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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: July 18th, 2023

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  • Shapillon@lemmy.worldtoHumor@lemmy.worldWhat year is it?
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    2 months ago

    This is important activism. Thank you for doing it and sharing some insights.

    afaik here in France we use paper ballots and physical collection. Which is quite nice after thinking about it a bit.

    What is your opinion on automated solutions being used as an aid for human workers iff it doesn’t replace them?

    Same if they’re used only as a secondary check not a primary counting method?

    PS: I’ll try to raise awareness around me.



  • Shapillon@lemmy.worldtoHumor@lemmy.worldWhat year is it?
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    2 months ago

    It’s a very late reply but here I am.

    Your comment is very interesting and thanks for typing it. After a bit of reflection I think you’re right.

    I learnt a bit recently about the Bush/Al Gore election in the US and how Florida votes were handled. Thanks Climate Town for throwing me down that rabbit hole.

    It shook my confidence quite a bit especially about how automated systems often fail to handle edge cases and how it can create problems down the line.












  • Only that their aim, living in their own country can be seen as political.

    I’d say it is political. As much as any other human rights are.

    If anything, the US/Isntreal military ticks all the boxes.

    Amen

    OK, but terrorism is most certainly not a neutral term.

    I agree it isn’t in the cultural zeitgeist. But I’m genuinely trying to argue that it kinda should be.

    e.g. the IRA were based terrorists.

    Is it partly because it involves targeting civilians? Of course.

    Is it because it can be effective in the context of asymmetric warfare? I’d say probably.







  • Honestly “differently-abled” seems more like a media term than anything linked to either handicapped communities or scientific research. Imho it’s kinda stupid.

    And people speaking on behalf of marginalized communities is a real issue that does a lot of harm. e.g. Autism Speaks

    An expression I encountered helping my roommate work on their education master was “handicapping situations”. It’s a bit unwieldy but I like that it conveys that someone is handicapped by a combination of an ailment, an activity, and a lack of accessibility.

    In other words, someone who’s paraplegic isn’t in a “handicapping situation” when gaming in a chair.

    Or someone who’s dysorthographic isn’t handicapped as long as their not trying to write anything.

    I use handicapped as a shorthand for myself but it’s still a neat concept imho.

    I might be mistranslating some stuff since said roommate is French.

    PS: about the dance, blame it on people insisting on using our disabilities as insults.

    PS2: You’re always gonna hurt someone at one point or another. But it’s not hard to try not to and apologize when it happens imho.