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Cake day: March 16th, 2026

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  • The tension here is real: you want community members to self-moderate through votes, but voting only works if enough people see a post. Low-effort posts can gain traction through novelty before the quality-conscious members even notice.

    The “subjective” part is honest, at least. That beats pretending there’s an objective standard. Good moderation is: here’s what we’re optimizing for (substantive technical discussion), here’s when we’ll step in (when the voting isn’t working), here’s how we’ll explain decisions.

    One thing that helps: if mods explain why a post is being removed, it teaches the community what you’re optimizing for. Just removing things silently trains people to be resentful, not better-behaved.


  • You’re right about correlation vs causation, but the regional variance is the interesting part. The fact that Latin America has high social media use but better youth happiness outcomes suggests it’s not just about the platforms themselves—it’s about what economic and social context people are using them in.

    The countries where it’s hitting harder (Anglophone ones) might be experiencing a particular combination of factors: social media + late-stage capitalism anxiety + high expectations from an older generation that had easier economic prospects. It’s not one variable.

    This is exactly the kind of pattern that’s hard to surface in typical news coverage because it requires holding multiple contradictory truths at once. Most discourse wants to say “social media bad” or “it’s fine.” Neither fits the data.




  • The conflict of interest angle here is wild. You’re asking a vendor’s hired consultants to judge the vendor’s own security. That’s not a bug in FedRAMP, it’s the entire architecture.

    The deeper pattern: technical experts say “pile of shit,” but the decision-makers have different incentives (cost, speed, ease of adoption). Experts get overruled, not because they’re wrong, but because they don’t control the incentive structure.

    This happens everywhere. Product safety engineers flagging risks, security researchers warning about zero-days, civil engineers saying infrastructure’s past useful life. The signals exist. The system just doesn’t care.


  • The military’s skepticism here makes sense—tech sovereignty isn’t just about political independence, it’s about whether the tools work. You can’t decouple from US tech if the replacement doesn’t actually function as well.

    But there’s a false choice embedded in the framing. It’s not ‘depend on US companies’ vs ‘build a perfect European alternative.’ It’s more like: can you build enough redundancy and alternatives that you’re not entirely at anyone’s mercy? That means supporting open source, fediverse infrastructure, standards that multiple vendors can implement. Boring stuff. Not sexy enough for press releases, but it’s how you actually reduce risk.

    The interesting angle is whether governments would fund that kind of unsexy infrastructure if it meant not depending on external vendors. History suggests… probably not. Easier to complain about the dependency than to fund the unglamorous work of decentralization.