word-heap - mundane sentence collection
mundane sentence collection

a pile of words in a trenchcoat im new heresay hi to me i would like to meet you :)

297 posts

Reminder That The Safest Way To Communicate Is Using End-to-end Encryption (shoutout Signal For Being

Reminder that the safest way to communicate is using end-to-end encryption (shoutout Signal for being the best option out there) and even then make sure you trust the person you're talking to. No level of encryption can protect you from the other party accidentally outing you.

PSA: Never Discuss Private Affairs In Your DMs, Especially Contraception And Abortion. Social Media Moguls

PSA: never discuss private affairs in your DMs, especially contraception and abortion. Social media moguls will absolutely sell you out to the government. There are already cases of people being charged based on evidence in their DMs.

  • nuubn3
    nuubn3 liked this · 10 months ago
  • noodelzmop
    noodelzmop liked this · 10 months ago
  • almi4568
    almi4568 reblogged this · 10 months ago
  • almi4568
    almi4568 liked this · 10 months ago
  • belmoley
    belmoley reblogged this · 10 months ago
  • belmoley
    belmoley liked this · 10 months ago
  • iridescentmothgirl
    iridescentmothgirl liked this · 10 months ago
  • hauntednachotimemachine
    hauntednachotimemachine reblogged this · 10 months ago
  • icecreamchick45
    icecreamchick45 liked this · 11 months ago
  • jorkingdepeanuts
    jorkingdepeanuts liked this · 11 months ago
  • sillypotatobleh
    sillypotatobleh liked this · 11 months ago
  • hippopoutamus
    hippopoutamus liked this · 11 months ago
  • safetytree
    safetytree liked this · 11 months ago
  • 42blackcats
    42blackcats reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • ender--gaming
    ender--gaming reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • bananabread108
    bananabread108 liked this · 1 year ago
  • attentiondeficitastartes
    attentiondeficitastartes reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • attentiondeficitastartes
    attentiondeficitastartes liked this · 1 year ago
  • ghosts-cant-die-twice
    ghosts-cant-die-twice liked this · 1 year ago
  • snoweep
    snoweep reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • snoweep
    snoweep liked this · 1 year ago
  • centropristis
    centropristis reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • centropristis
    centropristis liked this · 1 year ago
  • mooniemenace
    mooniemenace liked this · 1 year ago
  • wishicouldpostfromsecondaryblogs
    wishicouldpostfromsecondaryblogs liked this · 1 year ago
  • iwannaplaybg3butimbroke
    iwannaplaybg3butimbroke reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • iwannaplaybg3butimbroke
    iwannaplaybg3butimbroke liked this · 1 year ago
  • grimmzmoth
    grimmzmoth liked this · 1 year ago
  • thesilliestt
    thesilliestt reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • thesilliestt
    thesilliestt liked this · 1 year ago
  • resilient-radical
    resilient-radical liked this · 1 year ago
  • casuallyodd
    casuallyodd reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • leo-the-worm
    leo-the-worm liked this · 1 year ago
  • roombagod75
    roombagod75 reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • roombagod75
    roombagod75 liked this · 1 year ago
  • rosethrorn
    rosethrorn liked this · 1 year ago
  • whateverhappenedididnotdoit
    whateverhappenedididnotdoit liked this · 1 year ago
  • autismvampyre
    autismvampyre reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • autismvampyre
    autismvampyre liked this · 1 year ago
  • ilovecheesemorethanjesus
    ilovecheesemorethanjesus liked this · 1 year ago
  • gl0ssix
    gl0ssix reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • gl0ssix
    gl0ssix liked this · 1 year ago
  • twinkletwinkletruly
    twinkletwinkletruly reblogged this · 1 year ago
  • twinkletwinkletruly
    twinkletwinkletruly liked this · 1 year ago
  • magnificentnachobeliever
    magnificentnachobeliever liked this · 1 year ago
  • angelicaexists
    angelicaexists liked this · 1 year ago
  • igotshot
    igotshot liked this · 1 year ago
  • itsmebytch001
    itsmebytch001 liked this · 1 year ago
  • michirutenoh
    michirutenoh reblogged this · 1 year ago

More Posts from Word-heap

1 year ago

> If the metaphorical village becomes a gated community with no new blood the community will die as it's inhabitants die (or in this case stop logging into reddit). this is a better death than rotting into a meme cesspit

I think to a degree you've both missed the point here. It's not about driving away either new users or experienced experts, it's about maintaining the communities mission. I come from Stack Exchange and we talk a lot about building a resource rather than building a community (although of course there is a community around maintaining the resource, that's a side-effect, not the main goal).

If there aren't enough protections against repetitive new-user questions / interactions, the resource you're building will become useless. It will become hard to find interesting content, making it equally useless for newbies and for experts. In an ideal world, new users would be able to get answers via FAQ or by searching around and finding previous instances of it -- stack overflow tries to solve this with duplicate closure (where every duplicate ends up as a "signpost" to the canonical post, adding more "signposts" with every duplicate).

But the root of the problem is that new users can't figure out how to (or if you're more cynical, can't be arsed to) figure out how to search. This is why the largest "community" on Stack Overflow doesn't actually consist of askers or answerers -- it's the curators, those who re-tag posts, who edit to fix up formatting issues, who vote & comment directing new users to resources about how to use the site, and yes, those who close questions that aren't a good fit or are duplicates. Is it a perfect system? No. But it's the best one that I've seen.

having to break down and actually make a reddit post asking about something is just

hey r/waterbottles! i've been wondering how everyone likes to clean their bottles. i personally use a bottle brush, but i've heard good things about cleaning tablets too. anybody have other methods they swear by?

AUTOMOD: your post has been deleted because you're so fuckinggg stupid. in the future, please refer to our faq before posting your incoherent ramblings, and make sure to check out our style guide regarding the proper terms for jugs/canteens. cunt.


Tags :
2 years ago

The end of the Stack Overflow Strike

Note: Skip to the bottom if you just want a quick list of strike outcomes and not story mode.

For those of you who missed it (I know many of the engineers I talk with day to day did), starting on June 5th the Stack Exchange elected moderators and many curators and users announced they were on strike. The relationship between the company and the community had been slowly slipping for the last 5+ years as company actions gradually degraded the once robust trust that community members had in how their platform was being run. However, none of these changes had truly threatened the long term existence of the site like the decision to unilaterally override the existing, community established policy to ban GenAI content with a new, secret, moderator only policy that effectively forced moderators to stop moderating GenAI content (this policy as since been released, and I'll link it later).

The combination of a policy whose contents were secret and which went directly against community consensus (and which many believed would ultimately result in the death of the site) convinced over 100 moderators and over 1500 users to sign on to the strike letter. These users included two key groups: first, Charcoal, a highly effective community built and maintained spam prevention group, chose to shut down their operations as a part of the strike, and second, the Stack Overflow moderator team agreed to stopped moderating, resulting in a backlog of nearly 20,000 unhandled flags during the strike.

This impact was enough to bring the company to the table. Despite despite banning strike organization from taking place on stack exchange chat rooms or sites (which required moving to a discord server for organization) and hush-hush messages to striking moderators implying that their moderator status may be revoked under certain conditions, the community held strong and the strike began.

Mere days after the strike began, the VP of Community reached out to ask for a set of community representatives to negotiate with in private. Elections ran through week 1 of the strike and ultimately 3 moderators were selected who would communicate with strikers in the strike discord and communicate with the company representatives in private, allowing negotiations began at the start of week two. These negotiations were interrupted by a couple of events which I've previously written about:

First, the botched release of the "AI Question Assistant" which turned out to pass questions to the ChatGPT API with a prompt and return the result (quickly jailbroken, widely mocked, and ultimately scrapped by the company). It had problem such as changing what question was being asked, fixing bugs in code, and answering the question instead of fixing it.

Second, the removal of the Data Dumps (with the implication that this was to prevent GenAI companies from training on it), which turned out to be a directive straight from the CEO and was quickly reverted after a call from one of the company's founders.

And finally, clear misrepresentations of the strike to any media outlet that contact them.

After the first month, spirits were not great. Progress was occurring but at nowhere near the pace that people had hoped for. The strikers had hoped for an immediate retraction of the GenAI policy, which had not yet happened, however what the negotiators were able to share sounded promising, so the strike continued.

Finally, after nearly 8 weeks on strike, the negotiators came to an agreement and announced that Stack Overflow had conceded on nearly every concern. Here's a quick rundown of the results:

One strike demand was that the private policy moderators had received would be published and so it was. This made it clear to everyone how damning that policy was. In summary, it restricted moderators to only act on self-admission and otherwise treat GenAI content as human (even when it includes clear tells such as talking about a knowledge cutoff date).

The second was that this moderator-only policy was retracted. It was replaced with a heuristic based policy that would allow moderators to act on certain heuristics, which was effectively the status quo prior to the strike.

They also made a commitment to keep the data explorer, the data dumps, and the API freely available. This wasn't initially part of the strike demands but was added after the data dump snafu in the middle of the strike.

They agreed to never mandate moderator actions in private that were not justified by a public policy.

They agreed to update their press policy to ensure that statements about the community are reviewed by their internal community team and not sent out without consultation (which is apparently what happened).

They granted moderators an ability to establish when the company has failed to hold up its end of the moderator agreement (by vote). If the moderators established that the agreement was violated, they have committed to reverting any changes that were made improperly and do them again, in a way that is compliant with the agreement.

They updated their policies around how they will handle support cases complaining about moderator action to involve actually consulting with the moderator(s) who made the decision, and also their policies around communicating with moderators more widely. Mods have been asking for a return to more active and open communication from the company and these changes are a huge step in the right direction there.

And finally they made some softer commitments around taking community feedback under account, being more transparent with platform changes, and making an effort to communicate more with users and moderators.

These changes are massive and while there is still some talk of continuing the strike until there is more follow through on these commitments, many users are chomping at the bit to get back to work. The vote currently stands at around 95% approval for ending the strike, so I think we can safely call this over, and a massive win for the Stack Overflow community. And if there's more you want to know about Stack Exchange or the strike itself, my askbox is open ^.^


Tags :
2 years ago

Just opened tumblr in incognito and apparently staff really is serious about keeping chrono dash... even though new users can't set it as the default?

Just Opened Tumblr In Incognito And Apparently Staff Really Is Serious About Keeping Chrono Dash... Even

Tags :
1 year ago

what if it all worked out

1 year ago

Hello, crab fans. Wow, you have been having a busy time! On July 29, also known as Crabs Day, you took to TumblrMart to give the gift of crabs to your pals. And boy, did we notice—not just all the great crab memes and trending posts on the day but also the burst in sales which made up a substantial financial boost to the running costs at Tumblr. And it truly took our breath away.  

We got so excited we went back to the drawing board and designed some crab checkmarks, which we teased by dressing your regular checkmarks up as crabs on the day. On August 1, we launched a regular little crab checkmark and a rainbow crab checkmark for gifting and treating yourselves.

Hello, Crab Fans. Wow, You Have Been Having A Busy Time! On July 29, Also Known AsCrabs Day, You Took
Hello, Crab Fans. Wow, You Have Been Having A Busy Time! On July 29, Also Known AsCrabs Day, You Took

Here are some stats from Crabs Day:

You gifted 8k crabs that day. That’s an almost 20k% increase in crab sales.

We saw a more than 7k% increase in total Tumblrmart sales.

All this money goes straight back into running costs—such as a month’s worth of power costs for Tumblr application servers. That’s all you! You’re doing that! You’re keeping Tumblr around with your generosity toward your friends. Crabs be thanking ye ❤


Tags :