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I made a similar tool a while back, https://pleasenox.com – Mine relies on a "poster" account doing the work rather than the current user's account.


I’ve read mixed ideas on this but:

Is bird flu “bad” (for cows and humans) because of higher mortality?


According to Google, the mortality rate is around 50%, but contact with infected specimens is^H^Hwas rare.

Having an anti-vaxxer in charge of public health may not have been the best decision.


Bird flu was not historically routinely tested for in humans except rarely in cases of severe illness. I don’t think it’s reasonable to believe the mortality rate, if it started spreading and was measured properly, would be much worse than Covid (<5%).


The infection rate was quite low due to the rarity of contact between wild birds and humans. Now that it's in cows … I guess we'll see what happens. I'm sure it will all turn out fine and we'll have a laugh about it later.


I never said it would be “fine”. If it is as bad as Covid, that would be millions dead. Perhaps it could be twice as bad. However, that is still a CFR of under 5%, nowhere near 50%.


Electing a person who disagrees with all Scientist was not the best decision.


Electing a person who agrees with all Scientists would not have been the best decision either


That strawman doesn't really exist, accepting the scientific consensus and believing in the validity of science are not equivalent to "believing all scientists," but the people who believe all vaccines are fake and climate change is a communist hoax (who mistrust all scientists) do.

These things are not equivalent, one is clearly more harmful than the other.


What?

- HTTP/2: Utilises Node's built‑in http2 module.

- Proxy Tunneling: Automatically tunnels through an HTTP/1 proxy (via HTTP CONNECT) when a proxy configuration is provided.

- Fetch-like API: Provides a drop‑in replacement for the standard Fetch API. The returned Response object supports properties such as status and methods like text() and json().

Why?

Because many proxy services still use HTTP/1.1, while many sites use HTTP/2.


Port it to using SST (https://sst.dev) then you can more easily experiment with different cloud providers’ costs by deploying to A, B and C service.

SST uses Pulumi so (per other comments) there are constructs for Hetzner among other budget hosts.


Hetzner (Pulumi) with SST example: https://github.com/prutya/next-self-hosted

Hetzner (Pulumi) example outside of SST: https://timozander.de/blog/using-pulumi-with-hcloud/


Thank you!


This was thrown together super quickly — I will improve upon it and add features in the coming days.

Suggestions welcome!


It's great! Of course the main feedback is that it would be great if people could comment without leaving the blog page. I may add this to my own website.


Excellent!

I wonder how difficult it would be to detect specific actions in the video frames, like “cat eating food”?


A dynamically detected bounding box (cat) overlapping with a predefined bounding box (bowl) would be less than 50 lines of python if you use openCV. Discriminating raccoons and cats would probably be another 50 lines if you use some pre-trained ML model.

Adding an electric scale to the bowl would certainly cut down the false positive rate you're going to get (from the cat, safe to say the raccoon will always be eating if it overlaps the bowl).


FYI: The website (webui.me) has a TLS / certificate issue and can only be viewed in Chrome (iPhone) after accepting the unsafe warning.


Cert expired -- Sunday, 24 December 2023 at 23:07:23


It's working now!


This doesn’t appear to have any filter for generating based on racist / extremist language


Assuming this isn't trolling/baiting:

Ukraine was invaded by its neighbour. Russia started a war.

Would you deem tweets that encourage donations toward Ukraine's military defence to be "promoting war"?

How about tweets that boost morale of their defence forces (well-produced propaganda videos, etc)?

The war isn't something that Ukraine wanted, but it was forced on them.

To then demote any tweet about Ukraine is throwing out the baby with the bathwater, and (in the examples I've given above) making their digital 'life' harder when trying to deal with a problem they didn't want.


> Ukraine was invaded by its neighbour. Russia started a war.

> The war isn't something that Ukraine wanted, but it was forced on them.

I rate both of these claims to be indisputably true.

> Would you deem tweets that encourage donations toward Ukraine's military defence to be "promoting war"?

> How about tweets that boost morale of their defence forces (well-produced propaganda videos, etc), [are they promoting war]?

The answer to both of these questions is indisputably yes.

War propaganda from the side which I support is still war propaganda. It doesn't stop being war propaganda just because it's also in the right. Remember "loose lips sink ship"? It was a WW2 American propaganda slogan designed to address German u-boat aggression. America was plainly on the right side of that conflict, yet those posters are still cited today in American classrooms as an example of war propaganda, because that's indisputably what it was.

Morally in the right and war propaganda have never been mutually exclusive.


To be clear: I am not disagreeing that slickly-produced videos are propaganda.

Or that tweets in support of Ukraine's efforts / donations / etc are "supporting the war".

I am, rather, disputing the "both sides"-type thinking of the person I replied to, who seems to imply that stopping ALL talk of war (regardless of whom it is in support of) is desirable.


> stopping ALL talk of war (regardless of whom it is in support of) is desirable.

It's a private platform isn't it? By conventional logic, twitter has the right to decide what sort of content they promote. If a fashion magazine or a twitting website decide they don't want to cover a war, that is a perfectly valid business decision.

It doesn't really matter anyway. Twitter isn't as important as the media says it is. Only a small fraction of the population actually use it, but it just happens that this small fraction includes people in the media, so they think it's much more important than it actually is and give it undo coverage. And no, I don't think that makes twitter actually important in a round-about way, because when most people see "somebody tweeted something" articles they roll their eyes at the media scrapping the bottom of the barrel for news. The media is blind to their twitter bias, but most others cringe. If Elon Musk ends up running twitter straight into the ground, nothing of value will be lost.


>Would you deem tweets that encourage donations toward Ukraine's military defence to be "promoting war"?

Actually this is promoting war. Because if you are donating to someone who is at war, you are participating in this war.

Some people just think that Russians will never come and ask them why did these people give money to kill their brothers.

Also it works like a promo. First you are supporting someone with tweets. Then you are sending money. Then you are sending weapons. Then they send you to the battlefield, because You know, it's very important to support Ukraine.


It is supporting a side in a war who didn't choose to be at war.

Insofar as that meets the criteria of "supporting war", then yes it's "supporting war" (a country's defence).

I see that as a wholly good thing.


I guess it's true that there would be no more war if everyone just rolled over any time a tyrant wanted to conquer a territory. But I think you can agree that wouldn't mean an end to the worst aspects of war, correct? Once the tyrant conquers, the death and oppression doesn't abate. At some point, people have to fight back, and we call that war.

No one wants to be in a war except malignant psychopaths like Putin. But once you are, the only way back is through.


> How about tweets that boost morale of their defence forces (well-produced propaganda videos, etc)?

How about well-produced propaganda that targets people outside Ukraine and Russia? Why should a foreign military be allowed to influence public opinion in America or India?


Ukraine and Russia have been willing to go to peace talks a few times, and each time some other country convinces Ukraine not to. The UK and the US are the two I remember reading about.


Is that not a massive oversimplification? And is it bad/wrong that a country's leadership can be persuaded by its allies?

If they were to enter peace talks based on the premise of ceding territory, would that not strengthen Russia; sending the message that this sort of robbery works and is rewarded? And would that not pose a danger to other neighbours of Russia?

I can see why it's in both Ukraine's interest, and its allies, for it to not cede territory.

Having said all of this: I am not a military strategist or diplomat, and I don't really know what I'm talking about.


I'm not saying it's right or wrong, I'm saying a lot of commenters here are missing information.

For example: https://apnews.com/article/russia-ukraine-zelenskyy-kyiv-bor...

> “We have to fight, but fight for life. You can’t fight for dust when there is nothing and no people. That’s why it is important to stop this war,” Zelenskyy said.

> [..]

> Zelenskyy said he is confident Ukrainians would accept peace despite the horrors they have witnessed in the more than six-week-long war.

> [..]

> U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson also made an unannounced visit to meet Zelenskyy, with his office saying they discussed Britain’s “long-term support.”

Which links to https://apnews.com/article/russia-ukraine-zelenskyy-kyiv-bus...

> Johnson’s visit came a day after the U.K. pledged an additional 100 million pounds ($130 million) in high-grade military equipment to Ukraine.

On top of that, Ukraine joining NATO guarantees Russia not backing down. It's at least part of the reason Ukraine wasn't a member in the first place: Russia doesn't want NATO advancing to their border. Ukraine joining NATO is the opposite of that.


Finland just joined NATO and added 830 miles of NATO border with Russia invalidating that Russian talking point.


> And is it bad/wrong that a country's leadership can be persuaded by its allies?

Ask Ukrainian men who are forbidden to leave the country and risk getting drafted every day.

It's only their health, their limbs and their very lives that would be sacrificed so that Ukraine's "allies" can get a better footing in their next confrontations with Russia.


It'll be the health, limbs and lives of future Ukrainians and other Europeans too, if invaders are appeased.

I think this mindset betrays a lack of understand at how power-hungry bullies work. They aren't reasonable.

It's not a case of "negotiate with them THIS time, and all will be fine" (as if they have a single, specific grievance).

Choosing to defer pain now invites much, much more later.


> It'll be the health, limbs and lives of future Ukrainians and other Europeans too, if invaders are appeased.

What exactly are you imaging?

IMO, given the current direction, the chances of a much more massive conflict in 10-20 years are only increasing, all while currently there is realistically NO actual threat to Europeans.

> I think this mindset betrays a lack of understand at how power-hungry bullies work. They aren't reasonable. It's not a case of "negotiate with them THIS time, and all will be fine" (as if they have a single, specific grievance).

I think we really shouldn't anthropomorphise geopolitical processes as it substitutes the actual nature of what is going on and what is at stake. It's not some bruises, bloody nose and a bit of pride. This is serious. This people securing their futures and livelihoods.

And yes, there should always be a negotiation when it comes to fates of so many people getting crushed between leviathans. This whole blood bath could have been avoided with proper negotiations, but instead people of Ukraine and Russia were pushed into a conflict they both hardly need. Remember how Minsk agreements were a thing? Good times.

> Choosing to defer pain now invites much, much more later.

This is a horrifyingly cozy outlook on condemning someone else to die. What is even a definition of win here? Currently all participants of the conflict: Ukraine, Russia, Europe/GB/US seem to be enchanted with ritualistic slaughter, afraid to take a wider look and realise what they've done.


No, each time Ukraine refuses peace talks because Russia refuses to give back the occupied Ukrainian territory.


Would you mind providing some source on Ukraine officials?

If Ukraine will stop fighting their independence and the country is over.

They'll never join EU or NATO. There will be no investments to rebuild.

People who left will never return back.


> Would you mind providing some source on Ukraine officials?

https://apnews.com/article/russia-ukraine-zelenskyy-kyiv-bor...

> They'll never join EU or NATO.

That would probably be a good thing. Russia doesn't want NATO to advance to its border, doing so is just provoking them, as it has before Ukraine: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2010/may/27/ukraine-drops-...

> Ukraine was considered a potential Nato partner along with Georgia. Concern in many Nato countries increased in 2008 when Russia responded with military force to a Georgian attack on South Ossetia, an enclave in Georgia.

> [..]

> Since then, most Nato countries, including the US and Britain, have realised membership of Ukraine and Georgia would provoke conflict, notably with Russia. This month, the Albright report on Nato's new strategic concept made no mention of prospective Ukrainian membership of the alliance.


Lol, the only non-NATO countries are being invaded and it's the fault of ...NATO apparently.

It became pretty clear in this war that refusing Ukraine was a mistake and caused the war.


Finland just added 830 miles of NATO border with Russia. The US and Britain both approved this extension of NATO's border with RUssia.


It’s really 100% ok to not comment on things you don’t actually know anything about.


No. The US asked Ukraine to show its open for negotiations.

Ukraine stated it will not yield an inch of land. It stated the peace talks are out of the question.

Stop spreading misinformation.


>Ukraine was invaded by its neighbour.

This is the jingoistic phrasing we hear a lot, which implies that Russia did something unique. As Americans, certainly we invade many countries, but we have the integrity to invade countries who are not our neighbors.


Whataboutism.

Other examples of stealing territory / starting wars can also be bad.


Straw man.

You ignored the content of my original comment. If you don't think "invaded their neighbor" is jingoistic, that's fine, but you didn't address that. I'm not commenting on specific ethics of their invasion; I am commenting on that specific phrase.


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