Howdy, Stranger!

It looks like you're new here. Sign in or register to get started.

PB Predictions Competition 2025 – politicalbetting.com

1235714

Comments

  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,051
    Taz said:

    Didn’t DougSeal, a man not averse to dishing it out and I remember him being most rude to me when I commented on an equal pay ruling - what a prick, have a hissy fit at you over something you said which seemed a little innocuous.

    One of those things that escalated quickly. Sometimes these do over a simple misunderstanding by one party.

    He seemed to get really upset. Really upset.
    Yes, agreed. He had a funny username and avatar, but that only got him so far.
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,203
    FF43 said:

    I don't think it's equivalent. The argument is that we cannot afford to fall out with the government of our main ally with Musk as a member of that government. Hence we need to suck it up when the same ally tries to undermine our legitimate government.

    It may depend on whether Trump is an aberration or if situation normal will reassert itself after him. If it doesn't I would question the value of the supposed special relationship.
    The special relationship is surely more important in a world where the US is reshaping the global order.
  • TazTaz Posts: 16,921
    MaxPB said:

    We started the BBC version of Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy after lunch today during the kids naptime, it's absolutely excellent, thanks for the recommendation all!

    Superbly cast. Even Beryl Reid who gave a great performance.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 44,888
    Taz said:

    Have you considered that you might do the same. Or for that matter any one of us.

    Words on a board are different to a conversation in person. None of us knows what’s going on in other peoples lives.

    Some fuckwit even claimed I led an unhappy life because I criticised SKS !
    Yes, I have considered that. And in the past I've said that we need to remember we don't know how the person on the other end of the screen (as it were) is feeling. In response, I've been called a snowflake or similar... :)
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,110
    edited January 4

    You are muddling up things.

    I haven’t seen what Musk called Phillips but it sounds unpleasant. But free speech is absolutely the right to be unpleasant.

    Phillips has the right to rely on the protections of the courts if she has been libelled - it’s not my area of technical expertise but very happy to accept that needs reform to protect against billionaires using money as a shield.

    Social media is corrosive and needs regulation. But, again, that’s different to restricting free speech - and I think unhelpful to conflate the two (that’s what the defenders of the status quo do)
    Yes, absolutely.
    How would you regulate it?

    It’s the great question confronting democracies at present. Nobody seems anywhere near defining a regime which manages to reduce the real harms of social media.

  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    edited January 4

    The special relationship is surely more important in a world where the US is reshaping the global order.
    Yes, and like it or not the UK government needs to engage with the incoming US administration as soon as possible.

    There’s a potential massive win to be had on tariffs, for example, which could make British luxury cars cheaper than their German and Italian equivalents in the US.
  • TazTaz Posts: 16,921
    If I was 30 years younger I’d consider this

    https://x.com/alanjlsmith/status/1875518715036324084?s=61
  • I think for social media, we will simply have to require some form of age proof to prove you are over 16.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 44,888
    Leon said:

    I simply don’t believe my invective is that powerful and even if it is then they have the option to simply not come to the site. It’s not like I’m visiting their homes and shouting in their tiny redbrick windows. For a start I hate the provinces
    Or you have the option not to come on here, as it's clear you cannot control yourself.

    Mind you, it'll probably only be another few months before you get banned again...
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,269
    malcolmg said:

    Get a grip , if they are that fragile they should not be on social media.
    'Leon' is such an incredible piece of grotesquery, on a par with other fictional egotists like John Self or Howard Kirk, or one of the iffier characters from the Canterbury Tales. Trading barbs with him is like being insulted by Bruce Robertson. Draw comfort from every spasm of bitchiness, enjoy every missing full stop. Be a witness to this peerless act of satirical creativity.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,504
    a

    PB - and probably the British public at large - are still largely resistant to outright prejudice.

    So this place is still a cut above the Twitter/D se

    Yes, absolutely.
    How would you regulate it?

    It’s the great question confronting democracies at present. Nobody seems anywhere near defining a regime which manages to reduce the real harms of social media.

    Some options

    1) Ban the algorithms that promote the spiral
    2) Make platforms 100% responsible for the content - including comments.
    3) ?

  • LeonLeon Posts: 58,970
    Taz said:

    Didn’t DougSeal, a man not averse to dishing it out and I remember him being most rude to me when I commented on an equal pay ruling - what a prick, have a hissy fit at you over something you said which seemed a little innocuous.

    One of those things that escalated quickly. Sometimes these do over a simple misunderstanding by one party.

    He seemed to get really upset. Really upset.
    Yes he’s a good example. Seemed perfectly normal (for a PB lefty), willing to banter, could be rude but was happy to take it in return, but then over a period of a few weeks - even days - suddenly became quite strange and intensely personal - to me, you and others

    Then he left. My sad presumption (I hope I’m wrong) was that he suffered some nasty mental blow. Maybe a bereavement. Or an actual psychological episode

    He came back a few times very briefly during which he nearly always called me “a Nazi” but by that time I’d realised something was wrong so I resolved to ignore him
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,110
    All the commentary here about Meeks is rather Freudian.

    He was, and so far as I can tell remains, utterly correct in his diagnosis of Brexit.
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,364

    I'm from Rochdale and I've lived and worked in Rotherham. I'm associated with this via my history, and I can look back over the way those towns worked at the time I was there to have a bit of understanding about the mood.

    Both towns had real issues of social and racial division, of suspicion and segregation. I can get how this could go on under the radar - because the radar was crappy and had huge holes in the net. What I can't get is how the authorities were so dismissive. Police who actively disbelieved anything that poor girls said. Social workers who were paranoid about being seen as racist in a town screwed by racism.

    The legal and law enforcement issue -
    traditionally the right - is just as key to this
    as the social work and councillors issue -
    traditionally the left. One side trying to
    blame exclusively the other is how we had
    this go on for so long. So I am less than
    amused with Tories denouncing Labour for
    Tory failings. It gets us nowhere.
    I think you are on to something. In most cases huge failures are the result of lots of little failures lining up in the right way (for clarity, none of the failures in this case are individually “little” but it is meant to emphasis that there wet multiple points of failure that created the outcome va a single huge conspiracy).

    Eg the social workers fear of being seen as racist (probably influenced by internal politics) is very different to the police unwillingness to believe those they - for prejudicial reasons - see as being non-credible witnesses

  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,504
    In the furore last night, a critical question went unanswered -

    Are Balrogs PEPs ( Politically Exposed Persons) under finance regulation?
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,269

    There was something about this on TRiEntertainment recently. Amazon's Kindle was supposed to kill off books but hasn't. Kindle plateaued and books are back.
    Books are great and so nice to browse among the shelves in person. Even the smell of a bookshop is inviting. My only problem is finding space on our shelves.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,110

    a

    Some options

    1) Ban the algorithms that promote the spiral
    2) Make platforms 100% responsible for the content - including comments.
    3) ?

    3) Ban for children under 16
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,269

    In the furore last night, a critical question went unanswered -

    Are Balrogs PEPs ( Politically Exposed Persons) under finance regulation?

    Sounds like it got a bit heated last night! Glad I was at the Greenwich panto (which is excellent as always but the last show is tomorrow).
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,504

    Or you have the option not to come on here, as it's clear you cannot control yourself.

    Mind you, it'll probably only be another few months before you get banned again...
    Nonsense. He’ll be banned again within weeks.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,110
    Taz said:

    If I was 30 years younger I’d consider this

    https://x.com/alanjlsmith/status/1875518715036324084?s=61

    My younger friends in the UK are constantly asking me where to immigrate to.

    I would recommend, depending on career and preference, the U.S., Australia, NZ, the Netherlands, or somewhere like Portugal.

    Nowhere is perfect of course.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,504

    3) Ban for children under 16
    That’s a different issue to the extremism/misinformation problem. Though related.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,110

    That’s a different issue to the extremism/misinformation problem. Though related.
    I am just as concerned - maybe more so - about the damaging effect on mental health. But yes, it’s a materially different issue.
  • TazTaz Posts: 16,921
    Leon said:

    Yes he’s a good example. Seemed perfectly normal (for a PB lefty), willing to banter, could be rude but was happy to take it in return, but then over a period of a few weeks - even days - suddenly became quite strange and intensely personal - to me, you and others

    Then he left. My sad presumption (I hope I’m wrong) was that he suffered some nasty mental blow. Maybe a bereavement. Or an actual psychological episode

    He came back a few times very briefly during which he nearly always called me “a Nazi” but by that time I’d realised something was wrong so I resolved to ignore him
    I did say to him, at one stage, if he genuinely felt like that he should seek some help.

    I didn’t care for how he posted here, or addressed me, but I’d wish him, and for that matter anyone else here, no Ill.
  • TazTaz Posts: 16,921
    edited January 4

    Sounds like it got a bit heated last night! Glad I was at the Greenwich panto (which is excellent as always but the last show is tomorrow).
    Oh no it isn’t.

    The panto up in Consett has the guy who played Curly Watts in Corrie in the main role !
  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,364
    eek said:

    A girls saying I’m being abused by one person is an awkward court case for the police to deal with.

    A girl saying I’m being abused by multiple people is very difficult to deal with - it’s 1 (untrustworthy) person against multiple people some or all of whom are unknown to the police.


    Hence I can see why it took a long time for it to be investigated and a long time for it to be dealt with.

    And we then get to the final point that while it may look organized and like malice the reality is many of the people involved have limited time in a day and more pressing issues which would have an immediate effect
    It reminds me of the (most likely apocryphal) story about JFK: he had two inboxes on his desk - one marked urgent and the other marked important.

    He always made it a rule to ensure the “important” tray was finished before he started on the “urgent” pile.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,504

    I think you are on to something. In most cases huge failures are the result of lots of little failures lining up in the right way (for clarity, none of the failures in this case are individually “little” but it is meant to emphasis that there wet multiple points of failure that created the outcome va a single huge conspiracy).

    Eg the social workers fear of being seen as racist (probably influenced by internal politics) is very different to the police unwillingness to believe those they - for prejudicial reasons - see as being non-credible witnesses

    There’s also the social phenomenon of problems that are Too Big To Deal With.

    Herman Kahn noted that when a problem reaches the scale of being majorly disruptive, a common response is to attack the people raising issue.
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,269
    Taz said:

    Oh no it isn’t.

    The panto up in Consett has the guy who played Curly Watts in Corrie in the main role !
    I have a friend who goes to see 10+ pantos every year - he said the Greenwich one is the best in London, but Stirling is the best in the UK.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,119

    There was something about this on TRiEntertainment recently. Amazon's Kindle was supposed to kill off books but hasn't. Kindle plateaued and books are back.
    I'd be interested to know why that happened.

    My personal feeling is that the Kindle, which worked well, had digital rights management that was too strict, and so that led to lots of feels bad experiences that put people off. For example, my daughter received a Kindle as a gift, but it ended up linked to her Granddad's Amazon account, who bought lots of books for her on it. My daughter later set up her own Amazon account and bought books on that, and then lost the other books, because Amazon wouldn't let her transfer them.

    Other ereaders with less restrictive DRM simply didn't work well. My wife had an Onyx Boox, and it's usability was dire.
  • “We’re entering this sort of parallel reality based on Musk’s ignorance of the thing he wants to talk about.”

    Reflecting on over a decade writing about grooming gangs,
    @HugoRifkind
    explains why he’s not sure an inquiry into grooming gangs will provide any answers.

    @TheTimes

    https://x.com/TimesRadio/status/1875503682420396530

    Finally, some sensible analysis.
  • mwadamsmwadams Posts: 3,771
    MaxPB said:

    We started the BBC version of Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy after lunch today during the kids naptime, it's absolutely excellent, thanks for the recommendation all!

    The opening sequence (without dialog) is one of the best scenes in TV drama; an absolutely exquisite set of character sketches.
  • Stark_DawningStark_Dawning Posts: 9,932
    Leon said:

    Possibly the most incendiary time on PB was just before and maybe a year after Brexit, when a significant minority of Remainers on PB went literally mad (a couple still linger, bless). They couldn’t accept a democratic decision, they believed they were democrats, the cognitive dissonance left them one choice: lunacy

    The worst example was Alistair Meeks. When I say worse I mean saddest, as he was one of the very best and smartest of commenters, judicious, wry, often witty

    Then Brexit turned him into a smouldering pit of anger and sometimes he would spend a day issuing threats of actual violence. In the end he made the wise but saddening choice to leave

    I still live in hope that now he’s calm again - or so it seems on other forums - he might return
    Really? My most vivid memory of Brexit PB was an erstwhile poster called seanT going around screaming 'traitor' at everyone in the most hysterical manner. And he was (at least at the time) a diehard Leaver.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,119
    edited January 4

    I think for social media, we will simply have to require some form of age proof to prove you are over 16.

    I don't think it is a good idea to train people to think it is normal to provide their passport details to dozens of different random social media sites.

    It would make it much more likely that people would then provide those details to scam websites, see their identities stolen, and enable vast amounts of financial fraud. It would be asking for trouble.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,110

    I have a friend who goes to see 10+ pantos every year - he said the Greenwich one is the best in London, but Stirling is the best in the UK.
    There’s a nice piece in the FT today about London’s theatre industry and its broad success versus Broadway’s. Pantos are mentioned in passing as having a very successful period.

    The arts generally is one area where London continues to punch above New York. The British model - which allows for a level of public sector funding somewhere between very generous European models and the miserly American one - works very well.

  • StillWatersStillWaters Posts: 9,364

    Then I wonder why all of those going after
    Muslims don't seem to spend any time calling for these people to be deported. If you want to start that train then I will support you.
    The issue is multiculturalism has completely failed as a model. Immigrants need to integrate into the host country, not import their own culture and establish it as a separate stream
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,051

    All the commentary here about Meeks is rather Freudian.

    He was, and so far as I can tell remains, utterly correct in his diagnosis of Brexit.

    Not really.

    It's only a few irreconcilables like you and him and Scott and Foxy that continue to be obsessed by Brexit.

    The rest of us have moved on.
  • ohnotnowohnotnow Posts: 4,496
    Taz said:

    Superbly cast. Even Beryl Reid who gave a great performance.
    I came across an old "Armchair Theatre" production of "Mrs Cappers Birthday" with Reid starring. It's a quite delightful performance - written by Noel Coward.

    https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0762584/?ref_=ttfc_fc_tt

  • I don't think it is a good idea to train people to think it is normal to provide their passport details to dozens of different random social media sites.

    It would make it much more likely that people would then provide those details to scam websites, see their identities stolen, and enable vast amounts of financial fraud. It would be asking for trouble.
    I used to think that but seeing the impact of social media on young people, it's destroying them. It really is.
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 13,680

    All the commentary here about Meeks is rather Freudian.

    He was, and so far as I can tell remains, utterly correct in his diagnosis of Brexit.

    Freudian or otherwise I for one would welcome Mr Meeks back and hope he returns.

    I am sure he was correct in many ways, but maybe was not sufficiently mindful of the case, put then and still put by some sensible people, that we could be out of the political project but in the single market, like Norway.

    This remains the best available answer by far and is completely consistent with the Brexit vote, where membership of the EU was the only question.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,110

    I'd be interested to know why that happened.

    My personal feeling is that the Kindle, which worked well, had digital rights management that was too strict, and so that led to lots of feels bad experiences that put people off. For example, my daughter received a Kindle as a gift, but it ended up linked to her Granddad's Amazon account, who bought lots of books for her on it. My daughter later set up her own Amazon account and bought books on that, and then lost the other books, because Amazon wouldn't let her transfer them.

    Other ereaders with less restrictive DRM simply didn't work well. My wife had an Onyx Boox, and it's usability was dire.
    Kindle simply lacks the sensory experience of proper books. It has one very powerful use case - reading during travel/holidays.
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,119

    a

    Some options

    1) Ban the algorithms that promote the spiral
    2) Make platforms 100% responsible for the content - including comments.
    3) ?

    I would ban the algorithms.

    I would also consider time-limiting comments on social media. I think it might help if social media comments didn't last longer than, say, twenty-four hours, or possibly an even shorter period of time.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,110

    I used to think that but seeing the impact of social media on young people, it's destroying them. It really is.
    Yes, I loathe overweening regulation, but it’s becoming clear that social media is a public harm.

    Not 100% of course. PB is, after all, social media.
  • How do you "ban algorithms"?
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,110

    Not really.

    It's only a few irreconcilables like you and him and Scott and Foxy that continue to be obsessed by Brexit.

    The rest of us have moved on.
    I’ve literally moved on, to the U.S.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,504
    mwadams said:

    The opening sequence (without dialog) is one of the best scenes in TV drama; an absolutely exquisite set of character sketches.
    One thing they got perfectly right in the TV series was that Smiley is never threatening. The character in the recent film descends to strong arm tactics at one point.

    Smiley (as written) is always polite - breaking people by pointing out contradictions.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 30,608
    ...

    Stopped reading at utter nonsense.

    Sorry.
    Is that because you were struggling with the words? The more you read the better the reader you will become. Perseverance will prevail. Good luck!
  • LostPasswordLostPassword Posts: 19,119

    How do you "ban algorithms"?

    The same way you enforce health and safety at work legislation. With punishments for breaking the law, inspections and support for whistleblowers.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    I think you are on to something. In most cases huge failures are the result of lots of little failures lining up in the right way (for clarity, none of the failures in this case are individually “little” but it is meant to emphasis that there wet multiple points of failure that created the outcome va a single huge conspiracy).

    Eg the social workers fear of being seen as racist (probably influenced by internal politics) is very different to the police unwillingness to believe those they - for prejudicial reasons - see as being non-credible witnesses

    The “Swiss Cheese Model” in action.

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swiss_cheese_model

    This is used in accident investigation, the thinking is that a whole bunch of things have to all go wrong at the same time or in sequence for an accident to occur, and that there were usually several opportunities not taken to avoid the accident during the sequence of events. Which is why it’s really important to learn from the minor incidents that don’t end up as accidents.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,110

    Really? My most vivid memory of Brexit PB was an erstwhile poster called seanT going around screaming 'traitor' at everyone in the most hysterical manner. And he was (at least at the time) a diehard Leaver.
    Leon, Casino and Max are three of the most hysterical and intemperate posters on here. They routinely call for what would amount to a form of dictatorship if taken literally.

    Leon of course is mostly very entertaining - especially since the photo and AI bans - and all three make very very valid points quite regularly, in between screams of treachery and calls for their political enemies to be imprisoned if not executed.

    I’m not sure what to call this “style”.

  • ohnotnowohnotnow Posts: 4,496

    Leon, Casino and Max are three of the most hysterical and intemperate posters on here. They routinely call for what would amount to a form of dictatorship if taken literally.

    Leon of course is mostly very entertaining - especially since the photo and AI bans - and all three make very very valid points quite regularly, in between screams of treachery and calls for their political enemies to be imprisoned if not executed.

    I’m not sure what to call this “style”.

    "Panto"?
  • The same way you enforce health and safety at work legislation. With punishments for breaking the law, inspections and support for whistleblowers.
    Yes but how on Earth do you police what algorithms are being used without looking at the source code. It's a non-starter.
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,269

    There’s a nice piece in the FT today about London’s theatre industry and its broad success versus Broadway’s. Pantos are mentioned in passing as having a very successful period.

    The arts generally is one area where London continues to punch above New York. The British model - which allows for a level of public sector funding somewhere between very generous European models and the miserly American one - works very well.

    The quality of theatre in London is incredible. In the last decade I have seen some unforgettable performances (Mark Rylance in Jerusalem and James Corden in One Man Two Guvnors maybe the most notable). It is probably the only indisputable and objective way in which London is the greatest city on Earth. Theatre outside of London is lagging, though; the disparity in quality and quantity is massive.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 30,608

    Remember that Iraq indirectly created Tommy Robinson because it was Muslim protests in Luton that targeted British soldiers that first inspired him.
    Fantastic, what a hero, what a patriot, but riddle me this; why did the silly f***** adopt a stage name?
  • No_Offence_AlanNo_Offence_Alan Posts: 4,861

    I would ban the algorithms.

    I would also consider time-limiting comments on social media. I think it might help if social media comments didn't last longer than, say, twenty-four hours, or possibly an even shorter period of time.
    But how many junior staff in media companies and political parties would be put out of work, not trawling through years of someone's comments, trying to get a "gotcha"?
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,051

    I’ve literally moved on, to the U.S.
    Not the EU then?
  • moonshinemoonshine Posts: 5,814

    I’ve literally moved on, to the U.S.
    So upset about Britain leaving the European Union that you… left Europe?
  • Casino_RoyaleCasino_Royale Posts: 62,051

    Leon, Casino and Max are three of the most hysterical and intemperate posters on here. They routinely call for what would amount to a form of dictatorship if taken literally.

    Leon of course is mostly very entertaining - especially since the photo and AI bans - and all three make very very valid points quite regularly, in between screams of treachery and calls for their political enemies to be imprisoned if not executed.

    I’m not sure what to call this “style”.

    I've never called for dictatorship.

    Maybe you could do with a nice cup of tea and a lie down.
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,269

    Not the EU then?
    That has gotten a whole lot harder recently for some reason.
  • MightyAlexMightyAlex Posts: 1,743

    I'd be interested to know why that happened.

    My personal feeling is that the Kindle, which worked well, had digital rights management that was too strict, and so that led to lots of feels bad experiences that put people off. For example, my daughter received a Kindle as a gift, but it ended up linked to her Granddad's Amazon account, who bought lots of books for her on it. My daughter later set up her own Amazon account and bought books on that, and then lost the other books, because Amazon wouldn't let her transfer them.

    Other ereaders with less restrictive DRM simply didn't work well. My wife had an Onyx Boox, and it's usability was dire.
    For me Kindle PW work very well. You just have to avoid the Amazon ecosystem.

    If you never connect it to the internet and only load books/papers through USB with Calibre I don't think there is a better reader for the price. I'd love a massive 15 incher with colour e-ink but tis a dream.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,504

    How do you "ban algorithms"?

    One of the defining characteristics of social media, in my view, is the use of algorithms to promote content. Which makes PB non-social-media…

    The problem is that such algorithms were selected for those that create the most interaction. So they show you the posts you *mist respond to*.

    It was then discovered that stirring up hatred and anger is the best way to do this - after the fact. The various companies were chasing clicks and comments. It was then pointed out that it was creating two phenomena -

    1) Promoting content that people really, really hate. Fire them up!
    2) Promoting content that is a slightly more extreme version of what you are already reading/writing.

    The first is good for getting lynch mobs going. The later creates a spiral of radicalisation.

    Banning promoting other posts by algorithm is perfectly possible as a law. Would it be a good idea? Hmmmmmm
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,347
    edited January 4

    I'd be interested to know why that happened.

    My personal feeling is that the Kindle, which worked well, had digital rights management that was too strict, and so that led to lots of feels bad experiences that put people off. For example, my daughter received a Kindle as a gift, but it ended up linked to her Granddad's Amazon account, who bought lots of books for her on it. My daughter later set up her own Amazon account and bought books on that, and then lost the other books, because Amazon wouldn't let her transfer them.

    Other ereaders with less restrictive DRM simply didn't work well. My wife had an Onyx Boox, and it's usability was dire.
    I definitely prefer tangible reading to electronic but I have noticed I find both a bit of a strain these days. I have to force myself to do it. The reason, I think, is podcasts and audio docs and books. I got into all that, late as usual with me, so maybe about a year ago, and I've got used to consuming that way, through my ears. The traditional eyeball method feels slightly cumbersome now. I find myself wishing whatever it is was being read aloud to me by somebody with a nice voice.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 23,935

    I don't think it is a good idea to train people to think it is normal to provide their passport details to dozens of different random social media sites.

    It would make it much more likely that people would then provide those details to scam websites, see their identities stolen, and enable vast amounts of financial fraud. It would be asking for trouble.
    Millions of gamblers already do this, to companies who can afford to spend far less on compliance and vetting than Facebook and Twitter could.
  • StuartinromfordStuartinromford Posts: 18,079

    Fantastic, what a hero, what a patriot, but riddle me this; why did the silly f***** adopt a stage name?
    Because Stephen Yaxley-Lennon is Head of Drama at Ipswich's third best comprehensive school. Tommy Robinson is a working class hero.
  • One of the defining characteristics of social media, in my view, is the use of algorithms to promote content. Which makes PB non-social-media…

    The problem is that such algorithms were selected for those that create the most interaction. So they show you the posts you *mist respond to*.

    It was then discovered that stirring up hatred and anger is the best way to do this - after the fact. The various companies were chasing clicks and comments. It was then pointed out that it was creating two phenomena -

    1) Promoting content that people really, really hate. Fire them up!
    2) Promoting content that is a slightly more extreme version of what you are already reading/writing.

    The first is good for getting lynch mobs going. The later creates a spiral of radicalisation.

    Banning promoting other posts by algorithm is perfectly possible as a law. Would it be a good idea? Hmmmmmm
    Way back when, Twitter and Facebook just showed content in chronological order. I wonder if you just mandate that by law.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,504

    Yes but how on Earth do you police what algorithms are being used without looking at the source code. It's a non-starter.
    Ban promoting posts.

    Plenty of forums don’t have this.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,110

    Not the EU then?
    I’d absolutely live in the EU (a diverse place), but right now the U.S. makes sense for my economic situation.

  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,690

    Leon, Casino and Max are three of the most hysterical and intemperate posters on here. They routinely call for what would amount to a form of dictatorship if taken literally.

    Leon of course is mostly very entertaining - especially since the photo and AI bans - and all three make very very valid points quite regularly, in between screams of treachery and calls for their political enemies to be imprisoned if not executed.

    I’m not sure what to call this “style”.

    I'd bring back the firing squad for enemies. Public executions always get the blood pumping...
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    Fantastic, what a hero, what a patriot, but riddle me this; why did the silly f***** adopt a stage name?
    Didn’t he originally have a proper job somewhere, so used the pseudonym for his weekend activities stirring up racial hatred?
  • Ban promoting posts.

    Plenty of forums don’t have this.
    Okay but that's not banning algorithms as such.

    I think you just say that posts have to be in chronological order, you can't pay to promote posts.

    By far the stupidest thing Elon Musk has done at Twitter is blue ticks being paid for.
  • 'Leon' is such an incredible piece of grotesquery, on a par with other fictional egotists like John Self or Howard Kirk, or one of the iffier characters from the Canterbury Tales. Trading barbs with him is like being insulted by Bruce Robertson. Draw comfort from every spasm of bitchiness, enjoy every missing full stop. Be a witness to this peerless act of satirical creativity.
    Do I like people using offensive terms to describe each other, no. But, trying to determine what is or is not acceptable is much much worse. It is a fool's errand and any imposed limit will be seen as a target. If there were to be a change on this site, and Guido then the only change I could think of that would be useful would be for us to post on our real names. Perhaps that might limit to offence ? But, surely we are all sort of adults and does it really matter if some of us aren't ?

    Apparently according to a correspondent on Guido there was a joke about Hitler at a dinner where various former government ministers attended. WOW ! Get a grip. Even Laura K and the Beeb would be scraping the barrel to try to make something of that.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,504

    Fantastic, what a hero, what a patriot, but riddle me this; why did the silly f***** adopt a stage name?
    The EDL was also partly inspired by a protests by Sikhs against a play (written by a Sikh woman, incipiently). The police pretty much arranged to have the play pulled, citing public order grounds.

    So the thug right thought “Getting things banned with a bit of violence and threats? Let’s get some of that.”
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,690

    Okay but that's not banning algorithms as such.

    I think you just say that posts have to be in chronological order, you can't pay to promote posts.

    By far the stupidest thing Elon Musk has done at Twitter is blue ticks being paid for.
    You realise that Meta also do this for Instagram and Facebook?
  • Ban the concept of paying for anything to get your post promoted on any social media platform. Ban posts out of order.

    This would seemingly kill TikTok's app over night but frankly, I'd like to see TikTok die a death.
  • David Starkey's analysis of Rachel Reeves on Youtube is well worth half an hour. Might not be to everyone's taste but I find his arguments interesting and for the main part convincing. Certainly more convincing than anything she herself has said, or Starmer for that matter.

    The truth is David Lammy is not the most stupid member of the government front bench, not by a long chalk.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,504
    edited January 4

    Okay but that's not banning algorithms as such.

    I think you just say that posts have to be in chronological order, you can't pay to promote posts.

    By far the stupidest thing Elon Musk has done at Twitter is blue ticks being paid for.
    Yup - that’s what is meant by algorithms in social media. Post promotion.

    https://forum.nasaspaceflight.com/index.php - is an example of a tightly moderated forum. They do have a small panel on the front page showing the most recent posts. But otherwise, no promoting stuff.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 53,504

    Ban the concept of paying for anything to get your post promoted on any social media platform. Ban posts out of order.

    This would seemingly kill TikTok's app over night but frankly, I'd like to see TikTok die a death.

    You’d have to ban promotion of posts outright. Otherwise all kinds of wacky stuff would go on. Not least, platform owners promoting posts.
  • mwadamsmwadams Posts: 3,771
    Sandpit said:

    The “Swiss Cheese Model” in action.

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swiss_cheese_model

    This is used in accident investigation, the thinking is that a whole bunch of things have to all go wrong at the same time or in sequence for an accident to occur, and that there were usually several opportunities not taken to avoid the accident during the sequence of events. Which is why it’s really important to learn from the minor incidents that don’t end up as accidents.
    Plus mechanisms to detect that something *has* gone wrong (that can't be ignored) and plans for containment and response when things *have* gone wrong.
  • Yup - that’s what is meant by algorithms in social media. Post promotion.

    https://forum.nasaspaceflight.com/index.php - is an example of a tightly moderated forum. They do have a small panel on the front page showing the most recent posts. But otherwise, no promoting stuff.
    The problem is, this would inevitably be called "shutting down free speech" if applied to Twitter or Facebook.

    I just think we have to get away from the idea that you are shown recommendations or paid for stuff. You sign up and can follow who you want but it gets presented chronologically and you're not recommended who to follow.

    Or you have some kind of "open" mode where you can see everything but again this is probably too large for Twitter or Facebook to be usable.
  • You’d have to ban promotion of posts outright. Otherwise all kinds of wacky stuff would go on. Not least, platform owners promoting posts.
    Yeah, I agree. But that pretty much kills the concept of a "for you" or recommended feed. I don't think TikTok even has a chronological version.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    Interesting video, from 2012, of the DPP before a Parliamentary Select Committee, discussing the “grooming” issue.

    https://x.com/timmyvoe/status/1875108970064757042

    He talks about the difficulty of unreliable victims and witnesses, from which one may draw their own conclusions.
  • It’s not obvious to me again why the West allows TikTok to operate freely when there is clear evidence of political manipulation in favour of CCP-approved content.
    The Chinese version is completely moderated and controlled by the CCP.

    It's shocking we allow it to fester here.
  • MaxPBMaxPB Posts: 39,690

    I’d absolutely live in the EU (a diverse place), but right now the U.S. makes sense for my economic situation.

    Which is fair, what's very worrying is that Europe (and I include Labour's UK in this) is become a retirement home for people who have found success elsewhere in the world because it is now actively hostile to wealth creation. The welfare states across Europe have created an entitlement culture and people think they are owed wealth transfers from successful people whether that's directly in the form of cash benefits or indirectly in the form of healthcare/education/state employment etc...

    I don't know what the solution to this is, but the entitlement culture across Europe is bankrupting the continent, the UK included and it's become a negative spiral as we're having to increase tax to pay for it which further harms economic growth and the tax base and eventually we turn into Argentina.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 30,608
    ...

    Leon, Casino and Max are three of the most hysterical and intemperate posters on here. They routinely call for what would amount to a form of dictatorship if taken literally.

    Leon of course is mostly very entertaining - especially since the photo and AI bans - and all three make very very valid points quite regularly, in between screams of treachery and calls for their political enemies to be imprisoned if not executed.

    I’m not sure what to call this “style”.

    I would be outraged if I were William Glenn and I had been missed off that list.
  • moonshinemoonshine Posts: 5,814

    I’d absolutely live in the EU (a diverse place), but right now the U.S. makes sense for my economic situation.

    Is this statement not a microcosm for the whole economic argument?

    For example, Germany’s economy was essentially built on cheap Russian energy, cheap third world migrant labour, autos, and exports of precision machinery to China, underpinned by a locked in currency competitiveness with the rest of the block. Only thing they have left is the internal terms of trades from the euro and that’s a pretty dishonest way to make a living.

    Of the other large economies, France and Italy arguably only have globally significant economic value as living museums, trading on tourism and luxury brands. And they’re buggering up the former thanks to third world immigration.

    Would love to say the UK has made the most of the post Brexit economic opportunity but it hasn’t. Yet.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    MaxPB said:

    You realise that Meta also do this for Instagram and Facebook?
    Much more so, and the criteria for being ‘verified’ on Instagram are very opaque.
  • You need some way to prove your profile is actually you to stop fraud but that should really be all it's for, not about promoting content.

    I'd have that process be open and transparent, again by law.
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,269

    ...

    I would be outraged if I were William Glenn and I had been missed off that list.
    There's a difference between hysterical and mad.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 30,608
    MattW said:

    It's a surreal week. Did anyone hear this live?

    Otto English ‪@ottoenglish.bsky.social‬
    Suella Braverman has just told #lbc listeners that not only has Italy built a wall on "its border with Turkey" but that she has been there "and seen it."
    https://bsky.app/profile/ottoenglish.bsky.social/post/3leqvwjpkvk2w

    I think she attended the Dominic Raab School of Geography, which is why she is so good at it.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,347
    edited January 4

    “We’re entering this sort of parallel reality based on Musk’s ignorance of the thing he wants to talk about.”

    Reflecting on over a decade writing about grooming gangs,
    @HugoRifkind
    explains why he’s not sure an inquiry into grooming gangs will provide any answers.

    @TheTimes

    https://x.com/TimesRadio/status/1875503682420396530

    Finally, some sensible analysis.

    Answers are not what Musk and his fanbase want. They want 2 things. To damage Keir Starmer. To whip up hatred of Muslims. Both of these things being in the interests of their far right politics.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    It’s not obvious to me again why the West allows TikTok to operate freely when there is clear evidence of political manipulation in favour of CCP-approved content.
    Tik-Tok is so clearly a Chinese psyop that Western governments should have banned it years ago, before half of Western Gen Z were on the platform.
  • MexicanpeteMexicanpete Posts: 30,608

    There's a difference between hysterical and mad.
    A fair point. I stand corrected.
  • moonshinemoonshine Posts: 5,814
    kinabalu said:

    Answers are not what Musk and his fanbase want. They want 2 things. To damage Keir Starmer. To whip up hatred of Muslims. Both of these things being in the interests of their far right politics.
    Heard it all now. Wanting to damage the most left wing PM of my lifetime means you are far right.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,399

    I think she attended the Dominic Raab School of Geography, which is why she is so good at it.
    No wonder I only got a C in Geography at school ...
  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 8,965
    edited January 4

    The issue is multiculturalism has completely failed as a model. Immigrants need to integrate into the host country, not import their own culture and establish it as a separate stream
    Multiculturalism isn't just about immigrants. A lot of it is homegrown. Look at the cultures of Reform people verus LibDem people.

    The model for monoculturalism is China, as the Tibetans and Uyghurs well know.

    The upside is that there isn't the tension of "others" or any affront to ones culture. It's one big happy family with common values, in theory.

    The downside is the loss of diversity of outlooks, of innovation, and also of the basic freedom to not conform and behave as you want as long as you don't harm others. (Harm is not the same as offend).

    The Chinese model is working well, but at a cost. There are pros and cons.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,274
    Taz said:

    If I was 30 years younger I’d consider this

    https://x.com/alanjlsmith/status/1875518715036324084?s=61

    One of my grandsons is off next month.
  • JosiasJessopJosiasJessop Posts: 44,888
    Musky Baby's latest missive:

    "Because Starmer is guilty of terrible crimes against the British people"

    https://x.com/elonmusk/status/1875525668227936392

    Musk is an absolute fuckwit, and a danger to the civilised world.
  • Musky Baby's latest missive:

    "Because Starmer is guilty of terrible crimes against the British people"

    https://x.com/elonmusk/status/1875525668227936392

    Musk is an absolute fuckwit, and a danger to the civilised world.

    If he had said this about the Tories we'd never hear the end of it on here.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,110
    moonshine said:

    Is this statement not a microcosm for the whole economic argument?

    For example, Germany’s economy was essentially built on cheap Russian energy, cheap third world migrant labour, autos, and exports of precision machinery to China, underpinned by a locked in currency competitiveness with the rest of the block. Only thing they have left is the internal terms of trades from the euro and that’s a pretty dishonest way to make a living.

    Of the other large economies, France and Italy arguably only have globally significant economic value as living museums, trading on tourism and luxury brands. And they’re buggering up the former thanks to third world immigration.

    Would love to say the UK has made the most of the post Brexit economic opportunity but it hasn’t. Yet.
    The EU was - on balance - a healthier place for the UK economy, and within that, the UK was largely free to pursue its own distinct economic model as a services-based, debtor nation with a social security and tax regime somewhere between the French/German model and the U.S. one.

    So I don’t disagree with anything you’re saying, except the suggestion that my move to the U.S. implicitly supports the idea that the EU was economically sub-optimal for the UK.

  • God the replies to Elon's Tweets are just awful. A sewer of bile, hatred, outward racism, anti-Semitism, it's all there.
  • GardenwalkerGardenwalker Posts: 22,110
    MaxPB said:

    Which is fair, what's very worrying is that Europe (and I include Labour's UK in this) is become a retirement home for people who have found success elsewhere in the world because it is now actively hostile to wealth creation. The welfare states across Europe have created an entitlement culture and people think they are owed wealth transfers from successful people whether that's directly in the form of cash benefits or indirectly in the form of healthcare/education/state employment etc...

    I don't know what the solution to this is, but the entitlement culture across Europe is bankrupting the continent, the UK included and it's become a negative spiral as we're having to increase tax to pay for it which further harms economic growth and the tax base and eventually we turn into Argentina.
    I agree with all of this.
This discussion has been closed.