<p>In a groundbreaking study published in <a href="http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41592-024-02200-1"><em>Nature Methods</em></a>, researchers from Carnegie Mellon University, the University Hospital Bonn, and the University of Bonn have developed a novel open-source platform named <a href="https://github.com/YttriLab/A-SOID">A-SOiD</a>, which stands out for its ability to learn and predict user-defined behaviors solely from video data. This innovative tool has demonstrated impressive versatility, capable of classifying a wide array of animal and human behaviors, and even showing potential applications in analyzing patterns in stock markets, earthquakes, and proteomics.</p>
<p>What sets A-SOiD apart is its non-traditional approach to learning, focusing on algorithmic uncertainty to enhance its predictive accuracy and avoid common biases present in other artificial intelligence models.</p>
<p>“This technique works great at learning classifications for a variety of animal and human behaviors,” said Eric Yttri, Eberly Family Associate Professor of Biological Sciences at Carnegie Mellon. “This would not only work on behavior but also the behavior of anything if there are identifiable patterns: stock markets, earthquakes, proteomics. It’s a powerful pattern recognition machine.”</p>
<p>The impetus for this research stems from the challenges faced in behavioral science, where understanding the nuances of behavior is crucial but often hindered by subjective interpretations and the labor-intensive process of manual annotation. Current methods either require extensive labeled datasets that are prone to annotator bias or rely on unsupervised models that cannot discover new insights beyond what they have been explicitly trained to recognize.</p>
<p>A-SOiD addresses these issues by incorporating both supervised and unsupervised learning techniques, thereby reducing reliance on large annotated datasets and enabling the discovery of previously unidentified behavioral patterns.</p>
<p>The researchers trained A-SOiD using a fraction of a dataset, emphasizing data points where the program’s predictions were least confident. This active learning approach allowed A-SOiD to refine its understanding iteratively, focusing on ambiguous cases that traditional models might overlook. This method significantly reduced the amount of data needed for effective training and improved the model’s ability to represent underrepresented behaviors fairly.</p>
<p>A-SOiD was able to distinguish between various behaviors with a high degree of precision, such as differentiating between a normal shiver and the tremors associated with Parkinson’s disease. This level of specificity underscores the platform’s potential not only in the realm of behavioral science but also in fields like medicine and finance, where pattern recognition plays a crucial role.</p>
<p>A pivotal achievement of A-SOiD is its departure from the ‘black box’ approach typical of many artificial intelligence (AI) systems. By focusing on areas where the model has the least confidence and iteratively refining its understanding, A-SOiD demonstrates an exceptional ability to learn from ambiguities in the data.</p>
<p>This method significantly reduces the volume of annotated data required for training, cutting down the need by approximately 90%. This efficiency in learning addresses one of the major challenges in behavior analysis, where the availability of extensive, accurately annotated datasets is often a bottleneck.</p>
<p>A-SOiD’s methodology ensures a balanced representation of all classes within a dataset, effectively addressing the common issue of data imbalance in AI modeling. This approach not only enhances the model’s accuracy but also ensures fair representation of various behaviors, including those that are less represented in the dataset. Such an achievement is particularly important in behavioral studies, where overlooking rare behaviors could lead to incomplete or biased understanding.</p>
<p>“It’s a different way of feeding data in,” explained study author Alex Hsu, a recent Ph.D. alumnus from Carnegie Mellon. “Usually, people go in with the entire data set of whatever behaviors they’re looking for. They rarely understand that the data can be imbalanced, meaning there could be a well-represented behavior in their set and a poorly represented behavior in their set.”</p>
<p>“This bias could then propagate from the prediction process to the experimental findings. Our algorithm takes care of data balancing by only learning from weaker. Our method is better at fairly representing every class in a data set.”</p>
<p>Another significant finding of the study is the platform’s accessibility and ease of use. A-SOiD can run on a standard computer without requiring extensive computational resources or prior coding experience, making it accessible to a wide range of researchers.</p>
<p>This aspect is likely to democratize the use of advanced behavior prediction models, enabling researchers from diverse fields to explore and understand complex behavioral patterns without the need for specialized equipment or technical skills.</p>
<p>However, the study is not without its limitations. The researchers acknowledge that while A-SOiD significantly advances the field of behavioral analysis, it is not infallible. The success of the model depends on the initial selection of behaviors and the quality of the input data. Future research directions include improving the model’s ability to handle extremely rare behaviors and further reducing the amount of manual annotation required.</p>
<p>“A-SOiD is an important development allowing an AI-based entry into behavioral classification and thus an excellent unique opportunity to better understand the causal relationship between brain activity and behavior,” said Martin K. Schwarz, principal investigator at the University Hospital Bonn. “We also hope that the development of A-SOiD will serve as an efficient trigger for forthcoming collaborative research projects focusing on behavioral research in Europe but also across the Atlantic.”</p>
<p>The study, “<a href="https://www.nature.com/articles/s41592-024-02200-1">A-SOiD, an active-learning platform for expert-guided, data-efficient discovery of behavior</a>,” was authored by Jens F. Tillmann, Alexander I. Hsu, Martin K. Schwarz, and Eric A. Yttri.</p>
So I’ve realized that in conversations I’ll use traditional terms for men as general terms for all genders, both singularly and for groups. I always mean it well, but I’ve been thinking that it’s not as inclusive to women/trans people....
Hi there! Looks like you linked to a Lemmy community using a URL instead of its name, which doesn’t work well for people on different instances. Try fixing it like this: !opensignups
No, this is because of already many abuses, the local admins / mods and the “origin” instance admins / mods can see your name.
Are the powers of moderators similar to reddit’s?
Much less but soon with sublinks aw lemmy compatible backend / ui it will become a lot better.
Any other differences from reddit I should know about?
Everything here is PUBLIC, because of federation many things gets federated everywhere even without you noticing sometimes.
Everyone here is unpaid, so mods and admins are here equal instead of reddit admins beeing paid millions for beeing *ssholes.
Here, if you dont like the admin of an instance you can somewhat easily swap to a different instance ( sh.itjust.works, lemmy.today … ), but be aware if you just went out with a “Bang”, like you trolled a lot and got permabanned you wont be welcome in the other instance because the admins are most of the time in good contact to each other, and warn for trolls or harassment.
Cylons being manipulated by other cylons doesn’t absolve them of guilt.
BSG did have a few instances of the reverse of OP’s question tho – where the “good guys” turned out to be bad" – trying to say this without spoilers; it’s a 20 year old show but ffs of you haven’t seen it, go see it now.
the (temporary) new admiral
several main characters during the part where they live on the dirty planet
a very specific set of seven main characters (wink wink) … .and more,…
And there’s one specific example of the full 360 – a character that starts good, turns bad, but turns out they were actually good all along. I won’t give the name, but they were passing messages to the resistance.
That show was awesome.
One note tho, on the topic generally: flipping character alignments is a frequent pre-shark-jump thing, and is often bad writing. In BSG, tho, all of the “flips” are pre-planned, or at least 100% true to their character (eg the 360 example above).
As the title says I want to block posts with specific words. I’m not an American and lately my whole feed is filled with trump/biden and I’m not slightly interested. Thanks in advance.
Gabe, a couple of weeks ago, nutomic was asking for ideas on a name for his federated wiki alternative project, I put forth my suggestion that I thought was better (also because I didn’t want it to be named after the bin chicken), but he told me, pretty bluntly in fact, that he is sticking with his original choice.
Am I bummed about it? Of course.
But it would be silly of me if I kept pestering him because he didn’t do exactly what I want, because at the end of the day, he doesn’t owe me anything.
I can make suggestions to him, but he doesn’t have to take them, I’m not his manager, and I can take no as an answer. (He could have let me down a little easier though.)
From reading your blog post, I get the impression that you are venting because 1. the Lemmy devs didn’t prioritize on the “improved moderation tools” that you wanted and 2. you are unhappy with the way they are running their own instance, which is kind of the point of decentralization that instances are ran independently from development.
Let me ask you a follow-up question to think about (you don’t have to answer me): You are putting weight into Sublinks right now, what’s to say that you wouldn’t have any disagreement with jgrim about the development priorities of Sublinks?
Lastly, sorry I never did the thing that I promised you to do a few months about moderating a comm on lit cafe, been kind of stressed and irritable recently and can’t really find the energy to do much creative writing. Sorry.
<p>In the golden years of life, many of us notice that finding the right words can take a little longer than it used to. This common phenomenon often raises concerns about cognitive decline and the specter of dementia. However, a groundbreaking study conducted by the Baycrest Hospital and the University of Toronto offers a fresh perspective on what aspects of speech may truly indicate changes in brain health.</p>
<p>The researchers found that the overall speed of speech, rather than the struggle to find words, serves as a more telling indicator of cognitive health. This discovery sheds new light on the aging process, suggesting that slowing down in speech could signal changes in the brain, while difficulties in word retrieval might be a normal aspect of aging.</p>
<p>The study was published in the journal <em><a href="https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/13825585.2024.2315774" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Aging, Neuropsychology, and Cognition</a></em>.</p>
<p>The motivation behind this study stemmed from the need to distinguish between natural cognitive aging and early signs of neurodegenerative diseases like dementia. Previous research primarily focused on word-finding difficulties as a potential red flag for cognitive decline. However, this study aimed to explore whether other aspects of speech might offer more precise insights into our cognitive well-being as we age.</p>
<p>To delve into this question, the researchers enlisted 125 healthy volunteers, ranging in age from 18 to 90, to participate in a series of innovative assessments designed to analyze their speech characteristics and cognitive abilities. The participants underwent a picture-naming game, where they had to identify and name objects while ignoring irrelevant, distracting information.</p>
<p>This was followed by a task that required them to describe complex images, with their speech being recorded and analyzed for speed and hesitations using advanced Artificial Intelligence-based software. The final part of the study involved standard tests to assess executive function, a set of mental skills that help individuals manage time, pay attention, and juggle multiple tasks.</p>
<p>As expected, certain cognitive abilities and speech characteristics declined with age. Specifically, participants exhibited a decrease in the speed at which they were able to name pictures presented to them in the picture-naming game. This decline was consistent with expectations based on previous research linking aging to slower cognitive processing speeds.</p>
<p>However, one of the study’s primary discoveries was the distinction between word-finding difficulties and speech speed as indicators of cognitive health. The researchers found a compelling link between the speed at which individuals spoke and their executive function.</p>
<p>Executive function, which encompasses abilities such as managing conflicting information and staying focused, showed a direct correlation with both the participants’ ability to quickly name pictures and their overall speaking rate.</p>
<p>Intriguingly, the study revealed that the frequency and duration of pauses participants took to find the right words did not correlate with cognitive decline. This suggests that the occasional struggle to find words, a common concern among aging adults, might not necessarily indicate serious cognitive issues. Instead, a general slowing down in speech — apart from these pauses — emerged as a potentially more significant indicator of changes in brain health.</p>
<p>Furthermore, the study’s findings challenge some of the conventional wisdom regarding aging and speech. Many older adults worry about their need to pause to search for words, viewing it as a sign of cognitive deterioration. However, the results of this research suggest that such pausing is a normal part of aging and is not directly linked to a decline in other mental abilities.</p>
<p>On the contrary, a slowdown in the normal rate of speech, regardless of pausing, could be a more critical sign of changes in cognitive health. This distinction provides a new perspective on what aspects of speech might be more accurately reflective of underlying cognitive changes.</p>
<p>“Our results indicate that changes in general talking speed may reflect changes in the brain,” said Jed Meltzer, Baycrest’s Canada Research Chair in Interventional Cognitive Neuroscience and the lead author on this study. “This suggests that talking speed should be tested as part of standard cognitive assessments to help clinicians detect cognitive decline faster and help older adults support their brain health as they age.”</p>
<p>The study, however, is not without its limitations. The researchers acknowledge that further research is needed to confirm whether speech speed can predict individual brain health changes over time. Future studies could follow participants over several years to explore this relationship more deeply. Moreover, these findings could pave the way for new tools to detect cognitive decline early, allowing for timely interventions to maintain or improve brain health.</p>
<p>The study, “<a href="https://doi.org/10.1080/13825585.2024.2315774" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Cognitive components of aging-related increase in word-finding difficulty</a>,” was authored by Hsi T. Wei, Dana Kulzhabayeva, Lella Erceg, Jessica Robin, You Zhi Hu, Mark Chignell and Jed A. Meltzer.</p>
Hi there! Looks like you linked to a Lemmy community using a URL instead of its name, which doesn’t work well for people on different instances. Try fixing it like this: !yurop
Hi there! Looks like you linked to a Lemmy community using a URL instead of its name, which doesn’t work well for people on different instances. Try fixing it like this: !orphancrushing
Hi there! Looks like you linked to a Lemmy community using a URL instead of its name, which doesn’t work well for people on different instances. Try fixing it like this: !helpunofficial
asa-explain Sea anemones are relatives of the jellyfish. They have these tiny hairs growing on them that they use to feed by stunning fish, shrimp, zooplankton, and so on.
But they can survive for years without food. They’re like jellyfish in that way. There are even sea anemones that have lived longer than 70 years with the proper care.
They’re found all throughout the world’s oceans, and they can slowly move too. There are also fish that live inside them called anemonefish. The sea anemones protect them from predators and share their food scraps.
In tropical waters, sea anemones latch on to coral reefs or rocks.
Starfish are echinoderms and relatives of the sea urchin. There are as many as 2,000 starfish species around the world. Not all of them are star-shaped either. There’s even a species with 30 arms.
When they get attacked by a predator, they’ll rip off their own arm to get away while the predator eats it. Their arms can regenerate, so I guess they regrow later.
Starfish can eat almost anything in the ocean. They feed by pushing their stomach out of their mouth and directly digesting their prey. Fun fact, there’s an area in Kumamoto Prefecture where they eat starfish. As you’d expect from a relative of the sea urchin, you strip the skin to eat the insides, like with sea urchins.
Even in other languages, starfish mostly have star-related names. For instance, in France they’re called…
Hey there! You may recognize me as a mod over on !TenForward, a Star Trek-themed meme and shitposty community. We love having our fun and hanging out but we’re also not averse to some serious discussions or news as well! While it is always allowed in TenForward, we realize that there might be a better place for it....
Yeeeah, I am not sure they are going to change anything. They’d have to handover that whole instance to new people to fix that. Not gonna happen. And that’s sad, its such a killer instance name, and Star Trek being basically the “federation” which is so crucial for Lemmy.
I don’t know if the functionality exists yet for the mods/admins, but I think it’s pretty safe to assume any links pointing to that domain are coming from bots/spammers and the accounts should just be automatically banned. I first saw that site linked to about 2 days ago from variations on the username “johnson”, then from a (new) account named debbie, and today from kelvinwashington to worldnews and now here.
It’s all clickbait ad-laden garbage and it’s getting tiresome having to report each instance of it.
You can probably infer the climate from my instance name.
Canada.
This year, winter has been pretty unpredictable. We had a bout of 10C weather, bookended by snowfall both before and after, all within about two weeks… The rest of the season has been equally unusual. Summer last year went into the 30C range, far too warm too be comfortable outside no matter what you’re wearing.
Most winters are well below freezing. This year was very strange.
Spring and Fall are usually nice walking weather, but the last few years it seems like both spring and Fall temperatures have been a “blink and you’ll miss it” kind of deal. It sticks around for maybe two weeks then straight into summer/winter.
Global climate change is really screwing with my ability to enjoy the outdoors.
<p><strong>Researchers surveyed the views of 1,172 parents across the US about the relative educational value of free play, guided play, and games. The results showed that parents tend to rate free play as most educational. However, their opinion differs from that of experts, who emphasize the effectiveness of guided play with a learning ‘goal’. This means that work needs to be done in educating US parents about the difference between free and guided play with their children.</strong></p>
<p>Child psychologists have long known that play is essential for children’s cognitive development because it boosts their social, physical, and <a href="https://www.frontiersin.org/subjects/emotional-skills">emotional skills</a>. But beginning in the 21st century, specialists repeatedly sounded the alarm that ‘<a href="https://psycnet.apa.org/record/2004-12898-001">play is under siege</a>’ for US children. Kids were playing less, and – it was feared – with a lesser quality.</p>
<p>But are today’s parents sufficiently aware of the importance of letting their children play? Yes, found a team of researchers who tested this through a survey of the opinions of 1,172 US parents. Their results showed that today’s parents understand how important play is for children’s well-being. However, they also showed that work needs to be done to educate parents about the value of playful learning (or ‘<a href="https://www.frontiersin.org/subjects/guided-play">guided play</a>’) for learning goals in reading and math. The results are published in <a href="https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fdpys.2023.1267169/full"><em>Frontiers in Developmental Psychology</em></a>.</p>
<p>“Here we show that US parents understand that play can be more powerful for learning than direct instruction,” says first author Charlotte Wright, a senior research associate at Temple University College of Liberal Arts, Philadelphia.</p>
<p>“Until recently, people generally considered play to be the opposite of work and learning. What we see in our study is that this separation no longer exists in the eyes of parents: a positive development.”</p>
<h2>Parents rate free play the most</h2>
<p>Parents were interviewed aged between 18 and 75, with children aged between two and 12. Parents were White (68.9%), Hispanic (14.4%), Black (10.3%), Asian (3.4%), mixed race (2.6%), or American Indian or Native Alaskan (0.4%). Household income ranged from less than $25,000 to more than $100,000. Their level of education ranged from lacking a high school diploma (4.4%) to having a postgraduate degree (11.9%)</p>
<p> </p>
<hr />
<p><a href="https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fdpys.2023.1267169/full">Read original article</a></p>
<p><a href="https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fdpys.2023.1267169/pdf">Download original article (pdf)</a></p>
<hr />
<p>The results showed that parents tended to rate <a href="https://www.frontiersin.org/subjects/free-play">free play</a> as best for learning, followed by guided play, games, and direct instruction, respectively. This held true, both when these types of education were explicitly named, or when they were only implied in given scenarios.</p>
<p>The higher the parent’s level of education, and the higher their household income, the more they tended to rate free play as the most effective method for learning. Likewise, parents of girls were more likely to rate free play as most educational than parents of boys. In contrast, Black or Hispanic parents were more likely to rate direct instruction higher than forms of play.</p>
<h2>An example of guided play</h2>
<p>The current research consensus is that <a href="https://www.frontiersin.org/subjects/guided-play">guided play</a> is more effective than free play for children to learn skills such as mathematics, language and literacy, and the <a href="https://www.frontiersin.org/subjects/spatial-awareness">spatial awareness</a> necessary for STEM skills.</p>
<p>Guided play, possible in the home and in the classroom, differs from free play in being initiated by the adult, while letting the child drive her learning towards a specific goal. For example, learning in Montessori classrooms and children’s <a href="https://www.frontiersin.org/subjects/museums">museums</a> is always initiated by an adult who reflects on <a href="https://www.frontiersin.org/subjects/learning-goals">learning goals</a>. But children themselves drive the exploration within such guided learning environments – giving them choice and voice.</p>
<p>The authors gave an example scenario of guided play: “Raouf’s father, Ola, says to Raouf, ‘I wonder if we can build a tall tower with these blocks.’ Ola follows Raouf’s lead as Raouf tries to build the tower, asking questions to support him, when necessary (eg, ‘Hmmm, our tower keeps falling when we put the blue block on the bottom! What is another block we could try?’).”</p>
<p>Adults thus become the support team, but not the directors, of guided play.</p>
<h2>Parents’ perceptions differ from those of experts</h2>
<p>Wright et al. concluded that “many US parents hold perceptions that do not align completely with evidence-based research, such as attributing more learning value to free play […] compared to guided play.”</p>
<p>The results also showed that when parents were better informed about current theory on child cognitive development (as measured by questions from the Knowledge of Infant Development Inventory (KIDI) questionnaire), they tended to value guided play more.</p>
<p>The concept of different kinds of play, such as guided vs free play, was only recently introduced in research and may not yet be evident to the public. Guided play also requires that parents engage with their children during a play experience, which might lead them to undervalue guided play in favor of free play.</p>
<h2>Importance of educating parents</h2>
<p>“While free play is crucial for children’s well-being, recent research emphasizes that guided play is a more effective approach to support children’s learning in reading, STEM, and learning-to-learn skills like attention, memory, and flexible thinking,” said Wright.</p>
<p>Senior author Dr Kathy Hirsh-Pasek, a professor at the same institute, said: “We need to help refine parents’ knowledge about the importance of play so that they can create guided play opportunities in everyday experiences like doing laundry, taking a walk in the park, or playing with a puzzle. As parents come to see these as ‘learning’ moments in everyday play, their children will thrive, while they will have more fun being parents.”</p>
<p><a href="https://www.frontiersin.org/news/2023/12/15/frontiers-developmental-psychology-playful-learning-us-parents-survey"><img fetchpriority="high" decoding="async" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-60249" src="https://www.psypost.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Frontiers-banner.png" alt="" width="855" height="70" srcset="https://www.psypost.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Frontiers-banner.png 855w, https://www.psypost.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Frontiers-banner-600x49.png 600w, https://www.psypost.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Frontiers-banner-300x25.png 300w, https://www.psypost.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Frontiers-banner-768x63.png 768w, https://www.psypost.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Frontiers-banner-750x61.png 750w" sizes="(max-width: 855px) 100vw, 855px" /></a></p>
Doesn’t have a single owner. It’s a free software, build around a free-protocol. If at a moment, some developpers do not agree with Lemmy’s main-dev, they’re absolutely free to create a Memmy platform based on lemmy with their feature enabled. Just like at a point Libre office split from open office. Even better, Kbin/Mbin runs a fully different code-base and is still (fully) compatible with Lemmy. It’s the magic of free software.
With instance I know, you don’t give a commercial licence to re-use your content like you do on reddit. For example, Lemmy.world team cannot sell your comments to train an AI, or re-use the photo you post te sell T-shirt. On reddit (but also meta, tik tok and others) they’ll do.
Have you noticed that you don’t find these big GDPR cookies/tracker consent form ? Well, when you don’t sell your user data to ads company, and don’t put tons of trackers, GDPR compliance isn’t complicated. Look at your instance privacy policy for LW it’s there and compare it with reddit term of use it’s crazy what we accept on reddit.
That said, please note that privacy friendly instances run because some people pay for it, if you like it, and can afford-it feel free to make a donation to your instances or the main developper.
At the moment it’s a relatively small community, and you’ll see the same nick-names everywhere, which means that in general the communities are nice and well behaved. There is a couple of instances which want to put politics everywhere and are annoying, but it’s the exception not the norm.
Federation and fediverse works. From Lemmy, I’ve interacted with persons on Mastodon, have seen some of my Lemmy comments being retooted in Mastodon, have seen Mastodon/Firefish user posting on lemmy from their account there. And of course, you can exchange with people using lemmy on different instance.
disclaimer: i am not a web developer or a programmer, so if the language use is semantically incorrect, i apologize—I am merely trying to provide a layman’s explanation.
it’s just a bunch of little “reddits” (general discussion forum websites) that are independently hosted, but have the ability to cross post with one-another (so long as they are “federated”).
lemmy is the underlying technology that lets that happen, not the top level entity (like how reddit is the name of the website that is the forum host). so what you have is a bunch of different independent websites running lemmy that users individually create accounts on, and a lot of those individual websites communicate with each-other to create cohesive “fediverse.”
on the front end, whatever lemmy website someone signs up on, they are able to see all the content created and posted across all the separate websites that have federated together with the initial website the user signed up with.
so in short, you may have signed up with Lemmy Server 1 that has 800 individual forum topics (communities/ or subreddits) but you can also post in and interact with Lemmy Server 2, which is separately hosted and a very specific forum that only allows forum topics about bunny tossing so there are two topics: /BunnyTossing and /BunnyTossingMemes. So long as lemmy servers 1 and 2 are federated you’ll see content from Lemmy Server 1 (your home server) and Lemmy Server 2 (rad tips on bunny tossing).
if in the future your home server defederates with another server, you will no longer see content from that server or be able to interact with it as your user profile from that home server (in this instance Lemmy Server 1). in this situation however there is nothing stopping you from creating a user account on Lemmy Server 2 and continuing to see rad tips on bunny tossing by logging into lemmy server 2 directly.
Hi there! Looks like you linked to a Lemmy community using a URL instead of its name, which doesn’t work well for people on different instances. Try fixing it like this: !eroticart
When you go to the mod log, you can start typing your name into the user search box until the auto-complete entries come up. Select the one that shows your name and the instance where you signed up.
In this case, it should be #45808. I don’t see any mod actions listed for that ID. Another post mentioned the possibility of missing entries in case there’s something in particular you’re looking for and not finding.
Hi there! Looks like you linked to a Lemmy community using a URL instead of its name, which doesn’t work well for people on different instances. Try fixing it like this: !sublinks_support
A security breach exposed two-factor authentication (2FA) codes/password reset links for millions of users on platforms like Facebook, Google, and TikTok....
It’s a great recommendation to use app-based 2FA, except that lots of services seem to insist on and only offer SMS OTP.
For instance out of all the financial establishments I do business with, only one offers the option. The big name players don’t, it’s only some tiny little mom & pop CU that does.
Hi there! Looks like you linked to a Lemmy community using a URL instead of its name, which doesn’t work well for people on different instances. Try fixing it like this: !breadtube
Hi there! Looks like you linked to a Lemmy community using a URL instead of its name, which doesn’t work well for people on different instances. Try fixing it like this: !privacy
What is a gender neutral replacement for man, guys, buddy, etc?
So I’ve realized that in conversations I’ll use traditional terms for men as general terms for all genders, both singularly and for groups. I always mean it well, but I’ve been thinking that it’s not as inclusive to women/trans people....
Open Invites/Signups?
I was reading a few days ago in a post somewhere that there is an open signups/open invites sub here, can anyone link me to it?
How does lemmy differ from reddit?
Here are some specific questions....
What is a story were the main villain actually turned out to be the good guy?
How to block certain words on lemmy feed
As the title says I want to block posts with specific words. I’m not an American and lately my whole feed is filled with trump/biden and I’m not slightly interested. Thanks in advance.
My Love-Hate Relationship With Lemmy – Gavi's Blog (jewy.blog)
cross-posted from: literature.cafe/post/7623718...
Join Lemmyvision, a Eurovision-like Song Contest for Lemmy communities around the world ! (jlai.lu)
Crossposted from lemmy.world/post/12717592...
The children yearn for the mines (lemmy.world)
deleted_by_author
pls respond (mander.xyz)
/c/[email protected] is under refreshed management
Hey there! You may recognize me as a mod over on !TenForward, a Star Trek-themed meme and shitposty community. We love having our fun and hanging out but we’re also not averse to some serious discussions or news as well! While it is always allowed in TenForward, we realize that there might be a better place for it....
Joe Biden confuses Gaza with Ukraine twice as he revealed that US would begin providing assistance in Gaza (central24.online)
Mr Biden revealed that the US would begin providing humanitarian assistance in Gaza when he made the blunde…
Zen (slrpnk.net)
What does Lemmy do better than Reddit?
Just found this space, I’m trying to play around with this platform. Can anyone help to explain?
This is art (sh.itjust.works)
Cannot follow automod removal links, how do I know what comment was removed?
So for some fucktastically stupid reason, the automod replies to removed messages provides a link that only returns a server error....
deleted_by_author
Tech Company Leaks 2FA Codes/Password Reset Links for Major Platforms (techcrunch.com)
A security breach exposed two-factor authentication (2FA) codes/password reset links for millions of users on platforms like Facebook, Google, and TikTok....
Breadtube (Solarpunk) - A community for leftist videos, with a particular focus on Solarpunk and Anarchist content! (slrpnk.net)
Here’s the link in instance agnostic forms:...
Searching for a Linux distro
cross-posted from: lemmy.ml/post/12400033 (Thank you lemmy.ml/u/Kory !)...