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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 17th, 2023

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  • Trying to find some that haven’t been talked about yet:

    Echo. It’s a fantastic experimental infiltration game with an AI that adapts to your way of playing. The setup is very impressive.

    Pathologic: one of the three playable characters (the Changeling). It’s a bizarre russian game, with an unique world, and messy gameplay. Can’t recommend it enough.

    Va11 Hall-A: chill bartending game in a cyberpunk setup.

    The Blackwell series: comfy, kind of amateurish point and clicks by Wadjet Eye. I like them very much.

    Transistor: weirdest game by Supergiant. You play as a redhead with a talking sword. I don’t remember much about it except that it was good.

    The Fall: (pushing it a little bit, since the protagonist is an AI, but I’ve always seen here as female.) Criminally underrated puzzle games, disguised as metroidvanias.

    Eliza (by Zachtronics): the only visual novel I enjoyed. It’s hard to explain, it’s about AI, burnout, whether tech dehumanizes people, and solitaire.

    Hedon Duology: for something completely different, it’s a slightly kinky retroshooter, with amazon Orcs fighting demons.
    It may sound a bit dumb, but it’s excellent. Huge levels, interesting worldbuilding, and a gameplay based on exploration, puzzles as well as shooting.

    There’s probably a ton more, but that’s all I can think about at the moment.



  • I can think of a way to help with the problem, but I don’t know how hard it would be to implement.

    Create some sort of trust score, where instance owners rate other instances they federate with.
    Then the score gets shared in the network. Like some sort of federated whitelisting.
    You would have to be prudent a first, but not do the whole task yourself.

    You could even add an “adventurousness” slider, to widen or restrict the network based on this score.







  • A few persons control a large amount of bots. They can manipulate upvotes, downvotes. Silence opinions they don’t like, boost the ones they support. They can flood everyone’s feed with whatever topic they like. They get to choose what is important, what people get to think about. They can harass any single user, by downvoting posts or being generally unpleasant all the time, and giving the impression that the community agrees. They can create a fake impression of consensus on any given topic.

    Now that bots basically pass the Turing test, they can get you to almost never interact with a real person, but instead with machines who never actual learn, listen or change their mind. That sort of thing could erode anyone’s opinion of their fellow humans. That could make one think that there’s no possibility of common grounds with their adversaries.

    Don’t underestimate the bots, they’re responsible for most of the political turmoil of the last decade.


  • Depends what you mean by security.
    If you mean privacy, no such thing exists. All browsers snitch on you, and trying to actually have a private life will land you in jail soon enough.
    If you want to do online banking, any of the big three will do if updated regularly.
    I’d choose firefox as a symbolic protest against tech oligarchy.