You mean because of the car video game thing? Yea that's not significant at all. But regardless, I could say that twitter was targeted at the mobile phone texting sub-community (which when it started, was definitely a sub-community). GTP welcomes lots of people, I haven't played the game in ages.
You came for the video game, stayed for the friendly members, right? Or whatever it is you liked that kept you here.
What do you call the opinions forum if not a sub-community? I thought, a second ago GTP was targeted as sub-communities, now it's not?
The lounge area of a book club.
Percentage of the population using your product/service and/or marketshare.
Exactly which of those that you put into that grouping do you think is a monopoly?
The easy pick would be youtube or google. It doesn't need 100% marketshare to be a "monopoly", just close to it. Let's not nitpick.
Why does the presence of the others not undercut that argument?
That's not how this sector works. Netflix gained popularity because it was one stop convenient shop for movies and shows (again, not 100% marketshare). The presence of others is diluting everybody's income AFAIK and piracy rise more and more when others such as Disney+ are "present". To quote the grfiter Andrew Yang again, no one wants to use the second best search engine. If anything, the more people use a certain engine/product the better that product will be. It's almost like single payer insurance
Nope. Can't carry pitchforks or guillotines here nor can you rally more than a 100 people at best. You can however, organize regime-change movements on Twitter or Facebook thanks to the reach
The democrats had a maximum of 60 votes in the senate (the requirement to break the filibuster, which was not broken a moment ago about roe) for all of 4 months. That does not mean that the had 60 votes on codifying roe - something which would not have been at the top of the priority list during that 4 months because the supreme court had ruled that the constitution requires it. I highly doubt that the democrats could have codified roe during that 4 months, but the fact that they didn't does not make it their fault that religious nuts want to threaten women with homicide charges for taking a plan-b pill.
The democrats with their "control" over the senate just voted to codify roe, and it did not even get a majority (despite the democrats having theoretically 51 votes). They got 49. If you need to understand what's wrong in this country, look no further than 2/3 of Americans supporting roe, and the senate voting 51 to 49 not to codify it. For clarity, it would have taken 60, not 51, for it to pass.
I forgot Obama's slogan was "No, we can't". By the way:
something which would not have been at the top of the priority list during that 4 months
Your thesis here is that the democrats wanted abortion rights to be tenuous so that they could scare voters. It lacks evidence, it lacks reason, it lacks understanding, and it's totally unnecessarily cynical and demonizing. It's almost like it came straight from right wing media.
I know this is heresay and "trust me bro", but trust me bro, I've talked to people who make "campaign contributions" to the leadership of both parties. It's even more cyicial than what you're saying I'm portraying.
It also does not lack reason. Those tactics have been employed by "people in charge" for centuries.
You might, but what's the relevance?
You called my comment risible. Just because in your opinion or others' it's a laughable opinion, doesn't mean it'll always be that way (like gay marriage) It's entirely subjective and it would've been better if the response wasn't just a gif. Do you not agree?
As you wish, but it makes for awkward conversations if words are used without meaning.
"Necessity" means "that which is necessary", and "necessary" derives from the Latin "necessare" meaning "indispensible or unavoidable".
If you can survive by dispensing with it or avoiding it, it is not a necessity
Okay. This seems to one of three fundamental disagreements here.
When you say necessary, do you mean literally biologically necessary? Is the test here whether a heart still beats or not? Because my necessity line is much closer than literal death.
Both of those things are really, really odd things to say.
Being a "government employee" is a choice. Working in whatever industry you work in is a choice. A government requiring [a piece of software] is a choice. An industry relying on [a piece of software] is a choice. All are highly fluid choices; I seriously doubt that government required WhatsApp, and I seriously doubt that Instagram was your industry's standard, 15 years ago, because neither existed. I seriously doubt it'll be the same in 15 years' time too.
However, they are examples of terms of use. If you work for your government, you agree - as a condition of employment - to use WhatsApp... What happens when the government decides WhatsApp isn't secure enough and switches to Signal as a condition of employment? Employees can either agree and continue working for government, or disagree and stop...
To clarify, the government here does not require you to use whatsapp. It's just that if you want to opt out of using WhatsApp, you're opting out of finishing government paperwork such as renewing your license etc. It's an invisible gun to your head. So yes even by your biology standard, opting out of WhatsApp will indirectly lead to being left in the desert to die.
What about them? I don't have, nor do I use, any of them. An Oculus Rift isn't a necessity either.
That's quite an achievement. Are you sure, though? Do you not use a smart phone? Even if you uninstall WhatsApp after getting an android phone, Google still steals your data. So does Apple.
You would honestly be the first person I met below 70 years of age who never used a Facebook, Google or Apple service. I mean, I'm sure Google is integrated to this very site lol and you may be using chrome.
They can, and indeed should. This is why it's important to separate rights from laws. I don't see the relevance here though, as the point is that Facebook (and pretty much everyone else) operates to the finest, furthest extent of the law possible and that it is entirely legal for them to set out an agreement in which you may use their services and they may harvest your data. It is not illegal.
It could not set out an agreement in which you may use their services and they may harvest your organs. That would be illegal.
Perhaps I didn't make it clear enough. I'm not discussing what is currently legal and what isn't. I'm stating what I think should be illegal and my own interpretation of laws and rights.
If I were a supreme court justice (and I'm more qualified than Amy Coney Barret), it would be my opinion that a digital platform may not harvest your data without complete transparency and consent. Not abiding by this would/should be a violation of the 4th amendment. It's no different than having someone sign away their organs or right to medical record privacy.
Fundamental disagreement 2/3
Firstly, you'd need to be governed by US law for that to be applicable. More importantly though, it still wouldn't. The US Bill of Rights is a list of restrictions on Government.
Fundamental disagreement 3/3
Although I am not as versed in US history as I have time to be, it seems logical to me that if the bill of rights includes the right not to get killed by the FBI, that right should also mean you cannot be killed by Google. I just do not believe that restrictions on the government only apply to the government. Corporations should not have more power.
BTW when I quote it becomes hard to read. See:
I don't use Facebook, Instagram, Whatsapp, Twitter, Tiktok etc and I don't feel like I'm missing out particularly. I certainly would not describe any of those as essential.
They are in this country and I'm sure others. No WhasApp or Instagram to here = no government interaction or business or job = no food or shelter = death.
You want to go into further discussion about the specific ins and outs of harvesting data? That's a separate argument. The bottom line is that they shouldn't do it, most people would probably agree, but they do. I don't see why that's gotten so bent out of proportion.
Thank you. I hope one day enough people agree and changes the laws to keep up with the 21st century.
Even if it were required that you needed a phone, you still have a choice in what carrier you use and if you look into them, they're all going to be different. AT&T, Verizon, and T-Mobile all differ and I'm guessing if you read their TOS you'd see they're all different as well. The communication industry is highly competitive and I can assure you that if one carrier can find a niche that will net them more customers, they're going to do it.
Different shades of theft. It's pointless to have false choices. If/when it's established by law they cannot censor you or harvest your data, then the more options the merrier and everyone's happy.
You've mentioned how they benefit from tax payer money. The least they can do is agree to the above in exchange of letting them operate.
If people suddenly start caring about how their data is harvested, I can almost guarantee some companies will jump on that in order to attract customers.
People already care but are hopeless.
edit
steals your data* lmao.