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Draft Farm Bill amendment puts hemp industry at risk

Some in Congress are threatening to dismantle the hemp industry, which was built by small businesses and American farmers.

https://mjbizdaily.com/draft-farm-bill-amendment-puts-hemp-industry-at-risk/
weed.jpg
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Protip: if you lads and lasses are choosing between a large one-off donation and a smaller recurring donation (that will work out to the same amount, averaged over time) . . . Choose the smaller one. It is far more important for small business owners (that's what graf is) to have a steady monthly income stream rather than subsisting over large infusions that are irregular, unpredictable and have to be chased down. It helps them budget and plan accordingly.

RT: https://poa.st/objects/268e738e-38cd-4f7b-82d2-93beea985068
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NewsGuard Co-Founder Advocates Banning Anonymous Social Media Posts, Enabling Lawsuits Against Tech Firms for “False” Content

reclaimthenet.org/newsguard-co

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@gabriel

>The main community hub is our Discord server.

Ugh.

>GitHub co-founder & CEO

The one who sold Github to Microsoft?

I wouldn't touch that crap.

Besides, @servo already exists and is being actively developed

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Lefties: End of the Chevron doctrine is an unmitigated disaster, Experts are being restrained by courts.

The experts: Shoelace is basically machine gun
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Already have received the very first piece of fan art, featuring Avadel and drawn by @canvasesbymaya on Instagram!

xianc78 boosted

It's part of an op. Which op is the question. All the news is talking about "replacing Biden," so that's obviously not it (that's the narrative).

2/3 of the population don't really pay attention. Their believe in whatever is on the TV/Google/Socials is what keeps society stable. They can, for the most part, be safely ignored. (If it drops from 2/3 ... well hope you have your stock pile of food and guns ready).

Trying to figure out what's really going on is like trying to figure out the story of a Sweet Baby Inc video game.

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@xianc78 The value of bills was initially the ability to redeem for metal. You couldn't tax bills without essentially stealing a portion of the gold they were redeemable for.
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I will also like to take this as an opportunity to explain why RSS (and other feed formats) never really caught on outside of tech-savvy users because I hear a lot of people complain that RSS should've caught on instead of Twitter.

* The acronym makes it look like it's something that only web developers, web indexers, etc need to care about - just put the name "RSS" next to HTML, CSS, XML, etc and it sounds like it is meant for web crawlers or API programmers. The full name, "Really Simple Syndication" doesn't sound user friendly either. They should've called it "web feed", "e-feed", or "web subscription" and people who find the link to it will have a better idea what it is.
* Not many browsers supported it out of the box - The only one I remember doing it was Firefox with "live bookmarks" but that has been long discontinued. Apparently, everyone thought it was a better idea to have email clients support it, or just have services like Google Reader for reading RSS feeds instead.
* The negative stereotypes of bloggers - I don't know how many people remember this, but back in the mid to late-2000s bloggers were mocked and ridiculed as being a bunch of wannabe celebrities or failed journalists. Given that nobody liked bloggers, almost nobody bothered with RSS feeds.
* A lot of people were still editing pages manually - Not everyone was using blogging software or a CMS. A lot of people were either writing web pages by hand in a text/HTML editor, designing pages in a word processor/WYSIWYG editor, or using a custom backend they written themselves. With the former two, you had to manually edit the RSS file. The latter requires you to implement RSS yourself which many people were either too lazy to do or didn't know how to do.

I think my proposed replacement can address some of these issues. Having self-contained text and image posts and having servers that host it, in addition to self-hosting can allow anyone (not just webmasters and bloggers) have a feed. Getting major browsers to support it is difficult as it needs to become popular on it's own first. And a lot of people are using static-site generators, content management systems, and other software more than people edit pages manually these days, so it could probably work. The last issue is the name and it should sound as user-friendly as possible.

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So, I've been thinking about what would the ideal decentralized social network would be and I think I have the right idea.

Basically, it would just be a modernized RSS feed, just a simple file that can be hosted on any webserver, kind of like what twtxt is doing, but not focused on ultra-minimalism and instead be a JSON or XML format that can also include photos, videos, links, etc. Feeds can be accessed through clients just like RSS and there will be so called "aggregator servers" where people can access that will display aggregated content from various feeds submitted to it (similar to registries on twtxt).

I think there are some advantages to this:
* Feeds can be hosted on any webserver and can pretty much be implemented in almost anything from existing social media software, content management systems, to static-site generators.
* Self-hosting would be much easier.
* People are limited to interacting with the feeds and aggregator servers they follow. They can have a much more relaxed experience (if they choose) by only connecting to the feeds and aggregator servers that they trust.
* Someone can just have a simple feed and ignore people interacting with them. They could just have some feed that they either manually edit or have automatically generated with some script and not connect with anyone through a client.

Sure there will be some disadvantages and they would be the same as twtxt. For one, you will only be able to see replies if they are from feeds or aggregator servers that you connect to, but I think this would be perfect for those who just want to share stuff without getting into all the drama present in most social media. It can also be a viable replacement for RSS, something that should've caught on, but didn't due to the rise of social media (along with other reasons that I will explain later).

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Mainly gaming/nerd instance for people who value free speech. Everyone is welcome.