![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/105a30b3-5b6a-4f12-aae0-5c1f4311c91c.jpeg)
I’m concerned too much more salt may lead to salting of land, but I may be worried over nothing.
I also don’t fully trust our ability to predict negative outcomes if it’s profitable to ignore them.
Creator of SlippiHUD Rejector of Enshittification Locksmith Melee Puff P+ Sonic HDR Greninja @SmashToday@discuss.smash.today
I’m concerned too much more salt may lead to salting of land, but I may be worried over nothing.
I also don’t fully trust our ability to predict negative outcomes if it’s profitable to ignore them.
It’s all good. I can see that point, but it’s unfortunately a bandaid (semi-short term cooling strategy) on a sucking wound (too much CO2 in the atmosphere), and if I trusted the world powers to continue solving the issue (Atmospheric Carbon Capture) before sepsis set (salting the earth from aeroslizing sea water) in, I’d be less opposed.
I never said burn more oil?
Also I’m not a huge fan of the idea of seeding the atmosphere with salt water, that salt has to come down eventually.
It is the Sulfer thing. Sulfer Dioxide was shading the planet and making clouds more reflective, cooling the earth and we’re fairly uncertain by how much.
Even though the article doesn’t say it outright, the obvious conclusion is that we should have stopped using fossil fuels decades ago. And even if stop now we don’t know how much more warming we’d do without the sulfer dioxide. Which shouldn’t be added to the atmosphere because it would kill an outrageous amount of people.
This seems like a conspiracy for targeted harassment, with a strong case of doxxing.
With an email account I created 10 minutes ago and no registered church within the app, I’ve been able to pull the names and addresses of myself, my neighbors, and the names of people whose address I’ve checked.
This is a privacy nightmare.
Well I played it, once, 12 years ago when the graphics were good. I don’t remember them being mind blowing, but I don’t remember them being bad either.
I dont think it really had an “are we the baddies” story, it was a very graphic anti war game for me.
It is one of the better executed anti-war message in games. Nothing I’ve played has come as close to its level of execution. I remember thinking, at the time, that the competitive multi-player really undercut the message of the single player campaign.
Spec Ops: The Line is an excellent game.
I’m all for blocking Threads as an instance or user, but blocking instances that choose to federate with threads is going to leave a lot users who when Threads breaks its compatibility with Activity Pub with no social graph to keep them tethered to ActivityPub.
Threads can’t get the data we’re worried about it collecting from federation, they can only get it from you installing/using their site or their app. So don’t do that.
I think the difference between this EEE and say XMPPs EEE is Meta/facebook is widely seen as a cancerous entity that people who are already here aren’t going to want to use, and when they break compatibility few people are going to want to switch to their service as long as there’s still enough people here to talk to.
Not to downplay the threat of EEE, we need to remain vigilant. Our best defenses are preemptive defederation or shitposting how we never see ads.
Dice forge could be good, it takes 30ish minutes to play a full game and it has heavy fantasy themes
Is a hammer a cosmic ray in this example?
Hinge was okay 2.5 years ago when I met my gf on it. It’s since been purchased by match.com and is likely ruined now.