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Cake day: August 7th, 2023

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  • Socialism has several different lineages. All of which used different strategies for accomplishing socialism (workers own the means of production) and maybe eventually communism (stateless, moneyless, classless society). (I often use “socialism” interchangeably as both the movement for and the desired end state, which I think Marx used to do, too, iirc).

    The Marxist-Leninist/Maoist version is what most folks are familiar with - create a “vanguard party”, leverage that political power to take over the government in a workers’ revolution, and then use the power of the state to accomplish socialism and eventually transition to communism. That strategy was how we got the USSR and Communist China, loosely speaking. How much that strategy actually fulfilled the promises of socialism/communism is up for debate.

    But there were other socialist movements in other areas of the world. The European version tends to be either democratic socialism (use standard political power to ease a transition to socialism, sans revolution) or social democracy (use government to implement the desired economic egalitarianism without the precise goal of the workers owning the means of production). (I hope I got those right, I often get them mixed up.)

    I would agree with you that no European state has reached the end state of socialism or communism, as they’re still pretty dang capitalist, but a good number of EU states are a lot closer to the promises of socialism than the rest of the world, as far as I understand things.
















  • It does, but that may not necessarily be a bad thing. It largely depends on what the overall dataset looks like.

    It’s not unusual to tweak your dataset in response to certain biases, especially if there is a known bias at play (for example, I’ve actually met plenty of parents who keep having kids hoping for a boy/girl, and then stop once they get what they initially wanted. As creepy and weird as that is to me, it’s definitely a thing).

    This does seem a bit blunt of an approach, however. I would’ve preferred a survey question as part of data collection where parents are asked if they were “trying” for one sex over another, if they wanted “one of each”, etc etc., and then using that info to weight the data.

    But without reading the article myself, my assumption is they just used a readily available dataset (such as medical records) rather than recruit participants directly. But I could be wrong, didn’t read it after all.




  • In this case, it’s pretty true. You can view the webauthn protocol, the FIDO2 documentation, etc, that are the foundation of what we know as “passkey” technology.

    It’s all cryptographic hashes getting sent around, essentially. The more high-grade security implementations are “device-bound passkeys” which do require a minimal amount of hardware registration, though, but you shouldn’t ever need to do that unless you’re like… accessing sensitive datasets or secure services, at which point you’re most likely registering a work device, anyhow.