That’s how I understood it and what I’m agreeing with. It’s how companies like Cambridge Analytica came to be. How people came to be so manipulated.
That’s how I understood it and what I’m agreeing with. It’s how companies like Cambridge Analytica came to be. How people came to be so manipulated.
No one cares about privacy or rights
First Cambridge Analytica data scandal happend, then the whole world suddenly voted for right wing extremes.
When I was a child, I was told that hunters used to put things like twigs in their boots, so the European badger would let go, when they heard the “leg break”.
Though I doubted it even then.
It’s so nice of employees, to help the company from needing a certain amount of employees.
You don’t have to make things complicated here. If you want to tell people that you use Linux, just say that.
I just might buy this for my neighbor.
Brown, Derren - Tricks Of The Mind. The chapter about memory.
We are only being taught in schools, but never taught how to learn.
That one is great. The sequel to the 1995 film Babe I believe.
That is the whole point of an analogy.
Or start using the shower instead, and stomp it through the grate.
I can’t imagine living and/or working without a window or exit close to me.
Careful! I’ve heard of what happens to Boeing whistleblowers.
There will be a constant breeze if you are standing next to whomever eats all that.
Reminds me of the HUMANCENTiPAD
You lied. I’m done with your racism…
And I asked you to help find the examples you rambled about. But no, you didn’t provide any. Because you can’t. Seeing things that aren’t there.
Actively achieving the opposite of what you want. Unless you are just trolling, in which case, good job…
No you just wrote that I should think about, what a black person would think about the comments in that thread, where I couldn’t find any.
You wrote: “imagine a Black person reading this”
How dare you assume my ethnicity…
I did, and still can’t find any. Please link. It’s not like you are making stuff up.
We have equipment to measure down to microns, and my students often test how fine details they can feel.