So they used a rule they already had then? What's the problem, oh yes it's being used equally for both sides now
Re: Twitter
That's exactly how you get things done, try something without caring whether it's right or wrong and see how it lands. Get feedback, change it, try again. The faster you do that, the quicker you get things done and find a successful outcome. It's quite simple. Admittedly he is treating a ~$40bn company in the same way that many of us would treat a startup in our garden shed, however, the principle is the same. Any entrepreneur like Musk gives zero fucks about being wrong, as long as there's feedback that guides towards a workable solution.mik wrote: ↑Mon Nov 07, 2022 9:29 amYou're kinda right, but I think people are just -ing at the absurdity of his "plans" splattering out real-time.Gavster wrote: ↑Mon Nov 07, 2022 9:15 am Only a few hours ago, everyone on Twitter was wetting their pants about the idea that people would be able to impresonate someone else, simply by paying $8 a month. Now Musk has brought in strict rules around impersonating others and you're all laughing at him? This is exactly what everyone wanted - assured user identities for blue ticks!
Musky: "You will soon need to pay $20 per month for a verified account"
Stevieking: "Fuckoff"
Musky: "no I meant $8"
Human: "People will be able to pay to pretend to be someone else"
Musky: "no. I...." minions, what do we do here? We can shoot anyone who tries this yeah? Mercuh! We can't shoot them? OK "permanent ban for anyone who creates a parody account or changes their name"
Human: "what if I open an account as Mr Mik McSlabbercabbege and realise I mis-spelled my real surname McSlabbercabbage
Musky: minions, we can shoot people like this yeah? Mercuh!.... we can't shoot them either? FFS I have a brain the size of a planet and I can't...ok then. "Temporary ban!"
Human: "How long for?"
Musky: "6 months!"
Human "6 months?"
Musky: "I meant, erm.... one month?"
etc etc
I think it's quite fascinating watching him iron out the problems on the platform transparently, in real time, rather than the previous board who were so paralysed by consensus that they became ineffective and struggled to make any significant changes to benefit the platform.
Re: Twitter
The Musk admirers have joined the chat I see.
The old rule is a warning for impersonation, then a temp ban if you ignore it. The humour here is that Musk has gone nuclear because people are making fun of him after making a big deal about "comedy coming back to twitter".
I just remembered when someone I followed lost their blue check for refusing to delete this cracker though.
The old rule is a warning for impersonation, then a temp ban if you ignore it. The humour here is that Musk has gone nuclear because people are making fun of him after making a big deal about "comedy coming back to twitter".
I just remembered when someone I followed lost their blue check for refusing to delete this cracker though.
An absolute unit
Re: Twitter
There's an obvious contradiction though. You can't have the freedom to anonymously imitate someone else AND have a platform which has well-verfied identities, those two objectives contradict each other. Also, the idea of 'comedy coming back to Twitter' surely means that people will have freedom to say what they want - as long as they take ownership for those words by posting under their real, verified name.
Re: Twitter
That’s what the Tories have been doing since Boris - leak a policy, see what the popular feedback is and then proceed or not based on that. It didn’t work for them.
It may be how Facebook, Google etc do it behind the scenes; implement a change without making a song and dance about it, see how it plays out and revert or change to something else if unsuccessful.
Musk is just flailing visibly though.
Re: Twitter
You weren't free to impersonate someone though, that's what I'm saying. There was already policy in place to deal with that which worked fine.
Elon running around trying to cosy up to the worst cunts on twitter over free speech, then permanently banning Kathy Griffin for changing her username is hypocritical at best. She didn't change her handle, a cursory glance would've shown it's not a scam account trying to pretend it's him.
Elon running around trying to cosy up to the worst cunts on twitter over free speech, then permanently banning Kathy Griffin for changing her username is hypocritical at best. She didn't change her handle, a cursory glance would've shown it's not a scam account trying to pretend it's him.
An absolute unit
Re: Twitter
Look up agile code dev, it's standard practice, fail fast and redevelop is one of DevOps guiding principles. I bloody hate it as they keep trying to force this on us in infrastructure and it just doesn't work for most projects.Jobbo wrote: ↑Mon Nov 07, 2022 9:49 amThat’s what the Tories have been doing since Boris - leak a policy, see what the popular feedback is and then proceed or not based on that. It didn’t work for them.
It may be how Facebook, Google etc do it behind the scenes; implement a change without making a song and dance about it, see how it plays out and revert or change to something else if unsuccessful.
Musk is just flailing visibly though.
Re: Twitter
This.Gavster wrote: ↑Mon Nov 07, 2022 9:39 am That's exactly how you get things done, try something without caring whether it's right or wrong and see how it lands. Get feedback, change it, try again. The faster you do that, the quicker you get things done and find a successful outcome. It's quite simple. Admittedly he is treating a ~$40bn company in the same way that many of us would treat a startup in our garden shed, however, the principle is the same. Any entrepreneur like Musk gives zero fucks about being wrong, as long as there's feedback that guides towards a workable solution.
I think it's quite fascinating watching him iron out the problems on the platform transparently, in real time, rather than the previous board who were so paralysed by consensus that they became ineffective and struggled to make any significant changes to benefit the platform.
"Hi guys, I'm Tim. Today I'm going to be driving a shit old Mondeo!"
Re: Twitter
People don't though. I've seen other prominent positions RT the parody Musks as fact.
Anyway I'm just enjoying the show. Although I did report a particularly unpleasant "British Freedoms" account yesterday just to see what would happen, it they took it down a few hours later.
"Hi guys, I'm Tim. Today I'm going to be driving a shit old Mondeo!"
Re: Twitter
And Musk himself has posted absolute dogshit as fact, you can't legislate against idiocy.
I'm talking about within the moderation process, it should be more than Elon going "they're named like my name, end them".
An absolute unit
Re: Twitter
Interesting - the infinite monkeys principle?drcarlos wrote: ↑Mon Nov 07, 2022 9:54 amLook up agile code dev, it's standard practice, fail fast and redevelop is one of DevOps guiding principles. I bloody hate it as they keep trying to force this on us in infrastructure and it just doesn't work for most projects.Jobbo wrote: ↑Mon Nov 07, 2022 9:49 amThat’s what the Tories have been doing since Boris - leak a policy, see what the popular feedback is and then proceed or not based on that. It didn’t work for them.
It may be how Facebook, Google etc do it behind the scenes; implement a change without making a song and dance about it, see how it plays out and revert or change to something else if unsuccessful.
Musk is just flailing visibly though.
Re: Twitter
But I'm sure your senior managers have told you that "Agile has more RAM"
Re: Twitter
Enjoy it while you can...
"Hi guys, I'm Tim. Today I'm going to be driving a shit old Mondeo!"
Re: Twitter
They need a little symbol to show the verified users, I expect that there's loads of genuine Matt Hancocks in this country.
Re: Twitter
How long before someone changes their name, legally by Deed Poll to Elongated Musk - Known as Elon and takes him to task for not allowing the account...