I highly highly doubt that DOJ succeeds in convincing the Court to force Google to divest Chrome. That wasn’t really part of the trial, which focused on Google’s contracts to make its search engine the default on other platforms.
However, if DOJ does succeed then yes this case could make it easier in the future to force Microsoft to divest Bing if Bing ever gained a monopoly in search. As a comparison, the original Microsoft antitrust case precedent is very important to this search case. That’s why the government sued in this district (the same district they sued Microsoft in decades ago).
From a brief dip in the multi volume full OED it looks like "Vice Chairman" (etc) came about via vyse | visage | "face" .. as in "This person is a substitute | deputy | "the face" of another person or role"
It's a usage going back to at least 1597 and lost in the fog of time before.
Interesting. It works the same in a most European languages (Vicepresidente, Vice-président, Vizepräsident, Wiceprezydent, Viceprezident, Віцепрезидент, Вице-президент, ...).
So this isn't an official site from the EU, and is instead just a big add for a password management company https://uniqkey.eu/en_US/
As far as I can read in there as well the proposal hasn't been approved/ratified yet, so I don't know what fool is going to pay someone to prepare for a directive that isn't even official yet.
Especially considering that OP posted a link to uniqkey a couple months ago on HN (not necessarily wrong, but considering that downloading the "whitepaper" also asks for a bunch of PI...)
> The data in the study can’t explain why, but the results fit evidence indicating that young people today don’t think now is a good time for them to have children.
> "For those who are concerned about America’s dropping birth rates, this study suggests that there is no need to pressure young people into wanting more kids, Hayford said."
This article (and most quoting "low birth rate") are incredibly out of touch. How can you be shocked that in a world where a shooting might not make the news, our politicians don't hide their corruption, and you know, the climate crisis that we've seen coming and still choose to do nothing.
No I can't think of a single reason why "young people don't feel like it's the right time".
> This article (and most quoting "low birth rate") are incredibly out of touch. How can you be shocked that in a world where a shooting might not make the news, our politicians don't hide their corruption, and you know, the climate crisis that we've seen coming and still choose to do nothing.
And yet, the world has never been safer in a long time and the statistics show it.
The ever rising cost of living and challenges to careers for caregivers are a real concern though.
This is depressing, because there is good news out there!
I’m sure you’re not alone, that you’re reflecting what the article is talking about. But I feel like this might say more about how we are sharing news and framing the world than about whether this is a good time to raise kids or not.
Shootings in the Wild West were a dime a dozen. Politicians have always been shitty. In the mean time, amazing things are going on everywhere in the world. Being unable to think of a single one is a bit frustrating.
> This is depressing, because there is good news out there!
Good news and amazing things like "Grandpa drives stray dog 1250 miles to surprise grandkids" or "World's Fastest Shoes Invented" don't do much to offset the bad news like "All water on Earth now poisoned and toxic" or "1 billion climate refugees to be displaced by 2050".
Maybe shootings were commonplace in the wild west, and politicians were always shitty, but you can't blame people if they don't want to raise children in the wild west, or a crumbling democracy.
See that’s exactly the kind of frustrating pessimism I’m talking about. You’re choosing to downplay what’s going well and choosing to highlight the bad and frame it as hopeless. I wasn’t talking about fluff stories of good news. There is actual, real good news.
The climate refugees statement has not happened yet, and the problem with treating it as though it has is exactly what you’re seeing in this story and in this thread: people start acting like there’s no nope and nothing we can do about it, when the reality is that we have time! The problem all along has been a lack of motivation, due especially right-wing skepticism and a concerted attack on public trust in science and government. Now that the skepticism is really starting to evaporate, it would be the most massive and incredible shame if we sat around moping even though almost everyone now agrees it’s real, just because everyone decided it was already hopeless and decided to be depressed about it. Some hopeful people are going to work on solutions, and the more we can spread hope, the more people will contribute. This is hopeful framing is still incredibly important right now, if you want the solutions to get funded with tax dollars! Keeping levels of public trust in government actions on climate change and keeping levels of public trust in science is really critical to avoiding the outcome you’re talking about.
Here’s a list of actually amazing things that happened, and this is just the very first Google result I got, the list is very far from complete, there are many more good things happening if you care to look around! https://www.positive.news/society/what-went-right-in-2022-th...
> You’re choosing to downplay what’s going well and choosing to highlight the bad and frame it as hopeless. I wasn’t talking about fluff stories of good news. There is actual, real good news.
Your list of good news is a very mixed bag
#1 in the list is that the war in Ukraine is bad for fossil fuels - that's a lot of suffering and death for changes that could have happened at any point without the war. Not exactly a net win. They bolster this weak point with a shout out to a recent fusion experiment which was widely panned for being reported over-optimistically to the point of misrepresentation.
Lots of climate legislation listed. It is genuinely good to see anything meaningful being done to address climate change. It's no where near enough, but it's Something even if it's debatable how much good it'll actually do or even if it'll cause more harm than good in the end.
#4 is actually genuinely depressing. It says that research suggests that people have direct influence over 25-27 per cent of the emissions savings needed to avoid climate chaos. What the report actually says is that if everyone gives up owning a car, stops eating meat, limits themselves to only 8 items of clothing and limits replacements to 3 new articles of clothing a year, if they can somehow "avoid all household food waste", limit themselves to 1 short flight every 3 years and 1 long flight every 8 years, keep all appliances and electronics far longer than they are designed and built to last, and do all of those things immediately we'd still be 75% away from preventing global catastrophe and none of that 75% is within people's control. Should I be excited about the idea of raising a child in a world where they can only own 8 items of clothing, have to eat garbage, and can never own a car?
#5 is about Patagonia which was a PR scam to cover that a billionaire will just give money to himself/his family for tax reasons.
There is some genuine good and encouraging news in there too though: a couple endangered species pulled back from the brink of extinction, the Respect for Marriage Act passing, some social movements gaining ground and opinions shifting. Medical advances some of which may or may not amount to anything.
Is it enough to offset all the bad news? hard to say.
> The climate refugees statement has not happened yet,
No, but would-be parents need to look at the past, the present, and the future. When experts say the world will be on fire in 25 years if we keep doing things as we have done and our past and current situation doesn't give us a lot of reason to think things will change soon enough the smart thing to do is prepare for what's expected. You say that the reality is that we have time, but that's not certain. We probably could have time, if we're careful, but we're not being careful.
hopeful framing comes from hope and that hope needs to come from something tangible. When we have demonstrated progress showing a trajectory heading away from disaster and chaos we'll have hope. The best a person can have now is faith that things will improve because faith doesn't require evidence.
Trust in science requires accountability and integrity. Right now corporations pay for fraudulent research, replication isn't being done, and peer review is a rubber stamp. With nothing being done to combat these problems how can there be trust? It's the same for government which routinely lies to the public, acts against the will of the people to favor a small number of wealth elites, and works to minimize the ability of the public to make meaningful changes. How can there be trust? We need transparency and accountability for trust.
I'll admit that there is a lot of pessimism and learned helplessness going around these days, but it's rooted in reality. The deeper you look into things the more hopeless they seem, but if you don't look too hard and accept press releases without question you can end up with lists of "what went right" that are filled with so much that is wrong and uncertain.
> There is some genuine good and encouraging news in there too
I know, right?!
FWIW, it wasn’t my list, it’s just a list, and there are others. There are plenty of bad things to find, when you’re looking for it. (And, ahem, vice-versa.) Wallowing on the bad things, things which you and I both have almost zero first-hand knowledge or experience of, is a pointless and depressing waste of time. Let’s control the things we can, and make the things we control better!
A lot of capitalist interests want us docile, and they spend time designing the news and social media to keep you engaged and dependent on full time consumption. They don’t care if you’re happy or depressed, as long as you stay unmotivated to challenge them, and keep purchasing Xanax and video games. Don’t be a tool of the news outlets, go find some good news, and if you really truly can’t find any, then make some! (But I already know you can find good news, if you take the time to look.)
> How can you be shocked that in a world where a shooting might not make the news
Recent increases in gun deaths are primarily driven by poor city neighborhoods that already had a long history of gun violence, so, if you don't live there, why would you be so afraid of gun violence as to avoid having children now compared to 10 or 20 years ago? https://www.brookings.edu/2022/04/21/mapping-gun-violence-a-...
Note that Brookings institute is a solid left think-tank. I completely disagree with most of their conclusions and much of their analyses, but they tend to do a good job in collecting data and are at least more honest than most politically-biased organizations.
> Our politicians don't hide their corruption
They don't need to, because most people just keep voting for them anyways. If they are willing to do that, why would corruption stop them from having kids?
> and you know, the climate crisis that we've seen coming and still choose to do nothing.
We have a climate problem, not a climate crisis. I suggest you read or watch some Bjorn Lomberg.
What's the point of all this? A bad doctor, seeing symptoms, diagnoses the wrong illness, prescribes the wrong treatment, and makes the patient sicker than before. Birth rates are on the decline, but it's not because of gun violence or existential climate threats, although it could be in part due to the false perceptions people have on these issues from listening to dishonest media corporations, school teachers, university professors, and celebrities.
51 shootings a year in a country with 100,000 public schools, not even counting private and charter schools, is not "commonplace." Your child is statistically 19 times more likely to die in a car accident than from a school shooting based on last year's numbers of 608 versus 32:
If you're not having kids because of school shootings then you might have a serious problem and should seek help. And I am not trying to be callous in saying that. I feel sadness for someone who is unnecessarily gripped in fear about the future in that way. You deserve better!
"school shootings" is also misleading, because it includes negligent discharge of a police officer's gun into the wall on school property, gang/crime related shootings (even non-fatal) on the school parking lot after hours, and so on.
What we think of as "school shootings" - an active shooters targeting individuals in a school systematically - is still exceedingly rare and you know them all by name. 1-2 per year, if memory serves. Pretty bad, yea, but not nearly what it's made out to be. Pretty much chance of being struck by lightning.
Violent crime is at some of the lowest levels we've seen in decades. A slight uptick compared to the pre-Covid, but way down compared to prior decades.
Sounds like the solution is to stop spending so much time on social where the algorithms are built to generate outrage..
Please stop spending time online and venture out in the real world (cafes, restaurants, gyms, parks, hills, lakes etc) with real people. World has never been better for humans.
Yes, we have a clearer view of the world than ever for those who can discern the truth from the bullshit. But shootings have always happened and are still quite rare, politicians have certainly been more corrupt in our history, and climate change is just that, change. We're not certain which regions are going to benefit and which will suffer. We might all collectively suffer economically from the instability, but the "fiery hellscape" rhetoric is severely overblown.
Seems like many in my generation (millennials) and younger are ill-equipped to deal with this glut of information, so they seize up. There are plenty of rational reasons to postpone having kids. School shootings, climate change and political corruption are not among them once you look at the data.
Having an app that can setup its own completely secure networking no matter where it's run is game changing, as soon as I get into the alpha, the Cloudflare tunnel it's on right now is going down!
(Humor on Hacker News is hard. I thought if I made two joke posts about goats, at least one would get modded up enough to undo the downvotes from the other.)