I love the idea of a privacy-focused fronend for YouTube, but every time I visit a piped link, it just spins forever. Both on my Linux desktop and my Android phone.
Maybe I'm doing something wrong?
Here is the latest one I tried and failed to load.
I hate that I always compare Lemmy to Reddit, but Reddit used to have (not sure if they still do) guidelines called "Reddiquette" that included guidelines about upvoting and downvoting. I don't remember the specifics (and sending too much of my browser traffic to Reddit makes me feel dirty) but one of the guidelines was not to upvote/downvote on the basis of agreement/disagreement with the content.
On Lemmy, I'm honestly a bit lax about upvoting and downvoting at all. (I'm trying to be better about it.) Buy when I do upvote/downvote, I try to do so on the basis of whether the comment/post "adds to" or "subtracts from" the community or conversation. I can disagree with one comment's take on some subject but still upvote them if they've given me a more nuanced perspective on the issue. If they're just parrotting well-known talking points and not being thoughtful with their posts, I may downvote them evren if I agree with their ultimate stance.
I'm just mostly wondering how folks on Lemmy think about upvotes/downvotes and what implications that has for the content here.
https://ocw.mit.edu/courses/6-912-introduction-to-copyright-law-january-iap-2006/video_galleries/video-lectures/
This section contains a collection of video lectures from the course.
This post is somewhat inspired by a recent post in this same community called "Is anyone else having trouble giving up Reddit due to content?"
I imagine "Reddit" will be a common answer. (And it's one of my answers.)
Another of my answers is "Hasbro." First Wizards of the Coast (a Hasbro subsidiary) tried to revoke an irrevokable license and screw over basically all 3rd-party publishers of D&D content, then they sent literal mercinaries to threaten one of their customers over an order mixup that wasn't even the customer's fault. D&D: Honor Among Thieves and the latest Transformers look really good, but those are within the scope of my boycott, so I won't be seeing those any time soon.
Third, Microsoft. (Apple too, but then I've never bought any Apple devices in my life, so it hardly qualifies as a boycott.) Just because of their penchant for using devices I own against me in every way they can imagine. And for really predatory business practices.
One boycott that I've ended was a boycott of Nintendo. I was pissed that they started marketing The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild (though it didn't have a name at the time) before the WiiU came out, prompting me to be an early adopter of the WiiU, and then when they actually released BotW, they dual-released it on WiiU and Switch. I slightly eased my boycott when the unpatchable Fusee Gilee vulnerability for the first batch of Switches was discovered. I wanted to get one of the ones I could hack and run homebrew on before they came out with a model that lacked the vulnerability.
I guess I'm mostly just hoping I'm not the only one this happens to.
I'll see it fall to earthHyrule, follow the beacon, and when I get close and it switches from "no physics" mode to "collectable item" mode, it's just not there. I'm pretty sure what's actually happened is that it's under the ground. I think it may be more likely to happen if the "meteorite" hits a steep surface.
Is this an issue for anybody else? Two of the last three I've gone to collect were uncollectable because of this.
@TootSweet
@lemmy.world