Quick. Buy this dude a dog!
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Sirsnuffles@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•Too many products are easier to throw away than fix—consumers deserve a 'right to repair'English29·2 years agoI’d argue security updates are not needed too.
It depends on what the device is used for.
Most security concerns nowadays are from users giving easy access to nefarious people. Usually easy passwords that can be collected from social media.
I’d also argue that corps like Microsoft, Google, Apple etc, can have far more nefarious intentions than some random hacker. Even if it’s just data leaks. There is safety in a crowd. But when corps control the crowd… That’s more of a reason to raise security concerns.
Sirsnuffles@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•Too many products are easier to throw away than fix—consumers deserve a 'right to repair'English223·2 years agoSoftware shouldn’t be locked.
The manufacturer should stand by their products.
Products don’t need constant updates.
There is a point to repair.
Sirsnuffles@lemmy.worldto News@lemmy.world•McDonald’s once again sued after customer burns herself on hot coffee0·2 years agoI don’t think I understand how it can be hotter than 100 celcius.
I’m not defending McDonald’s here, they can rot.
Like, coffee is mostly water, and water boils at atmospheric pressure at 100c. Milk boils slightly more than 100. I guess the lid would pressurise the steam a little? Maybe the coffee grinds hold the heat far more than the water? I wouldn’t have thought it would be diluted too much to make a difference.
I guess this is a stupid question, because it happened. But how can boiling water cause third degree burns in the quantity of 500ml? I thought it’d have to be much more than that and very prolonged?
Sirsnuffles@lemmy.worldto No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•Why shouldn’t firearm manufacturers be held accountable for the use of their weapons in crimes?1·2 years agoI’d double down and say that maybe we shouldn’t be driving cars. There are other methods of moving from point a to point b.
This position isn’t exactly practical, yet, but it is consistent.
Sirsnuffles@lemmy.worldto No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•Why shouldn’t firearm manufacturers be held accountable for the use of their weapons in crimes?33·2 years agoThe car has a number of safety mechanisms to prevent death. A gun does too - but, that is to prevent it’s intended use.
The car is regulated to prevent death. Although, not nearly enough. We have licences, registration, regular maintenance and checks. That are enforced with fines, usually.
The car is designed to move people and things from point a to point b. That is it’s function. There is a side effect of that function, that it can kill people.
If the cars manufacturer had installed a spiked bullbar in a line of new cars. I think it would be fair for litigation to be directed at that manufacturer to determine the function of that bullbar. Because it seems like the intention is to make it easy for people to kill people.
The guns function is to kill. Plain and simple. The manufacturer has the intention to make tools to kill.
The cars function is to drive. Plain and simple. The manufacturer has the intention to move people and things around.
Sirsnuffles@lemmy.worldto Showerthoughts@lemmy.world•it's weird that we are prepared to die for democracy, yet willingly enter dictatorships daily for work and spend the majority of our waking lives with people we vaguely know101·2 years agoI would starve without a job. (without welfare, in some countries, this is not enough)
There is an order of magnitude here. In a way, I’m being hyperbolic. But I do want to highlight the similarity between the two.
Sirsnuffles@lemmy.worldto Showerthoughts@lemmy.world•it's weird that we are prepared to die for democracy, yet willingly enter dictatorships daily for work and spend the majority of our waking lives with people we vaguely know87·2 years agoSorry.
Directorship*
Functionally, they are the same.
Sirsnuffles@lemmy.worldto No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•Why shouldn’t firearm manufacturers be held accountable for the use of their weapons in crimes?14·2 years agoYup.
I’m not American. This has been standard procedure for the 3 countries I call home. You need a gun licence - and it’s pretty stringently assessed.
I don’t need to abide by American constitutional bullshit. There is no tap dancing from me.
Sirsnuffles@lemmy.worldto No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•Why shouldn’t firearm manufacturers be held accountable for the use of their weapons in crimes?1·2 years agoCan’t hurt their profit margins, of course they would say that.
Sirsnuffles@lemmy.worldto No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•Why shouldn’t firearm manufacturers be held accountable for the use of their weapons in crimes?36·2 years agoWhat is the intention of designing something capable of firing a projectile at high velocity?
Seriously, this argument is so stupid. Let me try.
Im a manufacturer that cuts wood at a specific size with the intention to use it as a door. It can and usually is used as a door, but doesn’t have to be.
It is a weapon. That is the intention of the tool.
A spade has the purpose of digging, just as the gun has the purpose of killing.
Sirsnuffles@lemmy.worldto No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•Why shouldn’t firearm manufacturers be held accountable for the use of their weapons in crimes?811·2 years agoI’m not arguing about the proportion of guns that kill things or not.
I’m merely stating that the purpose of a gun, is to kill. Otherwise, they wouldn’t.
Target practice, is practicing to kill.
I’m not American, I don’t need to abide by your bullshit constitution.
Sirsnuffles@lemmy.worldto No Stupid Questions@lemmy.world•Why shouldn’t firearm manufacturers be held accountable for the use of their weapons in crimes?1320·2 years agoThe manufacturer is making a tool with the intention of killing.
You have a point. But you are skipping a road of reasoning here.
Sirsnuffles@lemmy.worldto World News@lemmy.world•US suicides hit an all-time high last yearEnglish3·2 years agoWhat could possibly be more important than you? What could supercede your will to life?
Surely the only thing that existentially matters to you, is you. Right?
I do believe it’s your choice. But I also believe that the choice is wrong. There are countless numbers of other paths to try that could instill an essence in you.
Try moving to a city. Try moving to another country. Try learning an instrument. Try a new language. Try finding a new partner. Try a new sport. Try finding new friends. Try hiking. Try a different job, or no job. Try a new book. I could go on.
Try anything and everything that could prevent you from coming to a permanent end.
Sirsnuffles@lemmy.worldto World News@lemmy.world•US suicides hit an all-time high last yearEnglish821·2 years agoEverytime I see suicide statistics like these. I don’t think of the deaths. I think of the misery each individual must have experienced in order to come to the conclusion that death was better.
Then I think about the nebulous political cloud surrounding these people and those who may have approached the conclusion but had the strength to carry on. I say nebulous because research is never going to encapsulate the reasons for one to kill oneself. If 50k in the US is the number who followed through, the numbers must be huge. I say this, because the suicide death statistic, is only the start of the problem - it’s a scale.
Misery festers at all of us. Labels, drugs and conversation can help, but it’s just burying the problem for it to resurface later. Until we start getting political movements towards human needs, this will continue.
A boat and a submarine.
I’ll see myself out.