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#How to Tell if the Rabbit is Guilty#tips#tricks#life hacks#helpful hints#advice#rabbit#rabbits#bunny#bunnies#The Rabbit Code
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#gif#loop#glitch#glitch art#glitch aesthetic#skull#petscii#ascii art#text mode#processing#creative coding#cyberpunk#cyberpunk art#cyberpunk aesthetic#terminal#hacking
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elderly citizen bullies children with insufferable pokemon team
#(entirely legendaries)#turbo#wir#wir fanart#turbotastic#turbotime#pokemon#in myyy world/ref#his rotom IS the hacker#or better said the thing hes using 2 mod whatever pkmn game he's in#instead of his code box he just has this Living Virus (just like him)#like. 4-D rom hacking#or something#hes bald and hes torturing people who have hair
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To whom it may concern,
Just a suggestion, or gentle recommendation, but if you're writing code for a scientific study of any kind, maybe consider, possibly, limiting the number of swear words in said code because now many journals now require you to have your code publicly available in order to publish and if that's the case, then you'll have to spend many hours editing out all the swear words you put into your code or risk getting rejected by the journal that you already payed way too much money to in order to submit your paper.
Sincerely,
The scientist currently cursing her past code-writing self.
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My friend made a super cool language guessing game that is now fully functional!
https://langle.uk/
The database has a lot of minority languages (especially in level 3) and if you don’t guess correctly, you get a hint based on linguistic relatedness.
#this is genuine btw#not some weird hacked post#he's just coded it ground up and i told him not to do blue because of twitter/tumblr/fb/etc#but evidently twitter blue is now (mostly) gone so it's less of an issue#linguistics
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JEAN SMART and HANNAH EINBINDER during the Hacks Season 3 Collider Interview at SXSW 2024
#hacks hbo#sxsw 2024#jean smart#hannah einbinder#guys................. this interview#i'm back i'm in my delulu era#lucia's answers to some of these questions#romo debava coded#gifs
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The specific process by which Google enshittified its search

I'm touring my new, nationally bestselling novel The Bezzle! Catch me SATURDAY (Apr 27) in MARIN COUNTY, then Winnipeg (May 2), Calgary (May 3), Vancouver (May 4), and beyond!
All digital businesses have the technical capacity to enshittify: the ability to change the underlying functions of the business from moment to moment and user to user, allowing for the rapid transfer of value between business customers, end users and shareholders:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/02/19/twiddler/
If you'd like an essay-formatted version of this thread to read or share, here's a link to it on pluralistic.net, my surveillance-free, ad-free, tracker-free blog:
https://pluralistic.net/2024/04/24/naming-names/#prabhakar-raghavan
Which raises an important question: why do companies enshittify at a specific moment, after refraining from enshittifying before? After all, a company always has the potential to benefit by treating its business customers and end users worse, by giving them a worse deal. If you charge more for your product and pay your suppliers less, that leaves more money on the table for your investors.
Of course, it's not that simple. While cheating, price-gouging, and degrading your product can produce gains, these tactics also threaten losses. You might lose customers to a rival, or get punished by a regulator, or face mass resignations from your employees who really believe in your product.
Companies choose not to enshittify their products…until they choose to do so. One theory to explain this is that companies are engaged in a process of continuous assessment, gathering data about their competitive risks, their regulators' mettle, their employees' boldness. When these assessments indicate that the conditions are favorable to enshittification, the CEO walks over to the big "enshittification" lever on the wall and yanks it all the way to MAX.
Some companies have certainly done this – and paid the price. Think of Myspace or Yahoo: companies that made themselves worse by reducing quality and gouging on price (be it measured in dollars or attention – that is, ads) before sinking into obscure senescence. These companies made a bet that they could get richer while getting worse, and they were wrong, and they lost out.
But this model doesn't explain the Great Enshittening, in which all the tech companies are enshittifying at the same time. Maybe all these companies are subscribing to the same business newsletter (or, more likely, buying advice from the same management consultancy) (cough McKinsey cough) that is a kind of industry-wide starter pistol for enshittification.
I think it's something else. I think the main job of a CEO is to show up for work every morning and yank on the enshittification lever as hard as you can, in hopes that you can eke out some incremental gains in your company's cost-basis and/or income by shifting value away from your suppliers and customers to yourself.
We get good digital services when the enshittification lever doesn't budge – when it is constrained: by competition, by regulation, by interoperable mods and hacks that undo enshittification (like alternative clients and ad-blockers) and by workers who have bargaining power thanks to a tight labor market or a powerful union:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/11/09/lead-me-not-into-temptation/#chamberlain
When Google ordered its staff to build a secret Chinese search engine that would censor search results and rat out dissidents to the Chinese secret police, googlers revolted and refused, and the project died:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dragonfly_(search_engine)
When Google tried to win a US government contract to build AI for drones used to target and murder civilians far from the battlefield, googlers revolted and refused, and the project died:
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/06/01/technology/google-pentagon-project-maven.html
What's happened since – what's behind all the tech companies enshittifying all at once – is that tech worker power has been smashed, especially at Google, where 12,000 workers were fired just months after a $80b stock buyback that would have paid their wages for the next 27 years. Likewise, competition has receded from tech bosses' worries, thanks to lax antitrust enforcement that saw most credible competitors merged into behemoths, or neutralized with predatory pricing schemes. Lax enforcement of other policies – privacy, labor and consumer protection – loosened up the enshittification lever even more. And the expansion of IP rights, which criminalize most kinds of reverse engineering and aftermarket modification, means that interoperability no longer applies friction to the enshittification lever.
Now that every tech boss has an enshittification lever that moves very freely, they can show up for work, yank the enshittification lever, and it goes all the way to MAX. When googlers protested the company's complicity in the genocide in Gaza, Google didn't kill the project – it mass-fired the workers:
https://medium.com/@notechforapartheid/statement-from-google-workers-with-the-no-tech-for-apartheid-campaign-on-googles-indiscriminate-28ba4c9b7ce8
Enshittification is a macroeconomic phenomenon, determined by the regulatory environment for competition, privacy, labor, consumer protection and IP. But enshittification is also a microeconomic phenomenon, the result of innumerable boardroom and product-planning fights within companies in which would-be enshittifiers try to do things that make the company's products and services shittier wrestle with rivals who want to keep things as they are, or make them better, whether out of principle or fear of the consequences.
Those microeconomic wrestling-matches are where we find enshittification's heroes and villains – the people who fight for the user or stand up for a fair deal, versus the people who want to cheat and wreck to make things better for the company and win bonuses and promotions for themselves:
https://locusmag.com/2023/11/commentary-by-cory-doctorow-dont-be-evil/
These microeconomic struggles are usually obscure, because companies are secretive institutions and our glimpses into their deliberations are normally limited to the odd leaked memo, whistleblower tell-all, or spectacular worker revolt. But when a company gets dragged into court, a new window opens into the company's internal operations. That's especially true when the plaintiff is the US government.
Which brings me back to Google, the poster-child for enshittification, a company that revolutionized the internet a quarter of a century ago with a search-engine that was so good that it felt like magic, which has decayed so badly and so rapidly that whole sections of the internet are disappearing from view for the 90% of users who rely on the search engine as their gateway to the internet.
Google is being sued by the DOJ's Antitrust Division, and that means we are getting a very deep look into the company, as its internal emails and memos come to light:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/10/03/not-feeling-lucky/#fundamental-laws-of-economics
Google is a tech company, and tech companies have literary cultures – they run on email and other forms of written communication, even for casual speech, which is more likely to take place in a chat program than at a water-cooler. This means that tech companies have giant databases full of confessions to every crime they've ever committed:
https://pluralistic.net/2023/09/03/big-tech-cant-stop-telling-on-itself/
Large pieces of Google's database-of-crimes are now on display – so much, in fact, that it's hard for anyone to parse through it all and understand what it means. But some people are trying, and coming up with gold. One of those successful prospectors is Ed Zitron, who has produced a staggering account of the precise moment at which Google search tipped over into enshittification, which names the executives at the very heart of the rot:
https://www.wheresyoured.at/the-men-who-killed-google/
Zitron tells the story of a boardroom struggle over search quality, in which Ben Gomes – a long-tenured googler who helped define the company during its best years – lost a fight with Prabhakar Raghavan, a computer scientist turned manager whose tactic for increasing the number of search queries (and thus the number of ads the company could show to searchers) was to decrease the quality of search. That way, searchers would have to spend more time on Google before they found what they were looking for.
Zitron contrasts the background of these two figures. Gomes, the hero, worked at Google for 19 years, solving fantastically hard technical scaling problems and eventually becoming the company's "search czar." Raghavan, the villain, "failed upwards" through his career, including a stint as Yahoo's head of search from 2005-12, a presiding over the collapse of Yahoo's search business. Under Raghavan's leadership, Yahoo's search market-share fell from 30.4% to 14%, and in the end, Yahoo jettisoned its search altogether and replaced it with Bing.
For Zitron, the memos show how Raghavan engineered the ouster of Gomes, with help from the company CEO, the ex-McKinseyite Sundar Pichai. It was a triumph for enshittification, a deliberate decision to make the product worse in order to make it more profitable, under the (correct) belief that the company's exclusivity deals to provide search everywhere from Iphones and Samsungs to Mozilla would mean that the business would face no consequences for doing so.
It a picture of a company that isn't just too big to fail – it's (as FTC Chair Lina Khan put it on The Daily Show) too big to care:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oaDTiWaYfcM
Zitron's done excellent sleuthing through the court exhibits here, and his writeup is incandescently brilliant. But there's one point I quibble with him on. Zitron writes that "It’s because the people running the tech industry are no longer those that built it."
I think that gets it backwards. I think that there were always enshittifiers in the C-suites of these companies. When Page and Brin brought in the war criminal Eric Schmidt to run the company, he surely started every day with a ritual, ferocious tug at that enshittification lever. The difference wasn't who was in the C-suite – the difference was how freely the lever moved.
On Saturday, I wrote:
The platforms used to treat us well and now treat us badly. That's not because they were setting a patient trap, luring us in with good treatment in the expectation of locking us in and turning on us. Tech bosses do not have the executive function to lie in wait for years and years.
https://pluralistic.net/2024/04/22/kargo-kult-kaptialism/#dont-buy-it
Someone on Hacker News called that "silly," adding that "tech bosses do in fact have the executive function to lie in wait for years and years. That's literally the business model of most startups":
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=40114339
That's not quite right, though. The business-model of the startup is to yank on the enshittification lever every day. Tech bosses don't lie in wait for the perfect moment to claw away all the value from their employees, users, business customers, and suppliers – they're always trying to get that value. It's only when they become too big to care that they succeed. That's the definition of being too big to care.
In antitrust circles, they sometimes say that "the process is the punishment." No matter what happens to the DOJ's case against Google, its internal workers have been made visible to the public. The secrecy surrounding the Google trial when it was underway meant that a lot of this stuff flew under the radar when it first appeared. But as Zitron's work shows, there is plenty of treasure to be found in that trove of documents that is now permanently in the public domain.
When future scholars study the enshittocene, they will look to accounts like Zitron's to mark the turning points from the old, good internet to the enshitternet. Let's hope those future scholars have a new, good internet on which to publish their findings.
If you'd like an essay-formatted version of this post to read or share, here's a link to it on pluralistic.net, my surveillance-free, ad-free, tracker-free blog:
https://pluralistic.net/2024/04/24/naming-names/#prabhakar-raghavan
#pluralistic#ed zitron#google#microincentives#constraints#enshittification#rot economy#platform decay#search#ben gomes#code yellow#mckinsey#hacking engagement#Prabhakar Raghavan#yahoo#doj#antitrust#trustbusting
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You think Idia would pass out if a girl poked him?
I think he'd pass out if anyone poked him or even perceived him. T_T he's so skittish and it only worsens if the object of his affection and desire is suddenly paying attention to him. Like, what did he do to raise your affection bar and have you acknowledge his presence????? He's sorry for existing and breathing the same air as you. Please just leave him be... treat him like a bug you found beneath a rock,,, ignore him and let him return to his hikikomori life. >_< as he thought, it's much easier to interact online or to simply watch you through the campus security feed he's hacked into.
Ortho says it's you "being friendly" and "extending a hand of friendship," but Idia knows better than to delude himself with those fluffy, romantic, slice-of-life sort of tropes. No way an SSR-tier person like you would ever pay him any mind out of your own volition!!!! OTL
This is basically Idia the moment he triggers an irl interaction event with you:
#twisted chit chat#the cheat code here is to simply say [insert idia's waifu] is trash#or feed into his competitive mindset or have a genuine non-normie interest in the anime/manga/games he likes#and suddenly he can't stop talking#imagine idia doxxing a hater (you) only to find out you're exactly his type once he digs around in your files and hacks your webcam >:)
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The Justice League, on their way back from a deep space mission that was incredibly successful, received a distress signal from a galaxy they’re passing through.
As they investigate, they learn that a colony of a planet has been wiped out. Completely.
Slowly they piece together that there is some being out there that had been terrorizing planets, starting with colonies and then eventually going after larger settlements and home planets.
The League also learns they are not the first people to learn of this foe, or try to come up with a solution to stop them.
The colony they are inspecting has researchers on it that had fled or escaped from other planets where they piled together all they knew about their enemy, and in an attempt to sift through the mountains of data they had collected, created a device.
If a person was connected to the device, they would mentally experience the number of years required to process the data and come up with an attack plan in seconds. What the researchers had needed was time, so they created it.
As the League pieces this together, Superman sees that there is a being approaching the remnants of the colony and the defense system alerts the “remaining colonists” of the imminent threat. Their failsafe boots up and takes the nearest person, in this case, Batman, who had been studying some of its programming, and activates.
The rest of the team didn’t have a chance to react before Batman blinks and is in motion, setting up machines and dictating code without lifting a finger.
There is no fight, because after the two seconds Bruce was in the machine he was a flurry of motion and the enemy was contained.
They ask him how long had passed for him in the machine. It takes him a full minute to respond.
“150 years.”
#batman#bruce wayne#justice league#batfamily#batfam#i can’t decide how bruce would react to being alone in his own head for 150 years but no matter what it’s bad#because sure he trained with the loa in isolation but not for longer than the average lifespan nothing can prepare you#so either he comes back and is completely silent because he spent the last 20 years not even “talking aloud’’ to himself#or we finally get some sort of emotive bruce. one who finally realized that he needs people and is desperate not to be alone again#when he gets home? and sees his kids? my god that man should cry.#because they were what kept him going through those 2 seconds and 1314000 hours - that he would see them again#and in those years there must have been downtime (if it was like a mental simulation) where he could over analyze his relationships with his#kids and the watchtower defenses and his romantic relationships. and mentally hack the equipment holding him to let him write code in his#head and then program the defenses in real time for the moment he came out of “stasis”#let this deeply traumatized man have too much time on his hands and the isolation he thinks he needs and have it fuck him up irreparably#(based loosely on miles o’brien from ds9 and outer wilds for the mental prison and noncon time loop)#one things for sure and two for certain he lobbys against solitary confinement
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dev process of my submission for hackapet by hack club!!





drew all the assets, wrote all the code, consumed all the energy drinks xD
overall an incredibly fun experience!! learning pixel art and ignoring my psychology tests were the biggest highlights :3
now onto the final push to submit on time >:D
#codeblr#programmer#programming#i yearn to code#dev blog#developer#game development#game jam#hack club#pixel art#pixel graphics#duck#python#pygame#code#coding#computer science#cs#csblr
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Too good
#username#password#tech#coding#hacking#stonks#memes#funny#humor#student memes#reddit memes#dank memes#insidesjoke
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Is anyone else getting raided in their comment sections because wtf
#Pretty sure the link is to Discord please don’t try using it#I feel like all of these accounts are hacked tbh#Scratch#scratch coding#scratch mit edu
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baby, let a good thing be good
#i made this like 5 days ago and my internet has been on the fritz i could only upload it for the first time now#i don't even like how these look now ugh#but anyway#made this listening to wrabel's good on repeat#it's so THEM coded#ava x deborah#hacks hbo#ava daniels#deborah vance#gifs#hacksedit
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Things I’ve had to research because of a dipshit called Cypher
- Procedures to remove bullets and patch up the wounds
- Is it lethal to be stabbed by the liver (This is surprisingly very survivable)
- Constellations, specifically Sagitta
- Moroccan faces
- How to wrap a Moroccan headscarf
- How to make Moroccan tea
- Darija phrases and swears
- How people move on and grieve a dead spouse (This one SUCKED to research :[ I hope everyone who faces this has a good life)
- Moroccan traditional clothing and footwear
- Tea. (Allow me to go on a tangent of Please Buy Loose Leaf Tea and not teabags because I promise you there is a world of difference in quality and taste)
- The story of Prometheus
and there’s still so much to research.
#Muslim traditions and Moroccan food are on the to do list#along with hacking and coding#nameless ranting#cypher#cypher valorant#valorant cypher#valorant#writing
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A journal page inspired by some talk about this crossover on the Psych discord server! The writing for this page was done by @obsidiancreates
#shawn spencer#psych#psych 2006#gravity falls#my art#stanford pines#journal 3#the psych discord is fueling my artistic ability rn lol#so many people in there with great ideas#not sure if shawn would get along with ford as an adult or not#a lot of the people on the discord are also into the real psychic shawn au#and it just fits so well with gravity falls#oh and the code translates to: way more convincing than that old hack at the fair#which is a reference to the hand witch page in journal 3
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