« first day (1389 days earlier)      last day (574 days later) » 

01:34
Should've said "most people"
of course I also close obvious trash when I see it :-p
 
1 hour later…
02:42
0
Q: "Code not properly formatted as code" when attempting to blockquote a table

ShornIn a recent answer, I was attempting to cite a specific line in a table from the official documentation. Due to it's formatting, I thought it would be better to format the quoted section as a table. This prompted the "Your post appears to contain code that is not properly formatted as code" which...

đźš˝
 
2 hours later…
04:40
Shadow-banning is extremely rude, evil and harmful. It’s a lie to people, you’re wasting their time, and people don’t get the chance to improve, nor learn. You’re throwing them under the bus.
And people do realize they are being shadow-banned. It creates mistrust and anger. That benefits nobody.
05:31
To be somewhat fair, I think the people whom we'd want to shadow-ban (read: ban-evaders) are already wasting people's time and have declined previous opportunities to improve.
That is not to say that I think it's a good idea.
 
4 hours later…
09:15
*scratches "calling people misanthropic while doing nothing but negative contributions" cell in bingo card *
09:26
@RyanM <This account is temporarily suspended network-wide for bad puns. The suspension period ends on May 25th, 3023.>
09:48
2
Q: Bounty assignment retraction grace period

Bogdan MartWhen you vote on something up or down, you have few minutes to change your mind. But when you assign bounty it's just one click and bum, it's done. I've just missclicked on wrong answer, and assigned bounty to wrong person, and I feel terribly bad about it. On this question Make two java JDBC Dat...

 
2 hours later…
12:06
0
Q: Why was this question reopened when there were already many duplicates explaining the problem which could be used to solve OP's problem

JasonI recently closed Why does my code work without inheritance but not with inheritance in C++? as it has plenty of duplicates(around 6) of which I can found in the first search on google. But then some user reopened this question without giving any reason. My question was this question incorrectly ...

12:36
0
Q: Snippets are not working

0stone0Starting from around 12:30 UTC, all Stack snippets stopt working. Is this a local issue, or is there a bug on the server side? console.log('Foo Bar');

12:54
0
Q: Latest Chrome breaks Stack Snippets (113.0.5672.126)

0stone0I've just upgraded my Google Chrome to version 113.0.5672.126 (Official Build) (arm64) on macOS 13.2.1. But afterwards, all Stack Snippets stopped working I've uninstalled all my extensions Restarted laptop There are no errors in the browser console Network tab shows a 200 on the https://stac...

 
1 hour later…
14:18
0
Q: How to find out why this flag was declined, when the question is deleted?

AndréI raised a "not an answer flag" for this answer: Remove line break from br for mobile/tablet devices. I'm curious because it was the only flag of mine rejected this month. However, I can't see when I open the link. Since it was deleted it makes me think that something should have been flagged the...

 
1 hour later…
15:36
0
Q: Can a C++ tagged question be closed as a duplicate of a C tagged question when the answer applies to both the languages

JasonI come across many C++ asked/tagged questions for which there already exists many duplicate posts but sometimes those posts are tagged with only C. For example, suppose a user asks a C++ tagged question saying ternary operator does not work with the following code: cout << endl; (afterCalc)? goto...

16:28
@Andreasdetestscensorship the vast majority of people I have seen complain about shadow banning on various platforms are, in fact, not shadow banned, just being ignored by other users.
Also, see Ryan's point. You don't exactly get shadow banned for good behavior.
Seems to me a little like saying "jailing the people who stormed the US Capitol on 2021-01-06 is cruel and they don't get the chance to improve!" Well, they are being jailed for a reason. People who get shadowbanned get shadowbanned for a reason. In an environment like the internet where real banning can often be easily circumvented by creating a new account (even if it requires a new IP address and a VPN), shadowbanning is often far more effective and less costly.
You hide the problematic user from everyone else, and they often don't realize their garbage behavior isn't reaching others... so they don't go creating more useless accounts
How a site handles shadowbanning users or communications once asked probably has room for improvement in most casts, though
16:44
@TylerH Very US-centric, and also very much not the same. Jailing them is what we currently do. Shadow-banning them would be to let them go free, but ignored by everyone on the streets, the shops, and everywhere. When they call the police, they come through, get spoken to, but no actions. Cashiers in shops ignore them. Other people in the traffic ignore them. If they ask what’s wrong, they get no answers.
And you having seen lots of people complain they are shadow-banned, only goes to show that the mere existence of the concept creates distrust, and directed anger.
You can currently tell them that SE doesn’t use this concept, and explain why others ignore them, and why they don’t reach through.
May I suggest that part of your support for shadow-banning is because you come from a low-trust society?
I see the effects of high trust every day, and it really does reduce tension, anger and hostility, and makes people more willing to learn, adapt and change themselves and their behaviour.
Shadow-banning has a very damaging psychological effect on the individual.
It’s also part of why your country fails so badly at converting criminals to good citizens that stop hurting the society. Your prisons are about punishment, ignoring the needs of the individual convict, and to ban them from learning.
 
2 hours later…
18:26
@Andreasdetestscensorship It was an example and I am in the US so it's natural for me to use a US-based event as an example. It should be readily apparent to anyone, not just US citizens, how violently storming the nation's capitol and attempting to overthrow the peaceful transition of gov't is a bad thing and jail-worthy, rather than "well this will be a learning lesson for them"
@Andreasdetestscensorship It only creates distrust among the people who we don't want on the platforms in the first place
which is not really an issue
@Andreasdetestscensorship the failings of the prison system in the US are separate/orthogonal to the need to imprison someone in the first place
Every nation has prison systems, most just do a better job at rehabilitation
It's also irrelevant to the argument of shadowbanning someone. Shadowbanned users can still interact with the site. Their interactions are just not seen by other people.
you could argue it'd be back for SE's image, but imean... is it really any worse than "Sorry, you can only ask one question every 6 months"
A person who violated the rules so egregiously to be shadow-banned is now prevented from abusing other users, without being prevented from using the site. This is a win-win.
my understanding is once the SG is in place, users who are close to being banned will be more likely to be entered into it, same for users who've never asked a question to begin with. In effect this will work a lot like a shadowban, except that there's gonna be such a large shortage of people using SG that it won't really have any real effect.
I don't think it's useful to throw around absolutisms like "shadow bamming is very damaging psychologically" or "extremely rude, evil, and harmful". The former is highly dependent on the individual and the latter is such an extreme accusation that it's flat out dismissable.
There's very little about any online platform's rules or enforcement of them that is "extremely rude, evil, and harmful"
even Twitter under Elon Musk doesn't really meet that bar
outside of, of course, making the users wait 24 hours for the post to age out of the system
18:32
@KevinB "a large shortage of people using SG" is a confusing way to phrase whatever it is you are trying to say there
You mean there won't be enough reviewers to handle the volume of posts?
after the initial hype, yea
@TylerH Why have jail if the purpose is not for it to be a learning purpose? Then why don’t you just execute them instead? So yes, I do think they deserve a learning lesson. And also, jail serves as a means of signalling to others the consequences of this actions, so others won’t do it too. That’s why their learning lesson must be of a certain length.
@KevinB Yeah, remains to be seen, though I still hope for an outcome more along the lines of "question got some non-positive responses in SG and no completed review, so it doesn't get posted" rather than "always post SG posts that go uncompleted after n days"
that would require someone to interact with it, but yea
@Andreasdetestscensorship Well the US does have capital punishment and people are sometimes put to death. But executing people is more expensive than housing them in jail and feeding them for the rest of their life, believe it or not. I agree with you that the US prison system should focus significantly more on rehabilitation than it does.
18:35
@TylerH No, it creates distrust amongst everyone, including those that think they have been banned, are worried about it, and those that see false signs.
Good.
@Andreasdetestscensorship OK, well then everything creates distrust among everyone by that logic
@TylerH Execution is a sickness of the system. It’s worse than an individual committing murder.
I don't necessarily disagree, but that's at least two subjects beside the point by now
nothing short of removing all barriers to entry and no longer banning users would stop users from distrusting the system
18:37
@TylerH It’s a combination, and the fact that you don’t trust each others, lead to not giving convicts decond chances, and for the convicts not to want to adapt and learn.
@KevinB exactly
even then people would think they're shadowbanned simply because their question is so garbage noone wants to look at it
Of course, not helping people after they leave prison, economically, for instance, is a reason for going back to crime. So, a combination. Back to point.
@Andreasdetestscensorship the failure is actually deeper than that. Like with most things, it's a failure of the education system first and foremost.
All issues stem from the poor education system, ultimately
@KevinB What? No. There are bad actors, and a barrier to entry is needed. What you say makes no sense.
@TylerH Not all, but I can agree with putting a lot of fault there.
@KevinB And you can now easily tell them that’s not the case, at all, and never will be.
18:41
@Andreasdetestscensorship Not sure what you mean by helping people economically. Are you saying after someone serves a prison sentence we should be giving them money? Why not give money to people who don't commit crimes, instead?
@Andreasdetestscensorship distrustful people will still distrust you. People on the internet are often dumb these days. All it takes is one person from a conspiratorial website or discussion board to say "they're lying, of course they would say they don't ban anyone" and now you have a bunch of crazy people believing it even if it isn't true.
People inherently want to be a part of an in-group. That's why conspiracy theories are so popular
@KevinB Yes, it’s very different. Shadow-banning is a dishonest action against the user(s). Telling the truth upfront, blocking them, and letting them clearly know it, is an act of honesty. Honesty creates trust, and willingness to change. Dishonesty creates mistrust and anger.
Thinking the system has it out for you is a much easier mental model WRT a person's 'locus of control' to bear, especially for the less educated/less mentally robust
"It's not through any fault of mine, but through the fault of others/the system that I am disenfranchised"
it isn't dishonest to throttle who sees a users posts based on the success of the user's past posts, it's what we already do with post scores
Improve your past posts, and your future posts will be more visible
@TylerH Yes, I do. What do you expect of a prisoner thag gets out, hasn’t seen the light of society for years, struggles to adapt, has a history of crimes, and knows little of how to live a normal life? Can’t get a job immediately. Struggles to make a living? Hey, let’s go back to what’s familiar: crime.
And if they have the impression that the society doesn’t want to help them, support them, and want them to have a good life? Then why care for the society? Give a shit about them. Do crime. Hurt the ones that hurt you. Don’t care about the rules. Do what gets one personally rich.
i mean
> Do what gets me personally rich.
that's what everyone does
18:47
@KevinB Because you live in a low-trust society. That’s what the members of a low-trust society believes.
Members of a high-trust society don’t believe that.
And that’s why a high-trust society is so much more effective.
🤣🤣🤣
a "high-trust society" is simply more effective at controlling the narrative
Do I trust people? No, not really. Do I think people mostly care about themselves? Yeah, sure. But I think that we all want our society to succeed, and that we want to help each other. And that this need is important.
@KevinB That aligns very well with you having a mistrust in everyone.
i mean
@Andreasdetestscensorship well I'd rather we rehabilitate them so they are prepared for some kind of job rather than just pay them money
Otherwise it is essentially rewarding people for committing crimes
if you have to resort to claiming anyone who disagrees with you is just naive, i don't think you really have any ground to stand on. it's not worth even debating the topic with you.
18:51
No work? Free food and access to healthcare and a gym membership? And you get paid when you get out? Sign me up homie!
OK, they do sometimes do work
But to that point, I do think we should pay them for the work they do. The whole 'incarcerated slavery' thing is not OK in my opinion
@TylerH A prison is not normal life. A prison of rehabilitation is a safe haven. Normal life is not. There is only so much you can accomplish inside the prison. You need a system to support them after they get released.
@Andreasdetestscensorship We have one and it is called the parole system
@TylerH I find it very peculiar how you can find taking away somebody’s freedom a reward.
@Andreasdetestscensorship but they haven't had their freedom taken away? At this point they are released from prison
@TylerH But you don’t have a functioning welfare system, and it shows in statistics.
18:53
you won't convince anyone to agree with you by just stating they're wrong because they're naive. If you think a high-trust society exists, prove it
@Andreasdetestscensorship Sure, a welfare system would be for everyone, not just former prison inmates
@TylerH Their freedom was gone all the years they spent in prison, and their freedom of preparing their life is irrevocably gone.
@Andreasdetestscensorship Well yeah, because they committed a crime
that's why they went to prison in the first place
@TylerH A functioning welfare system should necessarily take care of the former prisoners? But you don’t have that.
are you saying now that we shouldn't imprison people for crimes?
18:55
eh, is that true tho?
can ex-felons not access our welfare systems?
@KevinB I don't know the answer to that, but it probably varies state to state, like their ability to vote
i'm fairly certain they can, in most states, but they must qualify for it like any other, and many states are now implementing work requirements to access it
I’m saying your welfare is very minimal, (of course it varies from state to state), but in general, it’s not functioning very well (I can certainly point out several mistakes in our own, too).
that's fine
18:57
And for a former criminal, if the welfare system isn’t functioning, their safe way of living, is more crimes.
yes, that's the way things work currently
now what does any of this have to do with shadowbanning?
@Andreasdetestscensorship OK, so someone commits a crime. The punishment for which is a prison sentence of, let's say 1 year. After a year, they get released from prison. You suggest we pay the prisoner at that point as some sort of welfare... but we don't currently pay anyone for some sort of welfare like that.
So you are essentially rewarding someone for going to jail and increasing the rate of recidivism. People already commit crimes after getting out jail at a fairly high rate just to go back because in prison they don't have to work or have other 'real world' obligations. Food, rent, healthcare... all free and provided. What do you think will happen if you add in "we now pay former convicts money, too"? You think the crime rate will go down?
@TylerH I do suggest you take care of that person while they are not living a normal life with a job, yes.
And I think you should help everyone, not just prisoners.
@Andreasdetestscensorship Well we do
prisoners currently benefit from a very socialist structure. Taxpayers bear the burden of prisons entirely
Making sure they can afford a living and food, and basic needs, including activities for a good life, is part of thag, Tyler.
18:59
including the care and feeding of the prisoners
I am speaking not about life inside the prison, but before and after.
@Andreasdetestscensorship I don't know what 'afford a living' means, exactly, but we do provide most prisoners with things like books, access to computers/the internet etc. in a supervised capacity
@Andreasdetestscensorship OK, it sounds like you keep changing what it is you are talking about, so I don't know if we can really have a productive conversation about it
You seem to just not want to help them, because you don’t want to pay the costs for it, which is tax.
@TylerH I haven’t changed the topic, but you seem to repeatedly misunderstand me.
@Andreasdetestscensorship Have you missed the multiple points where I have said I think we should do more to rehabilitate people while they are in prison, or where I said we should pay prisoners for the work they do while in prison (which currently does not happen)?
@TylerH No, and I agree with that, but you need to do far more.
19:02
I mean, i feel like i understand what you're saying quite well, but i think you fail to understand the scale of the problem that exists and how unreasonable it is to expect the system we have today to become something else.
OK, well, I don't need to do anything, because I'm not involved with deciding what happens in our criminal justice system. I do vote for elected officials who, by and large, are pro-criminal justice reform.
@KevinB Well, other countries can handle what you can’t. The USA is quite rich, but you concentrate all the money amongst the few, and you don’t want to pay taxes, because you don’t trust that other people deserve your money, and you don’t trust that the government is competent to use it correctly.
So it’s not an issue with scale.
yes, however, how are you going to get politicians to make these changes?
how are you going to get 50 states to agree to these changes?
Actually I think it is an issue with scale. There are way too many people in the world right now. Especially if we want everyone to have the quality of life that the top 1 or 2 % of people in the world enjoy
How are you going to convince taxpayers to pay more, when we're already underpaid and overworked?
19:04
@TylerH You’re gonna have to elaborate on that, because that’s in no way an explanation for the assumed issue of scale.
@Andreasdetestscensorship a significant portion of US citizens actually do want to pay taxes because they understand that's how you have nice things as a nation. Don't believe what Fox News tells you
how are you going to convince politicians to do what's in the best interest of individuals, when they're being funded by big business?
@Andreasdetestscensorship what's a country that handles some thing that you think the US isn't handling/can't handle?
any country will do as an example
@TylerH For the most part, you should look at statistics (too many for me to point to), and you'll see that the USA does considerably worse than a lot of countries in a lot of areas. But hey, let me mention some stuff: welfare system, healthcare system, pureness of the political system, democracy, school system, food quality, etc, etc.
and when individuals are pushing for things that favor big business due to propaganda by said business?
19:08
@Andreasdetestscensorship sure, but what is one example of such a country? I can't possibly refute every argument about every gov't system for every country... I don't have time for that
so just give me one and I will respond with how scale affects the outcome
it'd certainly be nice to live in an ideal world
@KevinB I think you're running out of arguments, which is why you're giving me so many "what about" questions that I can't possibly answer in time, but for this particular one, this is an issue with your system that I have pointed out many times. Yeah, this is one of the biggest issues in your country.
@TylerH Norway, Denmark, Iceland, Finland, The Netherlands, Australia, Heck, even Britain, Canada, New Zealand, etc.
@KevinB Yes.
All of which rely heavily on these evil countries you despise
45 secs ago, by Kevin B
All of which rely heavily on these evil countries you despise
19:11
@TylerH I don't watch things like Fox News and CNN. Why would I? It's really low-quality garbage that is completely irrelevant to me.
@KevinB I clearly have no idea what that statement of yours means, so it's quite unreasonable and stupid of you to do that.
@Andreasdetestscensorship OK, let's take the first country in your example, Norway. Norway has a population of 5.5 million people, making it about the size, per capita, of the state of South Carolina, which in the US is 23rd most populist state. So about half of the states are more populous. Put another way, South Carolina makes up about 1.5% of the population of the United States
@TylerH Will there be more, or am I waiting for nothing?
There will be more
Sure. Then I'll wait.
South Carolina is also about 4000km from the most populous state, California. I just chose that one as they are on opposite ends of the contiguous United States.
So South Carolina is to the US as Norway is to... perhaps the EU, in terms of population
and in distance, Spain on one end of Europe is about the same distance from Moscow
Which is why I think anyone arguing about how the US is so dysfunctional compared to any other single country is wrong and should instead compare the US to the EU as a basis, because that's a much more accurate comparison, considering how our government is structured
The US was originally much more similar to the EU before the bill of rights was passed, consolidating a lot of power in the federal government; each state was basically a sovereign entity
the US at that point didn't even have its own army; each state had their own, and the US couldn't levy taxes from the states, they had to ask nicely
19:20
Russia isn't in the EU, but most of the actual EU has far more functional welfare systems than the US
@ZoestandswithUkraine Yes, the Moscow thing was for the distance, not for anything else
The EU is also considerably more populous than the US, and Norway is not a member of the EU.
again, missing the point
it's the size
Neither is Britain anymore
@ZoestandswithUkraine I still laugh at the internet comments from Brexit saying Britain shouldn't be in the Euro cup or Eurovision anymore because they "aren't part of Europe"
19:21
@TylerH You still haven’t addressed why the size matters, and why things are different due to the size differences.
@Andreasdetestscensorship How easy do you think it is to get 5 million people to agree on something, even by proxy?
And also, Norway is one of the smallest countries on my list. (Iceland is smaller). You are cherry-picking.
@Andreasdetestscensorship I literally am not. I asked you to give me an example.
If anyone is cherry picking it is you
Then please include all the members on my list, and also combine them.
why combine them?
19:22
And my list is not exhaustive.
they aren't all using the same system.
Compared to getting 350 million people to agree on something, who live as far apart (or significantly farther if you consider Hawaii and Alaska to, say Florida or New York) as someone in Moscow vs someone in Lisbon or Madrid, is much harder than getting 5 million people to agree on something
You don't need 5 million to agree on something
especially when you consider other things like demographics and the cultural tensions from things like immigration
@KevinB Why combine all the US states? You’re quite similar to the EU. Might as well include all EU states. You know, the differences in size are uninteresting. It’s the ways the size impacts something that’s interesting, and why for that.
19:24
because the states are bound by the federal system.
@TylerH 20% of Norway is immigrants.
You need the adult population to vote for representatives that 1. have actual power at scale, and 2. aren't being bought out by companies
That's nice. 95% of the US is immigrants :-)
@TylerH Cool. You’re stretching things.
@ZoestandswithUkraine I agree. One issue I have is the size of the house of representatives relative to the number of their constituents
19:25
> stretching things.
lol
@Andreasdetestscensorship how so? Unless someone is primarily Native American, they are an immigrant, at least within the last couple hundred years
It's called a democracy, a thing the US pretends to have, but it really doesn't when you combine the two-party system, the bordering oppression of new parties and independents, and bribery (or lobbying, as the politicians and companies involved prefer calling it) of politicians. The US could be like Europe with its income, but it would require tearing out the entire government structure, and replacing it with something that isn't a dumpster fire being extinguished with oil
@KevinB I still don’t understand what you mean by your message, but it’s quite a burden to put on somebody to say they despise your country. I don’t despise the USA. I am in fact quite happy that USS Gerald R. Ford is in Norway at the moment. I don’t despise you. I wish you succeeded more. I wish you your country was better.
we do too.
Even considering recent demographics, e.g. people who immigrated while they were alive, the US has significantly more immigration, and a starkly different type, compared to Norway. The US has 90% more immigrants in its borders than Norway has people, total
19:28
I do however have Chinese friends that despise the USA. I can ensure you that despising your country is quite far from what I do.
@ZoestandswithUkraine I agree, for the most part. We could do a lot by just re-instituting high-level income taxes like we used to have
instituting a corporate leadership wage ratio ceiling (we talked about this here the other day IIRC), etc.
@TylerH Again, the total numbers are irrelevant. What’s relevant, is per capita.
forbid external funding of political campaigns/candidates and give everyone X amount of dollars (based on how many people are eligible to vote for the candidate)
the total numbers do matter, when you need to enact change
Sure, but that, along with gun regulations and a number of other things that would be objectively good for society will not happen without a complete government reform. Or, more realistically, a new civil war, which isn't fun to think about because the control of the nuclear launch codes are on the line if it does happen
19:30
@Andreasdetestscensorship You are wrong. You asked how scale is relevant, and I'm telling you, the absolute numbers do absolutely matter. You can't compare a system of 5 million to a system of 330 million
@TylerH I think that’s ineffective and not possible to achieve directly at the moment. You need to somehow fix the smaller issues first, while working together to fix the political system. I’m not saying it’s easy. But you can’t dismiss what I say because it’s hard. That defeatist mindset is what brings you to the bottom.
@TylerH Everything scales unless something is a hard constant. Please tell me what specifically is a hard constant, and I will start believing you.
Take asset management for e.g. an IT department. Managing 5-50 assets is easy, possibly child's play. Managing 50-500 is not to hard... a fun challenge. Managing 500-5000 is demanding; it requires work and consideration, but is certainly manageable. Managing 5,000-50,000? Now you're solidly in the 'at scale' range. 50,000+ assets? This gets hard.
you mean you can't just add another manager for every 5 assets?
But it’s still doable, because you will also have more people to manage it.
@Andreasdetestscensorship that's certainly a naive outlook :-)
19:35
that's the entire point though isn't it? it's not scaling up 1:1. it never does
Then please explain which things specifically don’t scale 1:1, and why. Analogies are not sufficient.
now you you have 50 managers. Who manages them? well, now we have 10 more to manage those 50, that's a new cost we didn't have before
the alternative is having less managers, and now you have a system that doesn't run as smoothly as before
Yes, all of these problems can be fixed, but it's not a matter of just making the numbers bigger
they require new solutions
I mean, one way you could try and fix an issue is to restore our gov't representation to what it was around the year 1800; one US House representative averaged 34,609 constituents. Today the average is 761,169. But do you think the US House would still function if there were 4,000 voting representatives?
Might be a fun experiment, but I think it would be pretty chaotic
@TylerH If you look at one system in isolation, sure. But the EU consists of 447 million spread across several countries with large political diversity, and still manages to have national healthcare systems that are free or mostly free. Each member country has their own system, but a whole lot of it is based on the same two models. That site isn't even limited to the EU, but includes several European countries
19:38
The EU Parliament, representing 100 million more people than the US, only has ~700 people in it total
@ZoestandswithUkraine I will say that some EU member states have corruption to levels which considerably negatively impact the quality of the healthcare system.
@ZoestandswithUkraine I think the US should have a national healthcare system. I wish it did.
Anyway, as much as an interesting discussion this is (and quite a bit annoying too :P), I have to pack for a train that leaves in a few hours, and I also must sleep. So I don’t have time to remain here, or else I’ll miss somebody’s wedding.
ew, i'd skip the wedding
@KevinB Now you’re being unreasonable again.
19:46
@Andreasdetestscensorship Oh, yeah, there's definitely quality issues in various countries
@TylerH It should, and it can, but it doesn't and won't because of the aforementioned form of government and completely screwed distribution of power and money
I mean, take taxes for example: specifically, the process of having to do taxes. It's automatic in Europe, though an early calculation is generally shown for corrections for stuff that hasn't been registered. When I get my taxes, I just look over it, press the button saying it looks good to me, and move on with my life in a couple minutes. In the US, this form of system is being actively prevented by tax calculation software providers bribing the aforementioned politicians in the aforementioned
form of government
@ZoestandswithUkraine Yes, we can thank Turbotax and now Intuit for that
Their heavy lobbying of the gov't to prevent the IRS from developing an automated system is appalling IMO
i mean, for the most part my tax prep involves logging in, clicking go, clicking next about a dozen times, and i'm done
@KevinB what do you use out of curiosity? I use Turbotax which isn't particularly difficult but is still significantly more clicks than ~12
would love to reduce the number of clicks
taxact
I will try to remember that come Jan/Feb next year
19:55
@TylerH Exactly. And nearly every single major "why is it like this?" can be traced to companies bribing politicians, and doing so legally by slapping the lobbying label on it, making that thing worse for everyone for no other good reason than money
they do still try to get you to upgrade quite often to pay for their premium services, but they weren't sued by the state of mississippi for maliciously fooling people into thinking the premium service is required
unlike turbotax
my company being with adp helps, since adp is integrated into these systems too
i don't need my w2, effectively
And the only way to fix it is reforming the entire government, because the politicians themselves don't want to change specific legislation (because they get paid for the system being that way), and the companies themselves certainly don't want to lose influence over the government. Incidentally, that's why a reform isn't going to happen either; lobbying and people in power wanting to stay in power
that's why i find it frustrating when people come at this argument with "just change it!"
no u
@KevinB Small break from my packing, because this place is addictive as fuck: I haven’t tried to say «just change it». I know it’s very hard. But you must start somewhere. And it’s fair to remember that the discussion started at the topic of shadow-banning people on SE.
that's because in other (democratic) countries, you can. It's easy to forget how completely screwed the US is politically, particularly when freedom is its #1 label
20:01
There's certainly solutions to a lot of the problems we have here, but none of them are things that we can just do, it doesn't work that way.
@KevinB Then do the things you can do, and fight against the rest, as best as you can. Giving up is not a solution.
@Andreasdetestscensorship except, SE is ran by a small team of people who can "just do" things
@Andreasdetestscensorship in the case of the US, it is
The solution is called "moving from the US"
@Andreasdetestscensorship What is a solution?
@KevinB But that has nothing to do with what the topic ended up being! :P
@KevinB I would hope you’d know better than me, as you’re an American citizen, and hopefully know how to change it, better than me? I’m just not very impressed by a defeatist stance.
20:06
it's easy to sit on the sidelines and say I should put my life on the line, or even less dramatically spend my time "lobbying" against groups much more powerful than I on my own expense, particularly when living in a state so f'n lopsided that there's no chance in hell anything i do will actually do anything to change policies.
@KevinB Yes, it is.
It is surprisingly easy, actually.
The sideline is indeed very comfortable.
But it’s your responsibility to look after your own country. It’s my responsibility to look after mine. Neither of us want to end up like Russia, for instance.
yeah, no
Ok, back to packing, before I need to elaborate.
@Andreasdetestscensorship Ironically, Russia does have free healthcare guaranteed by its constitution. Wikipedia says it was somewhat axed following a 2014 financial crisis, but it is a politically unstable government, so quality drops aren't really all that surprising
I'm more than happy to also sit on the sidelines and enjoy life, ;)
20:16
@ZoestandswithUkraine well with any luck in a week the US will basically cause a global financial meltdown
by defaulting on its debt
because politicians again wanna play politics
so much for republicans being the fiscally responsible ones
Yeahh, that's not gonna be fun
@TylerH Both parties just want power. That's why the debt ceiling exists in the first place
i mean, in this system as it currently stands, it's a requirement for making changes
The only reason it exists is so that whatever branch of the government it was again can hold leverage over the prez, particularly when there are opposing parties involved
nothing happens when the houses are split anymore
well, nothing good, anyway
20:48
0
Q: Missing margin around "post your answer" button

Ben the CoderWhen I'm not logged into my SO account, under the "Your Answer" field, I see the post your answer button, along with some text to the left of it (I'm not using an RTL layout) that has no margins. Not sure if the text or the button is the one that's supposed to have margins, but it looks not very ...

21:34
@ZoestandswithUkraine we actually do, fully free, and it's pretty decent at its job (it's underfunded in many cases, but that is easily solved the moment we stop pouring astronomical amounts into military expenses)
@OlegValteriswithUkraine oh, nice. I couldn't really find any recent sources to its quality, only that it's underfunded post-2014, but good that the system works
@ZoestandswithUkraine underfunded for sure, but it still is working pretty well - you can get a lot of medical attention just by virtue of being a citizen. With the priorities of the government set strait, it could actually be very good, but alas...
Think of what the US healthcare system could be like if we put even 10% of our military spending toward it...
yowza
i mean, we could have a healthcare system on mars by now
21:56
If humans at large didn't fight over petty stuff, we could've gotten wayyy further than we are now
i mean, but also, war and striving for an ever increasing technologically advanced war chest has lead to the majority of modern day QOL advances, not that they couldn't have possibly occured without it
@ZoestandswithUkraine would be even further if we didn't invent those petty things to justify fighting...
@OlegValteriswithUkraine Farmland?
So, farming? mhm, yeah.
Nomad life was awesome.
22:39
So, I have this issue here… I’m too sleepy to pack. Somebody please come pack for me. No tricks, though.
hah
(as i prepare to go help someone move)
22:59
I do have to move soon, so you seem like the right person. :)
-1
Q: What can I do to get question privliges reinstated on my SO.main account?

Jaxer6563I've recently been banned from asking questions on the SO main site. I looked through the help page, and tried to address the problems in my questions, but the majority of my posts have been received positively and actually revived some helpful answers. There were only 3 of the 10 that I asked th...

@NewPosts what's with all those ban-evading users coming clean on meta lately?
23:20
@OlegValteriswithUkraine It’s Vladimir Putin desperate to find out what’s wrong with the software of his latest missiles.

« first day (1389 days earlier)      last day (574 days later) »