

I find it funny that this is a surprise to anyone, given the cloud act from trump’s first term. It’s literally the reason behind this ‘revelation’ in the French courts.
I find it funny that this is a surprise to anyone, given the cloud act from trump’s first term. It’s literally the reason behind this ‘revelation’ in the French courts.
I didn’t answer because it’s irrelevant if I’m in Sweden, Spain or Greece. There’s a plethora of economic issues across the continent, none of which is that we’re falling behind on productivity. The point of this ‘productivity’ bs metric is to push for deregulation and less worker rights.
If you want to defend the premise of the article, you can do so regardless of what you know about me personally. Yet you haven’t made a single argument.
You’ve fallen victim to propaganda, my friend.
It’s only mandatory if they survive the fall…
What effects are those precisely?
Do yourself a favour and stop measuring success as a function of the difference with last year/quarter or another region’s stats. If you want to compete, put the money where your mouth is, it’s that simple. There are plenty of people who are hungry to build and develop businesses for 168 hours per week, they just get better opportunities to do it elsewhere. But why should everyone else be forced to follow that pace? Don’t buy into skewed graphs meant to push somebody else’s political agenda, do you own thinking.
What, GDP per capita per hour is less in my region? I’d be making 3x the money in my profession if I worked in the US? My quality of life is 10x better here than it would be there. And yes, I speak from experience.
Ah yes, overregulation and weak productivity.
Let’s keep on pushing that narrative. Regulation stands in the way of businesses. Policies promoting a healthy work life balance stand in the way of business growth.
Truly terrible things… For anyone who doesn’t need to work every day for 40-50 years of their lives. For the vast vast majority these are things that make everyday life bearable.
Regulation is essential in avoiding a reality where you need to pay for the air you breathe. Weak productivity is a myth in Europe, the real difference with US is in the hours we work. And I fully agree this needs reform. Let’s drop the working week to 4, no, 3 8-hour work days.
Just let people enjoy their short lives, you fucking greedy assholes.
There’s no fullproof way. Even if you somehow block every crawling automation, there’s still puppeteering where the bot behaves just like a normal user.
As someone who works for a paywallled website, that’s hardly a deterrent. If the site is important enough, they will pay for accounts and crawl until the server melts
The problem is not the functionality, it’s the business model.
Do Germans think they’re making amends? Is the lesson from the past century so deeply engrained that it clouds critical thinking? I don’t mean the politicians with hidden intentions behind their hidden intentions, but in general?
Just like with phones, all you need to do is remove the battery
Daily motion is owned by the French canal+, a public company.
Maybe I’ve gone too far in my open source and decentralised convictions, but the only benefit I see here is that the company is based in the EU. It has the same profit driven structure as Google/YouTube.
Why I see this as a problem?
Option A- the platform grows but it can’t monetise effectively: they will need to seek more revenue by further monetising users and advertisers. Expected result: enshittification
Option B- the platform grows and becomes very successful. This is a publicly traded company, so growth is everything. They will once again seek further monetisation. Expected result is the same.
What’s more, having extremely powerful and wealthy corporations leaves us on the path the US has taken, with strong lobbies of private interest (basically legal corruption).
Shouldn’t we use this turning point to move to a better alternative, instead of substituting foreign cancer with a home grown variety?
Man, the propaganda on Lemmy has such wild swings…