it doesn't encourage them to actually do more. We should encourage people to shout about this stuff so we can redirect it, not simply shut it down because it feels righteous to call out "virtue signaling."
BassmanBiff t1_iye4o3n wrote
Reply to comment by monkeyheadyou in Forced Uyghur labor is being used in China's solar panel supply chain, researchers say by chrisdh79
Totally agreed that fixing problems at home is probably the best way to start trying to fix problems abroad, but I also don't think they're mutually exclusive. Let's absolutely fix the problems here, but calling it out elsewhere doesn't stop us from doing that.
If anything I think it helps to use China as a mirror to say "Look, we hate this when they do it, so why the fuck are we?"
BassmanBiff t1_iye3dvh wrote
Reply to comment by No_Caregiver_5740 in Forced Uyghur labor is being used in China's solar panel supply chain, researchers say by chrisdh79
We are trying! If we can't do something about one until we do something about the other, then we'll never do anything about either.
BassmanBiff t1_iye2vph wrote
Reply to comment by 420ohms in Forced Uyghur labor is being used in China's solar panel supply chain, researchers say by chrisdh79
Yes it does, it just doesn't fix everything immediately. There really isn't a more impactful thing you can do with the hour or whatever it takes to do it. It's more than worth doing while pursuing other activism.
Put differently, voting is not sufficient, but it is necessary.
BassmanBiff t1_iye2fh5 wrote
Reply to comment by Badtrainwreck in Forced Uyghur labor is being used in China's solar panel supply chain, researchers say by chrisdh79
We should absolutely try to fix it here, but calling it out everywhere is important and doesn't stop us from working on it at home. Import restrictions and slightly better consumer info are about all we can do about China, and while that's obviously not going to fix the problem, it still helps to do it.
BassmanBiff t1_iyarbi8 wrote
Reply to comment by CHBCKyle in Forced Uyghur labor is being used in China's solar panel supply chain, researchers say by chrisdh79
Let's do both! It's also a problem when the only time we do talk about US prison labor is in order to say "Let's not talk about Chinese prison labor." It's also worth noting that China's program is even more explicitly racist than ours, but both should be considered unacceptable.
BassmanBiff t1_ixxqqk0 wrote
Reply to Chinese citizens in Shanghai facing down the police, calling for CCP to step down by I_am_hot_for_tofu
Weird that the watermark was removed from this. I'd link it if I could read it. The only sources Google finds are a couple other subreddits, like here (w/watermark): https://www-reddit-com.translate.goog/r/China_Pulitzer/comments/z5ghq3/shanghais_tankman/?_x_tr_sl=zh-CN&_x_tr_tl=en&_x_tr_hl=en&_x_tr_pto=sc
BassmanBiff t1_iwp54s3 wrote
Reply to comment by Yadona in META has released a new AI tool called Galactica that auto-generates science content. The problem is that it's terrible, and soon its inaccurate and bogus content will drown out real science information. by lughnasadh
The problem is that a lot of the stuff it does give you is straight up wrong, and you have no way to know which parts that is. It's just formatted such that it looks convincing.
BassmanBiff t1_iwp4q37 wrote
Reply to comment by 3d-print-struggler in META has released a new AI tool called Galactica that auto-generates science content. The problem is that it's terrible, and soon its inaccurate and bogus content will drown out real science information. by lughnasadh
> United Airlines dispatcher Susan B. Anthony
BassmanBiff t1_iu9x6lw wrote
Reply to comment by MrMojorisin521 in Is dark matter orbiting galaxies with the same speed as normal matter? by taracus
They posted this link in another comment: https://academic.oup.com/mnras/article/494/3/4291/5821286
BassmanBiff t1_j6nz262 wrote
Reply to comment by AadamAtomic in Chinese Nuclear Lab Uses Intel, Nvidia Chips Despite Ban | Blacklisted Chinese entities obtain American hardware on the open market. by chrisdh79
I hadn't thought of that, but it makes perfect sense. Thanks!