Currently a community can do nothing against people who mass downvote their posts because they arent interested in the “niche” topic, which imo sucks
Currently a community can do nothing against people who mass downvote their posts because they arent interested in the “niche” topic, which imo sucks
The Marvels had a target audience that didn’t watch the movie, and a “wrong” audience that watched it and didn’t like it.
This movie seems to have no hype at all in no audience group.
Still one of my favourite movies ever
They definitely paid someone to do this poster. A company like Marvel will not have some executive use an off-the-shelf AI to generate a poster himself. Someone got paid to create a poster, and that person did a bad job - no matter if it was a compositing error or an AI error.
The sentence structure suggests that in OPs sentence the monkey is the subject and part of the sentence is missing.
Like for example,
“The monkey – I’m wondering if it can see my ears? – is eating a banana.”
No, anyone is able to create a “feed”
Problem being that any instance only displays those posts under a hashtag that it knows about. Currently, if I follow #formula1 from my home instance, I’m seeing different posts than if I follow #formula1 from a certain other instance.
Will probably get better with developments in that aspect in the next few years.
Surph_ninja is definitely right with one thing though: previously Meta used a pre-selected group of organizers who were able to fact check. Meta are now switching to a model where everyone can “fact check” (the former Twitter “community notes” system).
I take it that you missed the whole WordPress situation that developed over the last couple of months?
It’s about control over the intellectual property (trademarks, copyright) as well as control over the company which pays the developers. One does definitely not want a single person in control of these things, otherwise they can hold the whole project hostage (like Mullenweg is accused of, in the case of WordPress).
Additionally, the change also gives them a preferable tax status than the previous arrangement.
The point isnt money. The point is the “benevolent dictator” model, see Matt Mullenweg and the current WordPress controversy. The whole future of that software depends on this guy because he controls the most important assets (like the trademarks) personally.
Eugen and the whole Mastodon development team want to avoid a situation like that.
Bluesky has had a very fast development cycle and now already has features it didnt have 6 months ago. Mastodon’s main problem IMO is how long it takes for features to make their way into the live version. There are features on their github ready to be merged in for 2 years and when asked, no one on the development team was able to find out why it had not been merged.
Bluesky literally allows people to finetune controls on things like allowing quote posts and replies. Thats way more freedom that the average social media platform gives to a user.
Bluesky has the USP of people being able to choose from multiple algorithms or even use multiple ones at the same time; and that certainly has resonated with a lot of people.
The Mastodon devs have received a grant to work on a search/visibility tool in 2025, so I definitely expect developments there
No, they co-own the IP. Barbara Broccoli’s Danjac LLC is the other co-owner.
The rights to James Bond, and consequently the rights to make any kind of movie featuring the character, are owned exclusively by Danjaq LLC and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.
So theoretically Amazon can not dictate anything on their own. They need to be in agreement with Broccoli.
Gping by my Letterboxd reviews, Dune 2 or Conclave. I also liked The Apprentice quite well.
In the wake of the Reddit API changes, I decided to jump off that ship. Saw Lemmy mentioned but a lot of posts were painting it negatively, due to federation things and tankies. I was on Squabbles (lol) as my Reddit replacement platform for a few months before that disintegrated and then finally arrived at Lemmy.
Nature catastrophes are the top 1 danger to nuclear energy. See Fukushima.
And the real question here would be a comparison between risk of a nuclear accident event and a renewables-impacting climate event.
The waiting list is still very long at this point. Probably don’t expect to get in for like 2 weeks…
Community tags are in development already if I’m not mistaken