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If we can't ban them from trading stocks, good luck with this.


Don't be needlessly cynical.

This is a good effort. So is the ban on stock trading. This administration is such that it is bringing corruption to the fore in a way not seen in generations. Things are always hard to pass at the start. Keep pushing and this administration will create a massive opportunity to swing the pendulum if we can (as hard as it is now) retain some optimism.


To the people downvoting you, you just said the administration is bringing corruption into the public view. Some people believe they are exposing and some believe they are currently doing it. Either way, corruption and profiting off of a political position is certainly top of mind for many Americans atm.


Ah interesting thanks for pointing out the ambiguity in my statement. I definitely did not intend that ambiguity but you also rightly point out it sort of works either way. I would think this would lead to more upvotes than downvotes but perhaps a trend of cynicism also is reflected in assuming the least favorable interpretation.

Thanks for pointing that out.

For the record, I meant the latter. Let the downvotes commence!


Blindly trying things without taking signals from outcomes of the past seems like madness. If you have evidence you have failed at walking many times, should you be putting your energy and efforts into running and jumping instead of continuing to pursue walking?


That's not what I'm doing and I think you know that. Reform takes time. If everyone gave up just because things were difficult n times nothing in government would ever change. The state is not a startup. Behind every significant piece of legislation is a battle.


It's easier to ban things before they become entrenched than after. Banning stock trading is hard today because most senators have been doing it for years before getting elected.

I'd be in favor of senators doing prediction markets, just limited to small dollar trades so they can get better at predicting.


Most criminal activity is hard to change when it's already happening. There is no reason to mollify the problem further.


> can accept that as the cost of security sometimes

And corporate IT wonders why employees are always circumventing "security policies"...


Additional explanation: this is primarily a personal setup.

There would be a lot of refinement and contingencies to implement something like this for corporate / business.

Having said that, I still exist on the ruthless side of blocking equation. I'd generally prefer some kind of small allow list than a gigantic block list, but this is how it's (d)evolved.


How is this better than blocking after a certain quantity in a range of time instead?

Single queries should never be harmful to something openly accessible. DOS is the only real risk, and blocking after a certain level of traffic solves that problem much better with less possibility of a false positive, and no risk to your infrastructure, either.


You're either digging through slop or digging through your whole codebase anyway.


I think AI will render software licenses and copyright irrelevant long before a hypothetical evil GPL-4 gets released.

Most new (corporate-sponsored!) software is already under permissive licenses anyway.


True.. my hope is that open weight models will progress to the point where they become viable coding agents for normies, so that even if open source dies with copyright, we will still nonetheless see a renaissance in people controlling their own computers, being able to create their own programs to solve their own problems. HyperCard on steroids, that anybody can use with no technical background. We're not there yet even for frontier models, but maybe in a few more years..


If any AI's will be sued into oblivion from Copyright holders until the bubble collapses into itself due to LLM rot over time due to the lack of curated human input.


This is quite frankly not a serious scenario. Once the label "national security" gets affixed to anything, you'd better be sure it's not going away.

Also, half of all AI development is in China. Why would China care about Western copyright holders, or rather, why would they start caring?


Because China it's making good Wuxia movies today and they woudn't neither like being ripped off if they exported either their movies or manhua to the West.


Why would you use TikTok for private communications anyway? It's mostly a public short video sharing platform.


It's the kids' social network, you're just old.


> you just have intact brain

Fixed a bit.


As much as I want to agree with you, the people who like TikTok make up a significant amount of the population, and their opinions do matter--arguably more than yours, due to sheer numbers.

Smugly dismissing them doesn't do you any favors except for making you feel good about yourself for a few seconds.


You’d be surprised how many people don’t give a shit about TikTok. It’s just another blip in history like Facebook, Instagram, Vine, MySpace and others before them.


All of those were extremely influential and half of them had enough power to select a president.


Regarding "why care." It's where a shockingly large portion of voters and adults get their "news."

• 43% of US 18-29 year olds regularly get news on TikTok

• Half of US adults get news on TikTok, 1 in 5 US "regularly" do so

• This is 2 points less than Twitter and two points more than Facebook

Data from Pew Research (Sep 2025): https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2025/09/25/1-in-5-am...


The way it starts is you pass videos back and forth with a friend. Then you find yourself chatting in the same app.

I'm mindful that it's less secure than other apps, but for a lot of chats it doesn't matter.


You say that like the typical 18 year old has any idea what they're doing when it comes to proper encryption and communication safety. That is never going to be the case.

It's a communication channel attached to the most popular social network for young people. Obviously they're going to use it a lot. They use it for the extreme convenience.


>never going to be the case.

And in a perfect world essentially shouldn’t have to be, at least inside expensive walled garden app stores.


They might understand e2ee but not care.


Says someone who has never sent a message to a friend over DM on TikTok.


Hopefully


Exactly.


Thankfully


it's more than that.


But I love internet chum! Don't forget "new law thing"; that's an important category.


If you live in California, insurance companies don't want you to know this


"internet chum" is a good one, it echoes "slop bowl".


"Chumbox" has been a descriptive term since 2015:

"A Complete Taxonomy of Internet Chum" (4 June 2015)

<https://www.theawl.com/2015/06/a-complete-taxonomy-of-intern...>

<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chumbox>


Cool Wikipedia read. These (chumboxes) are on our Windows 10 lock screens at work.


Wait a minute, what? What I read from your comment is that on your work machines the screen savers display ads? I mean, I’d heard Windows was getting bad with the ads, but surely it doesn’t work that way out of the box.


On Enterprise, configured by policy, no less, one would assume.


That is an absolute stone cold dead soul-sucking statement.


They're playing too nice. It's time to roll out the residential proxies.


I think the winning move is just to ignore the legislation, and drag the government into an EFF or ACLU-funded First Amendment lawsuit if they try to enforce anything.


GPT-4o is discontinued now


They could've shoved Copilot in Wordpad


And it would still compete with Word. They want you to switch to Office 365 (I mean, Copilot 365).


You jest but they did name change it to Microsoft 365.

Confused the hell out of me recently when I was looking for Office 365 on their website.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microsoft_365


It's actually the Microsoft 365 Copilot App


That’s Microsoft 365 Copilot” to you, buddy.

https://www.office.com/


Of course it is.


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