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> Is cognition a set of weights on a gradient? Cognition involves conscious reasoning and understanding.

What is your definition of _conscious reasoning and understanding_?


That's how I view it as well, from an end user perspective this is removing an arbitrary rule that you're required to "just memorize" (or be surprised when your IDE complains).


Totally agree, and I also love that so much thought and consideration goes into how the platform gets improved over time. Doing it "right" means taking so many things into account -- many of which are subtle -- and picking the right tradeoffs. Hats off to the people quietly doing the deep work which makes everyone's lives better.


Maybe, but the last straw for me on that platform was preventing tweets from linking to arbitrary, non-doxxing Mastodon profiles (try it and see). I tested it to confirm and deactivated my account afterwards. Who would want to be on a social network like that?


Why didn't you leave when they blocked tweets that linked to the Hunter Biden laptop story?


Because it was a dubiously sourced story at the height of a highly chaotic election campaign. You can see how that might be something a platform would want to suppress, not because they’re Democrat sleeper agents - but because they don’t wanna be responsible for swaying the election because of fake news.


> You can see how that might be something a platform would want to suppress...

No, I 'literally cannot even.' I cannot see how a platform might want to suppress anything except, perhaps, gore videos and child pornography. And that includes links to Mastodon and the ElonJet account, but I don't feel like I should have to put this disclaimer up just so people will stop telling me that I wanted to look at Hunter Biden's penis.

Sure, I can follow the proposed line of reasoning, but it is evident that instead of swaying the election because of fake news, they may have swayed the election because of not fake news. They were aware of this possibility, and yet the soldiered on censoring that story, so I'm not convinced that their actual reasoning was that they honestly did not want to sway the election.


Did you miss what happened with facebook in the wake of the 2016 election and brexit? They took the blame for all the misinformation that was flying around, being a vehicle for russian troll farms, etc. A lot of that was rightly so, imo, but even if you don’t think they did anything wrong the perception that they did something wrong hurt them financially. You may believe that a company like twitter or fb should act like a dumb pipe - but they’re operating in a capitalist system - they have a huge incentive to avoid things that will hurt them financially. You think they did it because they wanted to swing the election dem, but i don’t believe that for a second. I think they were motivated by wanted to not be seen as swinging the election at all. That means suppressing any sketchy stories.

Personal politics may have made them a little more skeptical of a story sourced from rudy guiliani than one from a sketchy source on the left - but honestly if you’re not deeply skeptical of stories sourced from rudy at this point, I’m sorry to say but you are biased away from truth.

If you want twitter / fb / etc to be dumb pipes you need them to operate outside of market forces. Either by being regulated by gov as a common carrier, privatized by someone with high minded ideals enough to resist banning anyone who criticizes him and doesn’t mind losing money on it, or by being run by some non-governmental foundation. Under capitalist motivations, you’re not going to get a dumb pipe.

So far none of those things are happening. Expect twitter to continue to be not a dumb pipe, not a zone of free speech, just biased in a different way under its new management - less about maximizing $$ and more about protecting its owners interests.


>Because it was a dubiously sourced story

Fake news.

>You can see how that might be something a platform would want to suppress, not because they’re Democrat sleeper agents

They suppressed it because they were very awake Democrat agents.

>but because they don’t wanna be responsible for swaying the election because of fake news.

No they wanted to deliberately sway the election, because of their partisan alliance. You can read the story here:

Part 1: Matt Taibbi: https://twitter.com/mtaibbi/status/1598822959866683394

Part 2: Bari Weiss: https://twitter.com/bariweiss/status/1601007575633305600

Part 3: Matt Taibbi: https://twitter.com/mtaibbi/status/1601352083617505281

Part 4: Michael Shellenberger: https://twitter.com/shellenbergermd/status/16017204550055116...

Part 5: Bari Weiss: https://twitter.com/bariweiss/status/1602364197194432515


> >Because it was a dubiously sourced story

> Fake news.

Same thing. But the Hunter Biden laptop story was not only fake news, it was completely irrelevant, because Hunter Biden wasn't running for office, and unlike Trump's children, Biden's children don't work for him. And yet the fake story was leveraged by political operatives to sway the election. After all the issues of fake news swaying the 2016 election, Twitter decided the responsible thing to do for them was not to be complicit in spreading fake news this time.


The part it contained about "10% for the big guy" (Joe Biden) was 100% newsworthy.

It wasn't fake news and deep down all the downvoters know it.

Suppressing it when it was known to be true was also a story.

>Twitter decided the responsible thing to do for them was not to be complicit in spreading fake news this time.

Actually they were at the forefront of spreading fake news as three actual journalists disclosed. Did you not even read the coverage? Because it sounds like you didn't. I even provided links to all of it above.

Let me know after reading it if your views have changed.


They probably tried to mitigate the worst of the fake news. It's pretty hard to stop all fake news these days.

Most news about Hunter Biden seems to be coming mostly from tabloids with a questionable relationship with the truth, and a political axe to grind. Even Fox News, a station known for its flexibility in what they call truth, passed on the story due to credibility concerns.

As far as I can tell, there's no convincing evidence that any of those questionable emails are authentic, and although a few of the emails do seem to be authentic, it's not clear that the hard disk itself is, and there's plenty of evidence that that hard disk has been messed with and has lots of content planted on it by others.

So everything about this smells like a dirty political hit job that even half of the Murdoch empire doesn't want anything to do with. And even if there is something here, it still pales in comparison to the corruption that Trump and his kids are still getting away with. Everything about this smells like a dirty political witch hunt based on made up or strongly manipulated "evidence".


You're allowed to be upset about more than one thing.


Yes, you absolutely are. Nothing in my comment suggested you are not.

The comment I responded to specifically was upset about censorship targeted at tweeting Mastodon links and not another version of censorship which came in the exact same form but targeted X links. I just gave X a name.

I find it somewhat absurd that a person would become indignant when the link is Y instead of X.


[flagged]


[flagged]


Hey, you broke the site guidelines exceedingly badly in this and other comments in this thread. We have to ban accounts that do that.

I'm not going to ban you for it because I understand that people go on tilt sometimes—it happens. But if you'd please review https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html and stick to the rules in the future, we'd appreciate it.


[flagged]


That's very brave of you to post a homophobic comment here.


Sorry? Could you please identify what, specifically, you found homophobic about the comment? I think your comment reflects more upon you than it does upon my comment.


Absolutely nothing brave about regurgitating Democrat rhetoric on HN: https://i.imgur.com/taGzsZP.jpg

To them there are no wrong actions (homophobia, body shaming et), only wrong targets (their tribe).

Now telling the truth in the face of that propaganda...


Both Java.

Pyranid - https://www.pyranid.com

I prefer SQL to ORMs and I don't like libraries with dependencies. Really simple mapping of resultsets to Java objects. Plays nicely with DI (I like Guice a lot).

Lokalized - https://www.lokalized.com

Another no-dependencies lib. I don't think any other platform handles translations in a powerful enough way. The magic is a simple expression language that lets the translator specify rules (e.g special cases for certain languages to be more "natural sounding") instead of embedding all that logic in code.


Thanks...I needed a laugh


My take on how to solve the natural-sounding translation problem: https://www.lokalized.com/#a-more-complex-example

The magic is a tiny expression language which understands plural cardinalities, ordinals, etc. so a translator can encode all required logic in a JSON file - the application code can be "dumb".


Localizing well has a lot of complexity - gender, cardinal, ordinal, etc. rules, and then how to combine them with locale-specific special cases (e.g. in Spanish, a 15-year-old birthday girl is a quinceañera)

I am attempting to solve this with a small library that offers full CLDR coverage and a special expression language.

See https://www.lokalized.com

Currently for Java 8 but am porting to JS and Python (probably Swift after those)


Shameless plug: if you're looking for a no-dependencies Java 8 JDBC wrapper, we have been using https://github.com/pyranid/pyranid in production for a number of public-facing projects over a couple years and it has worked very well for us


1. "On this particular challenge, I am expecting many will use RegEx as a part of the solution"

Really?

2. "replace(/[^a-z0–9]/ig, '');"

If I were interviewing and a candidate did this I would ask if he/she knows what i18n is


one of his questions is, "does this need to support utf-8" and i'm assuming in his hypothetical interview it is, "no it does not"

also are you seriously going to quiz someone about i18n for a interview? does that really tell whether they are a hire/no hire?


Given how many sites fail as soon as I start entering an "ä" in the name field (even on websites marketed internationally) I'd prefer if people would. At least the very basics or else you get a bunch of people that won't think about those issues when developing.


"also are you seriously going to quiz someone about i18n for a interview?"

Absolutely - in fact asking whether that regex was a good way of matching all characters in an input might be a good interview question.


IMO in 2016 it is important to know the basics well enough to know if what you're doing is bad from an i18n perspective (at least for non-junior positions). Even a comment like "// TODO: localize" is OK

It is often a positive signal that a candidate has worked on software large enough to be used internationally or is thorough enough to worry about it. For most of us, day-to-day software work is about being thorough and careful with design and implementation, not heavy algorithmic lifting


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