> you're not a good person, you don't fool me. Fund open source, it would support young people who were just like you were
Or maybe he knows he's not a good person and has no intention of multiplying people who are just like he was, because he knows people as himself are bad and the world is better without them.
For the video, i wanted a laptop with a real serial port (no usb). This one fit the bill and was $20 on eBay. Windows 2000 is the prettiest windows IMHO, so that’s what I installed for the demo video.
How has your experience been? Maybe you should give them a testimonial here, it's the least they deserve since it's serve you well (assumingly). Also, please consider giving us your perspective from a long-term user, I think you bring a unique perspective to the table!!! HTR is an oasis in this global desert of manual digitization. I did a relatively extensive search for projects a year ago, I don't remember seeing Xournal at all or maybe the old development date threw me off.
"HTR is an oasis in this global desert of manual digitization" - hach, this is such a great phrasing! <3
Xournal++ is a great project that features a bunch of really great developers who dedicate a lot of time to it.
I am not much involved in the Xournal++ development itself but then try to utilise my machine learning skills to build an HTR system for Xournal++ in the form of a plugin.
I was wondering, how do you capture handwritten notes using Xournal and Xournal++? Using some sort of tablet maybe?
Great to hear that you found out about Xournal++! It's really the power of open-source that you own your own handwritten notes as you are not locked in.
What if the universe which simulates ours is so inconceivably different to ours that we simply cannot conceive how it works, and something in how it works makes it fundamentally unsimulatable? Or is simulationability somehow an inter-universal constant?
I believe whatever universe "contains" us or simulates us has to be inconceivably different to ours. For us, only the physics of this universe makes sense and it seems pretty straightforward to imagine that we cannot conceive of any rules that the outside world follows.
The insimulatable fesature, if it existed at all, could be at any link of the upper universe chain. It would be extremely unlikely for it to exist exactly above ours; it changes little the initial proposition.
It's information still, maybe not targeted to the individual, but it allows still identifying trends which will eventually result in an ad I will (maybe) see. The advertiser wastes its time trying to show me an ad I will likely block, requiring filter managers to spend time blocking the ad and requiring me to spend time installing the extension. The total utility of the system is negative, even if just slightly. Sure there are cases where an ad could inform me of something useful I actually need, but this has basically never occurred to me, ever.
From there we can devise that the best solution for society is a global ban on advertisement.
I think the first order utility of the system is indeed negative. But the second order effect is to set a boundary with advertisers as to what is acceptable, which is positive.
I don't think it actually allows advertisers to identify trends except in terms of conversion rates. Let me reproduce the paragraph I linked to:
> Since the DAP server acts as a middleman, and reports are only generated at conversion times (impressions without conversions are not reported), ad networks have no way through this method of collecting your personal information (such as your user information or your IP address/browser client info). All they receive is an aggregate that informs them that their ad (published on source ) led number of people to a positive outcome for their customer over a period of time . Some amount of noise is also added to the information in order to further strengthen privacy[7].
Impressions without conversions aren't reported, so the only trends seen are over conversions as grouped by websites. If that's all it takes for advertisers to stop fingerprinting us, I'm open to something along those lines.
> But the second order effect is to set a boundary with advertisers as to what is acceptable, which is positive.
The idea of advertisers respecting boundaries or caring what other people think is acceptable seems hopelessly naive. As I remember, the Do Not Track (DNT) header was motivated by the same ideal, and it failed totally, as one should expect. Advertisers will take whatever they can pry loose.
> Impressions without conversions aren't reported, so the only trends seen are over conversions as grouped by websites. If that's all it takes for advertisers to stop fingerprinting us, I'm open to something along those lines.
They won't stop, and anyway fingerprinting is just one invasion out of many. If they also want information about trends, then of course I want to deny that to them as well.
Thought experiment: instead of opting everyone in by default, suppose Mozilla does an A/B test. Opt in 50% of the users by default, and opt out the other 50%. Then see how many users in each group switch the setting away from the default. Do you expect more will opt in on purpose, or opt out on purpose? What does that make you think of Mozilla's actual choice of default?
> As I remember, the Do Not Track (DNT) header was motivated by the same ideal, and it failed totally, as one should expect.
Microsoft decided to turn on DNT by default in Windows 8 / MSIE 10, which led to a violation of the DNT standard and a complicated debacle which rendered the whole thing pointless. It was a silly idea and an even sillier outcome, but that does not make the ideal itself silly.
> They won't stop
Then we can rip this out later, or submit a patch to opt everyone out. I trust Mozilla to accept such a patch much more than I do Google. It's not irreversible, it's an ongoing negotiation.
> Thought experiment:
Your thought experiment ignores the rationale Mozilla provided. I think ideally we would be notified on first upgrade / out of box that we are opted in to sharing our preferences with advertisers in a limited way, with a nice obvious "Opt out" button in that notification. That way, legitimate advertisers get the limited conversion rate information they desperately want from enough people who aren't interested one way or the other, and those who are diametrically opposed to the entire concept are perfectly able to turn it off before their first browsing action.
But I also don't think they'd build an interface this extensive for what they describe as a limited test run against a handful of allow-listed sites for exploratory and standards-determining reasons. I would have liked to at least see a heads-up upon the activation of this system in those cases, since that seems easy enough to build for a test run.
> Then we can rip this out later, or submit a patch to opt everyone out. I trust Mozilla to accept such a patch much more than I do Google. It's not irreversible, it's an ongoing negotiation.
Like removing the UI option to turn off Javascript? In fact they've now made it near impossible to turn off Javascript in a running window. (You can turn it off before it begins to run, but it used to be possible to turn it off after it had already started running, say to populate a page that you wanted to look at). When has a revenue-generating "test" ever been reversed?
Anyway, what info that advertisers are currently getting, will be withheld from them under the new regime? If they will get everything they got before, plus more stuff besides, that can only make things worse. Most of us think that it's plenty bad already.
> That way, legitimate advertisers get the limited conversion rate information they desperately want from enough people who aren't interested one way or the other, and those who are diametrically opposed to the entire concept are perfectly able to turn it off before their first browsing action.
By that logic, it's ideal for the Mafia to recognize a "do not kidnap" button that anyone diametrically opposed to kidnapping could choose to wear. They are then free to kidnap anyone not wearing the button. I could accept it being the other way around (they can kidnap you if you wear an opt-in button) though I'd hope they get few takers.
In fact, the statistical "great unwashed" info does tons of damage in its own right, and that's why it's not ok to simply exclude a few self-selected outliers. Shoshana Zuboff's book "Surveillance Capitalism" goes into this. They want to make behavioural predictions about whole populations, and "differential privacy" is one of the obfuscations they use to sell invasions that enable that. Disclaimer: I haven't read the book yet--it's been on my list for a long time. I got the above info (about predicting population behaviour) from reading an online interview with the author. IDK if she mentions differential privacy specifically. That conflict is my own interpretation.
The problem is that the boundary is not acceptable. The acceptable boundary is none of my information is exfiltrated. Pretending that we have set an "acceptable" boundary is manufacturing consent to being spied upon, and is itself a problem.
For sure! But just because you don’t “see” it doesn’t mean it doesn’t have a huge impact on the feel of the movie, your impression of the characters, and on the storytelling, which is ultimately why these “invisible” decisions were made :)
Or maybe he knows he's not a good person and has no intention of multiplying people who are just like he was, because he knows people as himself are bad and the world is better without them.