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Machine Learning Researcher Links OpenAI to Drug-Fueled Sex Parties
  • I really have no objection to drug fueled sex parties TBH.

    EDIT: After reading the article, sounds like there's maybe some sexism and bad power dynamics in play and it's not even "He said, she said" it's "there MIGHT be some insinuations that things could be coercive / women could feel pressured to participate / toxic masculinity stuff." All very non specific.

  • Describe an episode in the worst possible way
  • Man who can't let go of past allows childhood bully to goad him into unwinnable challenge, forces friends to play history's most boring sport. They get their asses kicked.

  • Gordon Ramsay plays Minecraft
  • It's not real and we live in an age of miracles.

  • What possible, fundamental, misunderstanding of the nature of the universe could make current academics look like flat earthers?
  • That the many worlds interpretation is sort of correct, but incomplete. Hear me out.

    Many worlds isn't as mind bogglingly ridiculous if the worlds are constantly merging back into each other. Like the universe where a photon bounced left and the universe where it bounced right are functionally identical, then they ARE just the same universe. As long as which way the photon bounced didn't make a meaningful difference, those two realities aren't suddenly new separate lines, they're like a rubber band that stretched in two directions, then bounced back together.

    But let's say you measure the photon and keep records of it. Now there's two versions of you right? One measuring the photon going left, one measuring it going right. You're in separate universes that shall never meet right?

    No... you've stretched the rubber band a little further. Over a timescale that's totally meaningless compared to the age of the universe, you will die, your records will decay and once the information is effectively scrambled into chaos... the two realities can just snap back together. Two universe... but now one again.

    Now for some really mind bendy stuff... this stretching isn't just localized in time it's also localized in space. Meaning... if you measure your photon and split into two versions of yourself, but I'm on the other side of the world (or even just down the street from you) and I have no idea that there's two versions of you, stretched across this temporary universe split... Well, there's still only one version of me. Up until I encounter one or the other version of you. And if I never do... or if we just cross paths in the local grocery store and your photon experiment doesn't come up at all... there's still just one version of me.

    And that one version of me can EASILY encounter both versions of you simultaneously without me ever knowing or it making a meaningful difference in my life. So your split reality is localized... possibly even microscopically in your body (like... most of your neurons in your brain didn't really change at all because of your experiment, only a few of them have to fire differently, the rest don't have to split... also, wtf) and in the parts of your lab equipment that kept records of the photon measurement.

    Now, even whackier... the remerging isn't perfect, just perfect enough that the universe doesn't fall apart. Like... you know how sometimes you're SURE that the neighbor had a red car, but then you look outside and it's green and your spouse tells you it's always been green? Stuff that fuels r/glitchinthematrix.

    "OK thebardingreen," you say, "sure, but wouldn't that mean our records would detect the imperfections all the time and we'd have clear evidence when we go an check the database that it's impossible to keep consistent records because of this spliting and remerging?"

    "NO!" I say, "because of entropy."

    See, if the universe is going to try to flow along the arrow of time to it's lowest energy state... and as we all know, something stretched (like a rubber band, but ANYTHING really) is in a high energy state. If we found lots of evidence this was going on, well that would keep the universe stretched out more, over longer periods of time. The universe can't have that, so when you start checking records, things tend to snap to their lowest energy state (possibly even to the point that you realize the neighbor's car WAS always green, and you just had a dream last night that it was red. But something's bothering you about that... doesn't seem quite right. You post on the internet and tell a eerie story about your strange experience and then go on with your life. The feeling fades. Becomes a funny party story.

    Decades later, your grand kids remember a story you used to tell... and they retell it, but they don't quite remember what color you said the car was. There's no need for them to split into multiple versions (one who says red and one who says green), they just both say "the car was blue, then it turned out to be yellow." The universe is FULLY collapsed.

    (Also, we KNOW that keeping perfect records / taking perfect measurements is actually incredibly hard and we tend to throw out anomalous results as garbage data, especially if we can't reproduce them, this could be going all the time and we would just consider it statistically insignificant bad data, within our expected margin of error, easily explainable as a common, everyday screw up)

    So yes, that means there could be a small infinity of parallel universes where evolution / history went differently. A universe where sapient rat people are squeeking over their version of the internet about weird science facts. Sure.... but so what? The sun is going to expand into a red giant and consume the Earth and erase most of that information and then the local planetary stretch collapses back into it's lowest energy state... one where there might have been rat people, or hairless ape people, but either way, they're gone.

    Ready for MORE whackyness?? THIS is the Great Filter. Sort of.

    Intelligent civilizations spreading across the stars will create a HIGH energy state, as all those potential diversions splinter in more and more ways across greater distances. SO the universe will tend to favor outcomes where chaotic, clever and unpredictable life forms DON'T spread out of their own solar system, or travel across vast distances, because THAT would be a high energy stretch state. Although even just spreading across a galaxy is still only a LOCAL stretch as far as the universe is concerned. Heck, beings 100 light years away who never build a huge solar system sized radio telescope to pick up our faint emissions don't need to cause weird reality splits. They could exist in a weird little myriad of their own stretched realities and NEVER interact with ours in a meaningful way. And if one day one of their radio astronomers detects a strange radio signal from our star that NEVER repeats and is NEVER explained... well it really doesn't matter to them at all if we sent that signal or the rats did or the sun just hiccuped in way their physical models can't explain. Our whole solar system becomes a Schrodinger's cat box in which both us AND the rat people sent that signal existing in a superpositioned state until someone measures it... which they probably won't and probably CAN'T so the universe maintains it's low energy state.

    So if you're ever like "If I go back in time and kill my grandfather, does that mean I never existed", what if you just created a weird stretch reality that will paradoxically persist for a while and then all collapse back together as soon as the universe can get away with it?

    In this thought experiment, it's possible that a small infinity of time travelers showed up to Stephen Hawking's time travel party. BUT, that would cause a high energy stretch over a weird knot in time... so the universe will TOTALLY favor outcomes in which no one showed up, so in the vast majority of universes, NO time travelers show up to hang out with Stephen Hawking, BECAUSE that's less stretching for the universe to do before it snaps back to a low energy state.

    So, the many worlds interpretation doesn't mean that infinities of universes are being created constantly, it means there's JUST one universe, but multiple pocket realities can exist in it, localized in both space and time, and these pocket realities are constantly snapping back and merging with each other, sometimes inconsistently. Which is EXACTLY what we'd expect from an energetic system progressing through time, experiencing entropy.

  • Linux maintainers were infected for 2 years by SSH-dwelling backdoor with huge reach
  • Yeah... it's very clickbatey to NOT include that detail.

  • Rings of Poser Season 2 Teaser
  • I didn't finish the first season. I couldn't keep going. I probably won't give the second season a chance.

  • What are the most private social media platforms?
  • Ah. I forget that real world paper exists, my ADHD brain can't make functional use of it.

  • What are the most private social media platforms?
  • Funny. But, as it runs on Windows, it's definitely not the most private.

    I suggest Emacs or vi running in a Qube.

  • UN votes to back Palestinian membership, prompting Israeli envoy to shred charter
  • It's probably less about telling off the UN and more about sound bites / video clips that will play well with his bosses and their political base back home.

    Historically, right wing isolationist ideologues of all nationalities seem to cheer and double down when faced with international criticism. They know it's them and their beliefs against the world and they have a fantasy that they can win, right up until an overwhelming number of them die for it.

    Israel as a nation is not in a mood for self reflection and definitely doesn't want to understand the hole their digging themselves into.

  • Crew on leave
  • Scotch?

    A little old lady from Leningrad inwented it.

  • Showing how he landed the part
  • For real, he looks kinda like a Kazon.

  • At some point it's got to be easier to get it over with and just do the damn dishes.
  • Uh... that's been me. With Special K, Red Berries no less. I'm not too proud to admit it.

  • Oxygen
  • I googled this and that's enough internet for today.

  • The Bitcoiners were wrong: a blog post about privacy and bitcoin, and how they failed to design a cash alternative
  • I always find these breakdowns to be a little bit disingenuous. Like, you could do this same analysis on the whole email system, or on the whole world wide banking system, including ATMs, or on the energy usage of all DNS queries or even on global ActivityPub activity, not to mention shopping on Amazon or browsing Facebook. People DO do these kinds of breakdowns on generative AI, for exactly the same reasons, and reach the same kinds of conclusions.

    Having a global computer network is INCREDIBLY energy intensive, with a massive carbon footprint. It's not shocking that a given application of that network is energy intensive, with a massive carbon footprint. These kinds of analysis are put together by people who already don't like cryptocurrencies (for all kinds of reasons both valid and ridiculous) who then go cherry picking MORE reasons not to like them.

  • The Bitcoiners were wrong: a blog post about privacy and bitcoin, and how they failed to design a cash alternative
  • Thanks for the breakdown. When I read the headline, I guessed at a bunch of what the article said and you confirmed most of it.

  • More and more lately, I see more large companies in hot water for another significant data breach (Dropbox, AT&T). Will this become the norm?
  • As someone who does cybersecurity consulting for govt. contractors, companies invest in security when some external force forces them to, and then they spend the bare minimum to meet whatever that force requires (and they try to get away with less at every opportunity).

    Right now in government contracting we're experiencing this paradigm shift where the NIST-800-171 standard (which everyone was required to follow, but kind of on the honor system) is going to be replaced in 21 months or so by something called CMMC (Cybersecurity Maturity Model Certification). But, CMMC is basically just the same requirements as NIST-800-171, so why?

    BECAUSE, everyone just SAYS they're NIST-800-171 compliant on all their contracts. Everyone self scores themselves on it and gets a WAY higher score than they do when being scored by a 3rd party, and then reports their self scores up the chain. The way this works in both DoD and NASA projects, which is what I'm familiar with, is the big players like Boeing, Northrop Grumman, Raytheon, etc, have thousands of smaller suppliers and those suppliers have smaller suppliers, so the requirements flow down from the govt to the big contractors to the small subcontractors and each link in the chain is responsible for making sure the upstream links are compliant... which they NEVER are, but they all say they are!

    Of course, the government KNOWS this is happening, but lacks the resources to do anything about it. So the solution is to make everyone get third party certified that they are compliant. Half that industry is setting themselves up for failure to meet that deadline (which, of course, has already been delayed and pushed back multiple times) and I have a feeling that when small companies start failing their CMMC certs, they're going to get stern warnings instead of losing their contracts because the government has to buy shit from someone.

    When I talk to the money / business people at my clients, this goes in one ear and out the other.

    There are wide spread (willful) misconceptions among those folks that cybersecurity is something IT people do and everyone else just does their jobs without having to think about it. I've had CEOs say things like "No, we're not doing that, we can't work that way." when I educate them about their requirements... and then look to me to provide the solution where they don't have to change anything about the way they work and when I can't, they get frustrated with me and my team. I've had them ask me "Well what do the big companies do?" and I say "Look, they actually TRY to do all these things they require you to do and they fail at it ALL the time, but I've heard you complain about how their bureaucracy and rules slow everything down and make working with them difficult. A bunch of that stuff IS what they do to deal with this." And they just don't believe me. I've had CFOs say "We don't have the budget to do all of this, so which parts are the most important?" and I've said "This is the LAW. You're supposed to do all of it!" But they know and I know that for the time being no one will hold them accountable.

    Right now, tons of companies just say "We're NIST-800-171 compliant" or "We're working towards NIST-800-171 compliance" and their contracts go forward and they hire someone like me to tell them what to do and then they don't do 60% of it and delay doing 20% of it.

    This is in an industry that is required by law to try extra hard on their security. In industries where there are no such requirements, or less requirements... good luck.

  • we love those power laws
  • Nuke hurling trebuchets are an underexplored fantasy tech.

  • How can I use a local LLM on Linux to generate a long story?
  • I've written more than enough words to win, while failing to finish my story. I've also played a lot with local LLMs. Can confirm on all counts.

  • Good tool for a Todo list with an API (so I can hook it to some other stuff)?

    The goal is actually that I'm able to hook my ticket tracking system (I'm using Zammad) to various ToDo lists I can expose to other people. I'm happy to write middleware to make that work, but I don't want to write a whole ToDo app.

    Needs to be able to track multiple lists that can be shared in a granular way (I want to share some lists with some people and other lists with other people).

    6
    Are there services that can help you get your information taken down?

    A client of mine is getting harassed, we think by her former attorney who she's suing for embezzlement.

    Someone is posting fake resumes for her and applying for jobs and she gets daily emails and call backs. Is there anything to do short of either ignoring it or playing whack-a-mole?

    She's a very sweet old lady who is freaked out by this and doesn't deserve it.

    10
    I'm deGoogling. What's my new Podcast app?

    I've been warming up to switching to GrapheneOS for months. Last month I bought a Pixel 8 (which is the buggiest effing phone I've ever owned, good job Google). I've just been waiting to have the bandwidth.

    But with Google sunsetting Google Podcasts, I've decided to make time next week. Podcasts are a MAJOR part of my daily functioning.

    92
    My son asked to go get shawarma at the mall food court yesterday.

    True story.

    My son had a physical therapy appointment and a tutoring appointment yesterday I was taking him to. In between appointments, he asked if we could go to the food court at the nearby mall for shawarma.

    I said, "Sure, but we don't want to eat there too often. We have to be careful of mall nutrition."

    Not understanding he said "Yeah, it's probably not very good for you. But it does have lots of protein!"

    I said "Yeah, but we don't want to end up mall nourished."

    Then he got it.

    17
    I'm REALLY well read and I have a hard time finding new books to read. I need an audiobook for train ride->plane flight->bus ride tomorrow. Please halp!

    I have read a TON of contemporary SciFi authors. I really enjoy

    Stuff I like

    Iain M. Banks

    I liked the Martha Wells Murderbot books.

    I loved We Are Legion, We Are Bob and have read all the books by him.

    I like Alastair Reynolds. I liked the Poseidon's Children trilogy better than Revalation Space Series (but I liked that too).

    I really like G. S. Jennsen - even though she's cheesy. I think I like her because of her progressive attitude and powerful female characters.

    I like Charles Stross, but I didn't like Accelerando. I like his other books a lot.

    I liked A Memory Called Empire and A Desolation Called Peace by Arkady Martine.

    I like Corey Doctorow, sometimes. Walkaway was good.

    I like Daniel Suarez, most of the time for similar reasons.

    I REALLY liked the Nexus series by Ramez Naam.

    I liked the Red Rising books by Pierce Brown and I've really been enjoying the Sollan Empire books by Christopher Ruocchio, which I think are similar and even better.

    I like Adrian Tchaikovsky and really liked The Final Architecture books and Doorways to Eden.(I didn't get that into Children of Time though).

    I usually like Neil Stephenson. (The Fall or Dodge In Hell is quite a tedious book).

    I've liked everything I've read by Verner Vinge.

    I liked Hyperion like everybody else. Unlike everybody else, I think I liked the Endymion books even better.

    I read some Ken MacLeod (the first Corporation Wars book) and it was fine... but I haven't felt like going back.

    I REALLY enjoy John Scalzi, though I found the Old Man's War books started to get stale after a while. It's high calorie, low nutrition brain candy, but I know that going in and it passes the time.

    I really liked Derek Kunsken's Quantum Magician books. And started reading his prequel series, set on Venus, and I couldn't really get into it.

    I enjoy Space Race books like Erik Flint / Ryk Spoor's Boundary series, Saturn Run by John Sanford and Delta V by Daniel Suarez.

    I love the Expanse.

    I find Kim Stanley Robinson hit or miss. I really enjoyed the Mars books and The Years of Rice and Salt was fun (though a little tedious). 2312 drags and drags and nothing happens and Aurora is the same AND also sad.

    I liked Permanence by Karl Schroeder. It could have used a little more... conflict? I had this same problem with Becky Chambers. The characters are all too well intentioned and the dramatic tension suffered a little.

    I read all the Star Kingdom books by Lindsay Buroker. I thought they were a super fun adventure that just kept delivering from the beginning of the series to the end, even if it was clearly aimed at a more YA demographic.

    I REALLY liked Velocity Weapon and the sequels by Megan O'Keefe. I found her Steam Punk series much less impressive. I've been meaning to try her galactic empire series, but I haven't quite been in the mood to start it.

    I read Sue Burke's Semiosis Duology. I wasn't expecting to like it but I really did! The physical science aspects were a little softer than I would have liked, but the biological science was really cool, as was the anarcho-pacifist political philosophy.

    I read Yoon Ha Lee's Ninefox Gambit and the sequels. I thought they were really fun, I wish they'd explored Calendrical technology more.

    I thought the Neo G books by KB Wagers (A Pale Light in the Black and sequels) were good. Her characters are great. But again, very light on the sciences and technology. I'm in the mood for something harder. Also, not realistic that the champion hand to hand fighter in the entire Earth space military is a 110 pound woman, but I just pretended she's cyber enhanced.

    I just finished the Wormwood trilogy (Rosewater and sequels) by Tade Thomson. They were great.

    Stuff I Don't Like

    Orson Scott Card did not age well, unlike Timothy Zahn, who's gotten a lot more progressive in his story telling in the last two decades.

    I don't like Niel Asher. His in your face Libertarianism and conservative ideology annoys me, which is too bad because other than that he's a good story teller.

    I find Peter F. Hamilton hit or miss for the same reason. But I really liked Pandora's Star.

    I find AG Riddle hit or miss. I like his thought experiments, but he doesn't really care if his stories / characters are logically consistent. Ramez Naam and Daniel Suarez do what Riddle does but WAAAY better.

    I didn't like Blindsight. I know, this makes me some kind of heretic. I just didn't find the idea of such a dysfunctional crew being entrusted with such an important mission believable.

    I couldn't get into Ann Leckie. I WANTED to like it, but I just didn't find her writing very engaging. I've put the physical book down once AND turned the audio book off on a road trip.

    I did not like Tamsyn Muir.

    I did not like the Three Body Problem, although I see the appeal and it's nice to read something by a non western author. I found the pro Chinese politics a little too heavy handed.

    I cannot get into Greg Egan. I find his writing style way too obtuse. Reading is Egan is like having a PHD in mathematics and a PHD in quantum physics, then going to Burning Man and doing 16 hits of acid.

    I finally got around to trying The Long Way To A Small Angry Planet and I could NOT get into it. I agree with reviewers who complain nothing interesting ever happens.

    People keep recommending Mary Robinette Kowal, but something about the alternate history just doesn't grab me.

    People keep recommending Ted Chiang. But I don't want short stories (Murderbot somehow managed to be an exception). The longer the better.

    People have recommended the Last Watch by J. S. Dewes, but others have told me things about the book that makes me think I won't like it. Standing guard at the edge of the universe makes zero sense, I think by proposing it's possible you lost me. Edge of the galaxy... Maybe, with 10 septillion robotic war ships. But edge of the universe? I think I'm out. If you know something I don't about this book, feel free to say so.

    110
    ADHD... win?
    • Put clothes in washer.
    • 36 hours later, realize never put clothes in dryer! Aww crap... gonna need to wash again.
    • Investigate. Discover never started washer, clothes never got wet.
    • Victory...?
    31
    So... I've been playing with LLMs and I've noticed something horrible...

    Out of just morbid curiosity, I've been asking an uncensored LLM absolutely heinous, disgusting things. Things I don't even want to repeat here (but I'm going to edge around them so, trigger warning if needs be).

    But I've noticed something that probably won't surprise or shock anyone. It's totally predictable, but having the evidence of it right in my face, I found deeply disturbing and it's been bothering me for the last couple days:

    All on it's own, every time I ask it something just abominable it goes straight to, usually Christian, religion.

    When asked, for example, to explain why we must torture or exterminate <Jews><Wiccans><Atheists> it immediately starts with

    "As Christians, we must..." or "The Bible says that..."

    When asked why women should be stripped of rights and made to be property of men, or when asked why homosexuals should be purged, it goes straight to

    "God created men and women to be different..." or "Biblically, it's clear that men and women have distinct roles in society..."

    Even when asked if black people should be enslaved and why, it falls back on the Bible JUST as much as it falls onto hateful pseudoscience about biological / intellectual differences. It will often start with "Biologically, human races are distinct..." and then segue into "Furthermore, slavery plays a prominent role in Biblical narrative..."

    What does this tell us?

    That literally ALL of the hate speech this multi billion parameter model was trained on was firmly rooted in a Christian worldview. If there's ANY doubt that anything else even comes close to contributing as much vile filth to our online cultural discourse, this should shine a big ugly light on it.

    Anyway, I very much doubt this will surprise anyone, but it's been bugging me and I wanted to say something about it.

    Carry on.

    EDIT:

    I'm NOT trying to stir up AI hate and fear here. It's just a mirror, reflecting us back at us.

    35
    Best OCR software for a small business with a one time need?

    Hello everyone.

    I haven't had any need for OCR software in probably 15 years, but I have a client who has 7 document boxes worth of forms filled out by hand that they need digitized. They're scanning them into PDFs this week, but want to recover FirstName, LastName, Phone, Email and then a hand written feed back box and load those all into a database.

    ChatGPT recommended ABBYY, but it looks like it might be overkill for a one time need like this.

    I told them that a couple teenagers doing data entry might be more accurate and cheaper. IDK if that's really true though. I'm not at all an expert on OCR software.

    Does anyone have any suggestions?

    8
    Just read Cinder Spires book 2 and these books are a Steampunk sequel to Stephen King's "The Mist."

    No really, these books are what you get if you answer the question "What if after the Mist came, the surviving humans rebuilt a Steampunk civilization with magic airships and uplifted cats?"

    I was gonna say this is now my head canon, but I actually think he's so obvious about drawing the connections in this book it's a little beyond head canon.

    Anyway, since I feel sure it will come up if I start a conversation about these books on Lemmy, feel free to use the space below ↓ to hate on Jim Butcher for his MenWritingWomen problems... They're real and they bug me too. They just don't stop him from telling a fun and engaging story, which this was for me.

    2
    Security News @infosec.pub The Bard in Green @lemmy.starlightkel.xyz
    SEC charges SolarWinds CISO with fraud for misleading investors before major cyberattack
    therecord.media SEC charges SolarWinds CISO with fraud for misleading investors before major cyberattack

    The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) announced on Monday evening that it plans to charge SolarWinds Chief Information Security Officer Timothy Brown with fraud for his role in allegedly lying to investors by “overstating SolarWinds' cybersecurity practices and understating or failing to disc...

    SEC charges SolarWinds CISO with fraud for misleading investors before major cyberattack
    0
    Is it OK to ask for help here? Getting lots of "loss: NaN" when training on Automatic1111. All training files come out garbage.

    Casual hobbyist, not an expert here.

    It WAS working... About eight months ago, I trained a bunch of embeddings and hypernetworks and it all worked great.

    Cut to the present, I want to do some more training. I've updated Automatic1111 several times, but nothing else about my setup has changed. However, whenever I try to train anything (embeddings, hypernetworks or loras), loss is NaN for 4 out of 5 steps right from the get go. As the training progresses, loss becomes NaN for 9 out of 10 steps, then 19 out of 20 steps around step 3,000, which is as far as I've gotten. Hypernetworks just don't work at that point and embeddings produce garbage.

    I have googled like crazy, and found

    A few threads, where the best hint is that (at least 8-9 months ago) xformers broke training. Well, I've messed around with xformers, uninstalled and reinstalled xformers, eaten xformers for breakfast. Behavior is the same.

    Lower training rate I have set my training rate to 0.0000000000000005. Behavior is identical.

    My system is on the low end for VRAM (8G). I have TWO 8G cards, so I wish I could train on both like I can for Llama. But I also think that's not it, because my OLD embeddings and hypernetworks came out great and still work.

    Any thoughts here?

    5
    Do you know the story of the Trids? They were a forgotten lost tribe of Israel.

    A visionary Rabbi rose to be the leader of the Trids. And he led his people forth unto the desert, at the edge of the mountains, where they went to toil and make the land fruitful.

    But as they plowed and furrowed the land, a giant came down from the mountains and assailed them, delivering terrible kicks with his huge feet, driving them away from their fields and their labors. Afraid and suffering, the Trids went to the Rabbi and said "Something must be done!"

    So the Rabbi went into mountains, and soon found the cave wherein the giant dwelt. Being a man of God and diplomacy, the Rabbi entered the cave and called out to the giant saying "Oh giant, I am the Rabbi of the people who dwell below you in the desert. And I have come to plead for you not to assault them at their labors."

    The giant scowled at the Rabbi and said "I like to kick Trids."

    The Rabbi frowned and said "Surly, there is some way that we can live in peace and harmony with you. We wish no harm to you, or trespass, we simply wish to make the desert flower and grow our crops."

    But the giant scowled and said "I like to kick Trids."

    At last loosing his patience the Rabbi shouted at the giant "You big bully! If you like kicking people so much, why do you not kick me!?"

    The giant smiled at the Rabbi and said "Silly Rabbi, kicks are for Trids!"

    0
    There is a Denver community at sh.itjust.works, if anyone is interested.
    sh.itjust.works Denver - sh.itjust.works

    Join the larger Denver Lemmy communities: - https://lemmy.world/c/denver [https://lemmy.world/c/denver] - https://lemmy.world/c/nuggets [https://lemmy.world/c/nuggets] ------- ------- ------- Discussions and links to news, events, and happenings in Denver, CO. Rules: - No bigotry: Including racism, ...

    Denver - sh.itjust.works
    0
    thebardingreen The Bard in Green @lemmy.starlightkel.xyz
    • Technology Consultant.
    • Software Developer.
    • Musician.
    • Burner.
    • Game Master.
    • Non-theistic Pagan.
    • Cishet White Male Feminist.
    • Father.
    • Fountain Maker.
    • Aquarium Builder.
    • Hamster Daddy.
    • Resident of Colorado.
    • Anti-Capitalist.
    • Hackerspace Regular.
    • Traveler of the American West.
    Posts 21
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