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No, the farmer got paid when the commodities trader bought their harvest on the futures market months ago. The trader lost it all though and ended up giving the potatoes away to the newspaper for free.

It was because they thought that landowners would direct the votes of the people who lived on that land. The same reason was given for not allowing women to vote. https://shec.ashp.cuny.edu/items/show/1645

This comes directly from a historical British restriction on voting rights that in turn is an artifact of feudalism. https://press-pubs.uchicago.edu/founders/documents/a1_2_1s3....

Ancient democracies, including those of Greek city states like Athens, restricted voting to landowners because prior to the invention of the printing press, only aristocrats could understand the issues being voted on.


Yeah I know. My point is that in the US, in 2026, whether voting should be restricted to property owners is not "up for debate," except maybe among a certain set of cranks.

> except maybe among a certain set of cranks.

Eh, a growing set of cranks. The diversity of political opinion in America seems to have exploded over the last decade. Cranks are now serious contenders for power and influence.


> Ancient democracies, including those of Greek city states like Athens, restricted voting to landowners because prior to the invention of the printing press, only aristocrats could understand the issues being voted on.

This is such bullshit. Pre-literate societies were not ignorant societies, they were not stupid societies, they were not issue-free societies. The printing press gave rise to literacy which then gave rise to both books and print-based issue campaigning. But the idea that before people were able to read they were also unable to understand "the issues being voted on" is ridiculous. People ate, built, got sick, got hot, got cold, got injured, were richer or poorer ... everyone had a framework in which to understand "the issues being voted on".

You could argue it wasn't an educated understanding, and that might be correct depending on your understanding of what "education" is. But the idea that people couldn't actually understand stuff until literacy arrived is just ridiculous.


> This is such bullshit

So are the justifications of Adams and Blackstone. Literacy was the justification given by early Greek democracies with written legal codes, though some, like Athens, later broadened eligibility.


Chromium is not using libjxl, which is the decoder that is evaluated in this article. The SVT encoder is much faster than the AOM encoder for AVIF.

Qubes doesn't compartmentalize the image decoder in a web browser from the rest of the renderer, and if you're serving tracking pixels and can exploit image decoding, you can make serious mischief.

If you use Qubes correctly, then VM in which you go to untrusted websites is disposable and contains no personal information, so there is no mischief to make.

The web page you are visiting contains personal information, and that is where the mischief can be made. All that is required is for the website to incorrectly trust an image, either by not sanitizing a user-uploaded image or by embedding a third party image. Both trust bugs are rampant on the web, and both have caused problems in the past. Adding an improperly vetted image decoder is a sure-fire way to get exploit authors salivating.

> The web page you are visiting contains personal information, and that is where the mischief can be made.

This is a weird threat model. You trust some website with your personal information but you don't trust that images they embed are trusted and will not attack you. Nothing will save you here except switching off showing pictures, which you can also do on Qubes.

I would say, if they really embed malicious images, then they probably have other problems with security, which nothing you run can help with.


> Nothing will save you here except switching off showing pictures

Or having a trustable image decoder, which is what web browsers actually do. This is a basic requirement that you are proposing to do away with by instead not showing images at all.


> trustable image decoder

This may never exist, since all software have bugs. Instead, you can isolate opening your pictures into a different VM, keeping this VM safe.

> what web browsers actually do

Haven't we seen related vulnerabilities?


> This may never exist

It's existed for years. https://chromium.googlesource.com/chromium/src/+/HEAD/third_...

Similarly, the JPEG XL decoder Chromium integrated is written in Rust, eliminating large classes of exploitable errors.

> Haven't we seen related vulnerabilities?

Repeatedly. That's why browser vendors are careful about adding new image decoders, and no, Qubes does not solve the problem.


Anecdotally, I have heard the exact opposite. The one thing that is in agreement is that the people promoted in management are uniformly incompetent.

No, the new wave of popularity for Stoicism can be traced back to Tom Wolfe's 1998 bestseller, A Man in Full. https://www.sfgate.com/news/article/Tom-Wolfe-s-Book-A-Man-i...

Google Search also has ads in it, but that didn't stop Apple from keeping it as the default, and now Apple is adding ads to Apple Maps. GP is correct. Google withheld turn by turn navigation from the iOS app. There are many deficiencies in the iOS platform, but this one was glaringly visible, forcing Apple's hand.

I use ngx_http_dav. It is faster than samba on my network. I also don't run PHP anything.

There is no analysis of selective majors. Students from Lynbrook and Bellarmine are more likely to apply to majors like CSE and ECE, which have lower admissions rates than general admission. https://undergrad.ucsd.edu/academics/selective-major-process...

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