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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: April 29th, 2024

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  • Manufacturers typically market the vehicles as energy efficient.

    Because they are more energy efficient…

    Until now it has been claimed by manufacturers that the vehicles used only a little or almost no fuel when in the electric mode. The studies showed that this was not in fact the case.

    Because when in pure electric mode they do use little or no fuel (different cars have different architectures but this is generally so)

    But, yes there is a good point buried in there. Europe needs to update rules on efficiency claims. l/100km in gas mode, and electric range gets you pretty far.




  • It’s not just a government run store, the products sold are being subsidized. Which is quite unfair to any small businesses/independents who have invested in the blast radius. Will they be compensated? (I’m not concerned about the large corps).

    It wouldn’t surprise me if NYC saw a net reduction in grocery stores as a result.

    So public money to subsidize costs of goods, and public money to subsidize costs of less efficient operations.

    Is this the most effective use of public dollars?

    I see NYC has incentives to open up grocery stores, good idea. Starting footprint is 5k sq feet… why so large? That would require something like an a million dollar build out… who is that incentive for?



  • The only way I could see it making sense is if a government was doing it as an exercise to understand what it takes to open a business.

    What environment have governments created where no one wants to open a grocery business?

    Is it overly dominated by a handful of large corporations? Should these be taxed or broken up to make the market more competitive? Is the supply chain competitive or is it also not competitive?

    Should government socialize insurance costs instead, for businesses that drive public good? Or other incentives like health coverage?

    Are there bylaws and zoning barriers that are making entry prohibitive?

    These are areas I think governments should be in, not operating a retail store. Policy is their area of expertise and has major impact.





  • On lemmy do you mean? It doesn’t have personalized recommendation algorithms as far as I know or any content similarity algorithms. I think it’s just a simple popularity by newness algorithm.

    To clarify, I meant corporate social media companies will target engagement, and they will use personalized algos (not necessarily down to a user, could be group of similar users).

    So for example if a user looks at some niche wood working content for example, they may mix in popular content that drives emotional response or is entertaining if that keeps people on the platform longer.

    That’s what I’m saying, it’s not about content similarity necessarily, it’s about showing whatever drives engagement / time on platform.

    When you have a lot of user data, and a lot of content meta data, you can do that very well. To the point where you can trigger addictive behaviors. That’s the issue with tiktok - but also other social media companies to lesser degrees








  • The bans are for under 16s, not just 7 year olds. Parents don’t control all internet activity for 15 years, at that age they are going to have some autonomy outside of the house.

    I’m not sure there is a direct irl analog when it comes to controlling digital spaces, since they are personal by nature. and I think this is where the debate comes in.

    Should parents be following their teenage child into every store to make sure they aren’t buying alcohol?

    I get the concern with providing social media companies a government ID, I certainly would never give them one! I would just not use them. But they provide net negative value in my opinion so no loss.

    I like the idea of FOSS parental controls.