alyaza [they/she]
internet gryphon. admin of Beehaw, mostly publicly interacting with people. nonbinary. they/she
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alyaza [they/she]@beehaw.orgOPMto U.S. News@beehaw.org•These Tenants Are Going on Strike Against ‘Rent Debt’1·19 days agohere’s the website for this initiative:
alyaza [they/she]@beehaw.orgOPMto Gaming@beehaw.org•Star Citizen fans sigh deeply, rub their foreheads as developer casts doubt on Squadron 42's 2026 release: 'I don't know if we're going to make it'21·1 month agoyou’re being pointlessly aggressive about something that is subjective and which obviously cannot progress from the fundamental disagreement you have here, please chill out a bit
alyaza [they/she]@beehaw.orgOPMto Socialism@beehaw.org•Dozens of Ships Prepare to Break the Blockade of Gaza9·2 months agoof note: Italian dockworkers are threatening to shut down Europe if this flotilla is not allowed through or if contact is lost with the flotilla:
Speaking at a rally on the docks of Genoa, one of Europe’s largest ports, a dockworker representing the USB union said that if communication with the flotilla were lost “even for just 20 minutes,” port workers would immediately block all shipments to Israel, regardless of their content.
“Around mid-September, these boats will arrive near the coast of Gaza. If we lose contact with our boats, with our comrades, even for just 20 minutes, we will shut down all of Europe,” said the dockworker, a video of whom has circulated widely online and in Italian media but who has not been identified.
“From this region 13 to 14,000 containers leave every year for Israel, not a single nail will leave anymore,” he added.
alyaza [they/she]@beehaw.orgOPMto City Life@beehaw.org•L.A. Council Committee Approves Step toward Eliminating Parking Requirements1·2 months agoWhat about changing the parking requirements to be vehicle agnostic? Require construction projects to have parking for X people, rather than X cars, and consider the requirement met if it’s a mix of bicycle parking, cargo bicycle parking, and car parking.
this is already how most parking mandates work (they’re not for X amount of cars, they’re obliged to have a set ratio of parking spaces to people), and changing it in this manner would almost certainly lead to no change because Los Angeles is extremely car-dependent and sprawling, and bicycling is only useful with actual pro-bike infrastructure which largely doesn’t exist.
alyaza [they/she]@beehaw.orgOPMto U.S. News@beehaw.org•Support for Phone Bans in Schools Is Growing, but Is It Enough to Help Kids?21·2 months agoIt’s not a coincidence this is happening alongside age verification and outright bans. It’s all one big manufactured moral panic to isolate a vulnerable population I won’t give an once because people like you won’t stop taking.
you are the sort of uncritical, single-minded person who is going to help turn us all into digital serfs on a latifundium that can never be overthrown and permanently enriches a class of technolibertarian freaks that want to remake society in their image. the fact of the matter is smart phones as a whole are arguably the most successful corporate mechanism to privatize social life yet devised, and any “liberation” you think can be derived from them by any class of people is illusory without overthrowing capitalism. the phone companies and the apps they host have successfully positioned themselves as middlemen with free ability to hoover up an endless amount of “consensually given” data that can then be used to quantify said social life, commodify our personhood, and preemptively snuff out any real competition to the existing economic oligopoly. if you were to structure a system so incapable of being challenged that we’re doomed to live under it forever, this would be a pretty good way to do that.
children, needless to say, are especially not liberated by this state of affairs–or by the future that people like Elon Musk or Mark Zuckerberg want to build and which you seem to want to enable–and giving them free rein online in this absolutist way because you want to “emancipate them” is, ironically, often the best way to ensure capitalists exploit their labor and data in the current system. Roblox, for example, has made a fucktillion dollars off of your subtextually proposed strategy of just “letting kids be kids”–those children have essentially provided the company with a free, uncompensated, popular series of games for them to exploit the entire value of. totally coincidentally, they don’t even spend any of that money they’ve made protecting children from the actual social harms children could be exposed to on their platform, so Roblox is awash in grooming and cyberbullying and hate speech and sometimes even graphic violence that is never dealt with.
You’re also conflating certain corpo slop apps with literally any use of any mobile device, which is a common slight of hand that doesn’t get called out enough
the “corpo slop apps” have like 95% market penetration among people under-18 and as such are the almost-exclusive mediums through which they interface with digital spaces (because they are explicitly engineered to make us envious and addicted, and to make us all into people who live and die for the fix for attention that such websites give us). let’s not pretend this is a serious “conflation” when all available evidence is this is the overwhelming use-case of mobile devices.
alyaza [they/she]@beehaw.orgOPMto U.S. News@beehaw.org•Support for Phone Bans in Schools Is Growing, but Is It Enough to Help Kids?1·2 months agoBlanket bans are going to cause lots of issues, and for some kids (generally the ones who are already the most bullied and vulnerable), will cause more harm than good.
name one issue that a blanket ban will cause “more harm than good” on.
alyaza [they/she]@beehaw.orgOPMto U.S. News@beehaw.org•Support for Phone Bans in Schools Is Growing, but Is It Enough to Help Kids?21·2 months agoActual LGBT and neurodiverse people disagree with you.
let’s not invoke monoliths here, i am both and i think there are quite a lot of defensible arguments for restricting phones in the specific context of a learning environment–not least of which is that it’s hardly “censorship” or “isolation”[1] to ask them to just not use a phone for roughly 8 hours of the 24 hours in any given day.
social media is arguably far more alienating and inhuman on average to children and young adults than it is liberating ↩︎
alyaza [they/she]@beehaw.orgOPMto World News@beehaw.org•Air Canada flight attendants reach ‘tentative’ deal with airline to end strike9·2 months agoof note, CUPE leadership was willing to go to jail over the strike. for a sense of what they struck over, see these two articles from Spring Magazine, and CUPE’s “Unpaid Work Won’t Fly” page
alyaza [they/she]@beehaw.orgOPMto Science@beehaw.org•Humpback Whales Blow Bubble ‘Smoke’ Rings to Communicate With Humans8·4 months agothe relevant paper here:
Humpback Whales Blow Poloidal Vortex Bubble Rings.
alyaza [they/she]@beehaw.orgMto U.S. News@beehaw.org•As women have far fewer babies, the U.S. and the world face unprecedented challenges7·4 months agoWhen we everyday people see patterns, we then make deductions from them that tend to be accurate. […] Let people see evidence and make their own deductions
…no? as humans, our pattern recognition, while well refined, often still causes us to make completely incorrect inferences from nothing. even restricted to the realm of the medical: you need only look at what people think made them sick versus what actually does; most people will blame food poisoning on the last thing they ate, or their sickness on the last person they encountered, even when there are many other possible reasons for their sickness.
also: a pre-print by definition has not been subject to rigorous peer review–it’s roughly analogous to a draft–so i would be exceedingly hesitant to even assert something like it having “good data.” even if you’re the author you wouldn’t definitively know that at this stage.
see also the Detroit Socialist article Airgas Teamsters on Strike in Ferndale: Greed Is in the Air
alyaza [they/she]@beehaw.orgOPMto U.S. News@beehaw.org•Here’s Your Cheat Sheet for Vaccine Recommendations Backed by Science3·4 months agothe “chart” is just the thumbnail for the submission, so yeah; you have to actually click through, since that’s the point of a link aggregator
alyaza [they/she]@beehaw.orgOPMto Space@beehaw.org•The Vera C. Rubin Observatory observatory's first images are stunning — and just the start2·4 months agofor more on this, see the New York Times article on the observatory: How Astronomers Will Deal With 60 Million Billion Bytes of Imagery
Each image taken by Rubin’s camera consists of 3.2 billion pixels that may contain previously undiscovered asteroids, dwarf planets, supernovas and galaxies. And each pixel records one of 65,536 shades of gray. That’s 6.4 billion bytes of information in just one picture. Ten of those images would contain roughly as much data as all of the words that The New York Times has published in print during its 173-year history. Rubin will capture about 1,000 images each night.
As the data from each image is quickly shuffled to the observatory’s computer servers, the telescope will pivot to the next patch of sky, taking a picture every 40 seconds or so.
It will do that over and over again almost nightly for a decade.
The final tally will total about 60 million billion bytes of image data. That is a “6” followed by 16 zeros: 60,000,000,000,000,000.
alyaza [they/she]@beehaw.orgOPMto U.S. News@beehaw.org•Breaking: SCOTUS allows Trump admin to deport people to random countries with no notice14·4 months agothe Supreme Court is not a legitimate institution and you should be screaming at the Democratic Party to annihilate it if they ever come back into power, because otherwise it will be yet another reason this country croaks
alyaza [they/she]@beehaw.orgOPMto World News@beehaw.org•A majority of people around the world support a carbon tax — even if they're paying it7·4 months agothe study: Majority support for global redistributive and climate policies
We study a key factor for implementing global policies: the support of citizens. The first piece of evidence is a global survey on 40,680 respondents from 20 high- and middle-income countries. It reveals substantial support for global climate policies and, in addition, for a global tax on the wealthiest aimed at financing low-income countries’ development. Surprisingly, even in wealthy nations that would bear the burden of such globally redistributive policies, majorities of citizens express support for them. To better understand public support for global policies in high-income countries, the main analysis of this Article is conducted with surveys among 8,000 respondents from France, Germany, Spain, the UK and the USA. The focus of the Western surveys is to study how respondents react to the key trade-off between the benefits and costs of globally redistributive climate policies. In our survey, respondents are made aware of the cost that the GCS [a global carbon price funding equal cash transfers] entails for their country’s people, that is, average Westerners would incur a net loss from the policy. Our main result is that the GCS is supported by three quarters of Europeans and more than half of Americans.
Overall, our results point to strong and genuine support for global climate and redistributive policies, as our experiments confirm the stated support found in direct questions. They contribute to a body of literature on attitudes towards climate policy, which confirms that climate policy is preferred at a global level17,18,19,20, where it is more effective and fair. While 3,354 economists supported a national carbon tax financing equal cash transfers in the Wall Street Journal21, numerous surveys have shown that public support for such policy is mixed22,23,24,25,26,27. Meanwhile, the GCS— the global version of this policy—is largely supported, despite higher costs in high-income countries. In the Discussion, we offer potential explanations that could reconcile the strong support for global policies with their lack of prominence in the public debate.
alyaza [they/she]@beehaw.orgOPMto U.S. News@beehaw.org•"No Kings Day" protests turn out millions, rebuking Trump5·4 months agothe crowsourced sheet, which is still taking submissions: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/158rlsPk0jxXwh3GIKl2YP1W84dPLC_2RXZnMjaG5bVw/edit?usp=sharing
alyaza [they/she]@beehaw.orgOPMto Music@beehaw.org•Grammys Introduce New Country Album Category, Best New Artist Rules for 20261·4 months agothis is going over hilariously on social media, despite the insistence by the Grammy’s that it has nothing to do with Beyonce’s win last year:
Recording Academy CEO Harvey Mason Jr. told Billboard that the proposal for the two new categories was submitted previously several times before it passed this year. The new categories “[make] country parallel with what’s happening in other genres,” he explained, pointing to the other genres which separate traditional and contemporary. “But it is also creating space for where this genre is going.”
Traditional country now focuses on “the more traditional sound structures of the country genre, including rhythm and singing style, lyrical content, as well as traditional country instrumentation such as acoustic guitar, steel guitar, fiddle, banjo, mandolin, piano, electric guitar, and live drums,” the 68th Grammys rulebook explains.
alyaza [they/she]@beehaw.orgMto World News@beehaw.org•Scientists prove that fish suffer "intense pain" for at least 10 minutes after catch, calls made for reforms111·4 months agoi think this topic has about run its course in terms of productiveness, and has mostly devolved into people complaining about being held to (objectively correct) vegan ethics. locking
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there’s some real deadpan gold in this one, such as the immaculate: