Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | victor22's commentslogin

Yeah I didnt understand shit either

Who even knows if they actually put anything in there lol

Working on desmulta.com - the top website in Brazil to cancel road tickets, a booming industry all over the globe. Email me if you're curious.


Fuck yeah us nerds are working out, the bullies are so cooked


Ahahah hell yeah! Nerds with routines, spreadsheets and gains let's keep pushing both code and plates

Honestly, I think it's also tied to growing awareness around how much time we all spend sitting. Yesterday i was sitting 19h.

More devs and tech folks are realizing that staying active is kind of essential if we want to feel good and stay "sharp" long-term let's say.


Also the game.


Easter egg: if you type 'camus' in the character selection screen you can play as Albert Camus in Algiers circa 1937, having premonitions about being a character in a text-based adventure game in the distant future.


How did you know that?


The director mentioned it in an email I got, apparently Camus is also a character in the film.



Replied :)


Same conclusion I got. This is weird as fuck. They seem kinda desperate.


Hi. Well thanks for your response anyway! Let's see what's the yes/no reply ratio, I'm curious.


Brazilian here. This guy is the most power crook in power, and he's definetely has been abusing it, many similar cases. The guys from Rumble are lucky they are not in Brazil, otherwise they would be fucked, extortion for sure (pay or go to jail / get fucked). Also, google him, he looks exactly like a evil movie villain, and he has this nasty villan look all the time.


If I'm reading that correctly, the court is taking this action after requesting that rumble respond to their requests and rumble has not responded. It's not censorship from the get-go, it's brinkmanship from rumble to get this response, it seems


>Also, google him, he looks exactly like a evil movie villain, and he has this nasty villan look all the time.

So the way somebody looks is half of your argument?


It's a relevant factor. There's a lot of statistically significant information about someone's personality that can be inferred from their face: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-020-65358-6 . It may be politically incorrect to do so but that doesn't mean it's not useful.


Please tell us what is "statistically significant" about this man's face.


This article:

"The reanimation of pseudoscience in machine learning and its ethical repercussions" https://www.cell.com/patterns/fulltext/S2666-3899(24)00160-0

shows why this is pseudoscience and harmful.


Yeah, why mention his appearance at all? It's crass and his actions should speak for themselves. Someone can be born with "villainesque" features and live a noble life, it's unfair to disadvantage them by perpetuating negative stereotypes.


Those stereotypes have a basis in reality; the way people think and behave etches itself on their faces. I don't think anyone with real life experience could seriously, honestly argue that it's not possible to discern any information about someone from their face/facial expressions and how they carry themselves.


This is HN, not twitter. Can you provide some more context or links to support your take on this?


Even if true, this comment isn't really conducive of a constructive or interesting conversation.


Because blocking a website that values hosting misinformation, conspiracy theories, ideological fascism and hateful bigoted content really makes you a bad guy. Do you free-speech absolutists ever take a look in the mirror?


Meh, I like his look a lot.

But the guy has definitively decided on turning his country into a dictatorial hell hole.

Brazil had already more than enough problems nobody was doing anything about, it really didn't deserve someone with a beyblade as a moral compass.

Let's hope he'll get a "Am I the baddie?" realization and doesn't enjoy it.


Staff the company there? Is this really how the internet has EVER worked?


Government wants a throat to choke that is subject to their jurisdiction.

If you have laws governing businesses that operate in your country it seems like a giant loophole if those businesses can avoid them simply having their servers/staff in another country. And in practice this shutting them out of the market is the stick they have to encourage compliance.


Having the company put an office there does not give you anything to choke, unless you did it like Brazil did and threaten lawyers with jail. Even then... that's just a Brazilian lawyer the company hired.

In order to do it right you have to be like a recent SEA nation that demanded the full investment from Apple in their national infra.


What does that have to do with anything? Brazilian law is quite clear. Whatever someone thinks the internet "was" or was not is immaterial.


Well if we agree that it's reasonable that a company needs to have staff in a country it operates in, then you'd need to have staff in every country to operate. That seems unreasonable to me.


Why is that unreasonable?

Within my lifetime that wasn't even physically possible.


> Why is that unreasonable?

I'd argue that if applied as a universal principle, then:

* It would make it even harder specifically for smaller companies, who don't have ~200 employees to position one in each country, to get started online. If for instance you're an independent designer based in Luxembourg, maybe making fonts or website templates, would you only be allowed to sell to other people in Luxembourg?

* It would likely segment the Internet, and render much of it inaccessible to anyone living in smaller countries, because realistically most websites aren't going to bother with all countries.

* The intended goal, that websites would more likely bend to local law because they have employees there to be imprisoned/punished if they don't, seems questionable to me in the first place. In many cases the demands they'd be caving to would be "remove anti-government content" or "give us the IP and phone number of this journalist".

> Within my lifetime that wasn't even physically possible.

The world is not as it was before the takeoff of the Internet, and trying to revert back would be "unreasonable" to many.

In this case Rumble is a business model that didn't exist pre-Internet, and has to compete with Amazon/Google which have global availability (or close to it). Just because brick-and-mortar stores used to manage does not make it feasible for businesses like Rumble.


It was rhetorical, but is a nice page of text to cleverly never provide any meaningful answer to the question.

A government - elected by its people - should not allow a foreign corporation to flout their laws. "If you want to operate in our country you have to actually operate in our country, where you cannot evade responsibility and the law." is not in any way an unreasonable requirement.


Why should an American/Canadian company care what the law is in some third world country?


So don’t. And don’t operate in that country. It’s that simple


If people in Brazil want to access Rumble, and Rumble wants to allow them access, why should Rumble defer to the regime? Facebook used to run a hidden service for users in China, this is the example to follow.


You could say the same about Silkroad in the US, or Google in China, or online casinos in specific states. It’s simply the law of the land. The people voted for it so that’s what it is.


Exactly, and why would they care if they’re banned in that country.


It has everything to do with everything how a free and open Internet works. I'm sorry you do not know your history. The Internet is not brick and mortar businesses and never has been.

If Brazil doesn't play ball then all other peering countries should drop all their routes and they can run their own Internet.


You are not very familiar with this Internet we are on, are you? There are geoblocks everywhere for so many things. For reasons from fraud prevention to politics to every reason in between (e g. do you think that middle east governments didn't scan all emails for objectionable content in early Internet days? Do you think anyone realistically suggested cutting off the links they paid for because of this?)


Censorship is wrong in every case, even more wrong when the motivation is extortion. History has taught us this.


Ok, are you ascribing a motive of extortion here? You seem to be repeating an awfully simple principle but not making clear what you think the context is. Could you explain what your perspective is here?


Consider applying for YC's Fall 2025 batch! Applications are open till Aug 4

Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: