Off-and-on trying out an account over at @[email protected] due to scraping bots bogging down lemmy.today to the point of near-unusability.


How could Lemmy implement an age verification system?
I don’t think that it would matter much. Assuming that the legislation applies to the Threadiverse and doesn’t have some sort of exception, it’d still be effectively unenforceable, because most instances don’t operate in France’s legal jurisdiction, and I imagine that most users, even in France, don’t really care whether their instance is in France or not.


Chinese people pay a 13% sales tax on contraceptives from 1 January
I seriously doubt that that’s going to have a major impact.
Observers appear divided on the aim of the tax overhaul. The idea that a tax hike on condoms will impact birth rates is “overthinking it”, says demographer Yi Fuxian from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
He believes Beijing is keen to collect taxes “wherever it can” as it battles a housing market slump and growing national debt.
Consumption taxes are regressive, but sometimes they can be more politically-viable if they can be presented as fighting social ills.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sin_tax
A sin tax (also known as a sumptuary tax, or vice tax) is an excise tax specifically levied on certain goods deemed harmful to society and individuals, such as alcohol, tobacco, drugs, soft drinks, sugar, fast foods, fat, meat, gambling, vaping, cannabis (wherever legal for recreational use) and pornography.[1]
In contrast to Pigouvian taxes, which are to pay for the damage to society caused by these goods, sin taxes increase the price in an effort to decrease the use of these goods. Increasing a sin tax is often more popular than increasing other taxes. However, these taxes have often been criticized for burdening the poor and disproportionately taxing the physically and mentally dependent.[2]


Advance UK became a registered political party in December and claims to have gained more than 30,000 members since launching in early 2025. It positions itself as a burgeoning rival to Reform, setting out on its website how it differs from Nigel Farage’s party.
Leader Ben Habib has called for the UK to “onshore” all industries “from steel, to food, to energy”. Writing on X, he said: “A way to protect our producers is to impose tariffs on imports… Put first the UK, not producers in China and Germany”.
Setting aside whether-or-not this would actually be a good idea for the UK, I don’t think that the UK is going to onshore all food production unless it goes vegetarian or makes some other major concessions in desired diet.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agriculture_in_the_United_Kingdom
Agriculture in the United Kingdom uses 70% of the country’s land area, employs 1% of its workforce (462,000 people) and contributes 0.5% of its gross value added (£13.7 billion). The UK currently produces about 54% of its domestic food consumption.[1]
If you’re producing 54% of your consumption using 70% of your land area, even disregarding what land area is actually suitable for agriculture and evicting all other users from the land, converting all land to agricultural use still probably isn’t going to get you to domestic production of 100% of domestic consumption.
Maybe you could grow more wheat and less strawberries or something, maximize the land allocation to crops that produce the highest caloric output. But the biggest gains are probably going to be ending consumption of meat, since that’s costly in terms of land.


two difficult an invasion target for this to happen.
From what I’ve read, generally-speaking, the US expectation is that the US would win a conflict with China over Taiwan, but that the US would take serious naval losses in doing so.
I suppose that China could have a different view of the matter, though.
I think that a more-compelling argument is that if you, in fact, intend to invade Taiwan at any point in the remotely near future, you’re probably better off just invading it, not loudly announcing that you will do so at some unspecified point in the future and then sitting around while the potential invadee fortifies itself.


If it’s new, it looks like 128GB ECC DDR4 is maybe $1k, going by this listing:
https://www.amazon.com/OWC-2933MHz-PC4-23400-Unbuffered-Workstation/dp/B0CBT139TS
Dunno what the used-new difference is currently.


The Japanese public are definitely not willing to lend to the government at such low interest rates. The majority holder of Japanese bonds is the Bank of Japan, who needs to purchase large amounts of bonds to conduct its monetary policy.
But that capital that the bank is providing the government with is from the Japanese public, yes, who are lending it to the bank for a low return?
searches
https://www.ft.com/content/23b560a4-f0f1-44a9-94af-88d4807211f4
Even after 30 lean, post-bubble years, Japanese households hold ¥2.1 quadrillion ($14.7tn) of financial assets, of which more than half ($7.7tn) is held in cash and deposits.
By contrast, households in the US and UK respectively hold 13 and 31 per cent in deposits.
In national terms, Japan’s cash savings alone are equivalent to the combined annual gross domestic product of Germany and India. In corporate terms, Mrs Watanabe could buy Apple, Microsoft and Saudi Aramco with what she has sitting (earning almost zero interest) in the bank.
When prices in Japan were stagnant or falling, as they were for most of the past 25 years, Mrs Watanabe’s preference for holding the majority of savings in cash was reasonable, especially so after the government guaranteed bank deposits in 1995.
The central bank’s long experiment with ultra-low interest rates, which began in the late 1990s, meant she was not making any returns, but nor was her wealth being significantly eroded as long as Japanese companies held back from raising prices.


Japan’s government debt climbs to record ¥1.32 quadrillion
My understanding from past reading is that Japan has an unusual situation where the Japanese public basically lends the government a lot of money at fairly unfavorable-to-the-public rates.
searches
https://www.stlouisfed.org/on-the-economy/2025/apr/what-is-behind-japan-high-government-debt
Based on a skim of this, it sounds like a lot of the Japanese public basically lends their assets to the government, while getting fairly unrewarding returns for them.
Then the government takes those assets and goes and invests the assets in riskier things abroad and makes a bunch of money by doing so.
First, as of the second quarter of 2024, Japan’s net public liabilities on the consolidated balance sheet amounted to only 78% of GDP. While gross liabilities stood at 270% of GDP, the government also held substantial assets totaling 192% of GDP.
Second, a significant portion of these assets were invested in high-return, riskier assets such as domestic equities, foreign equities and foreign bonds. Liabilities primarily consisted of low-return instruments like bank reserves and government bonds. This resulted in a return spread between government assets and liabilities. Despite having a net liability position, the high returns on riskier assets exceeded the government’s funding costs, generating a substantial positive return on Japan’s balance sheet.
So, I don’t know why the Japanese public is so willing to lend to the government at poor rates of return. Maybe cultural, maybe driven by tax law or other policy.
But from the standpoint of looking at the country in aggregate, it doesn’t sound so bad. Basically, the Japanese government has a lot of public debt because it’s chosen to take out debt from the public, who is willing to lwnd to it and makes a return by investing those assets. It’s not because it’s just spending beyond its means. High debts but also high assets and those assets have made a solid return.
There’s also some other material in the article about how another part of it is due to some unusual financing structure, but I haven’t read about that before, and don’t have familiarity with it.


The article also cites support for military support, which is lower.
If you run xev in a virtual terninal program — this works on Wayland as well, though make sure that the xev window has focus — you can see what actual events the program is getting when you’re doing stuff like pressing Control.


That should be interesting politically, given that Pew polling showed that the top concern for Trump voters in 2024 was “the economy” and within that category, the top concern was “prices”.


Great minds think alike. Yeah, just followed up with a similar comment. So probably a bug, but not sure whether it’s an mbin or Lemmy bug. Like you, I can also see the intended URL on PieFed (olio.cafe).
EDIT: Same problem on lemmy.ml, and they’re the dev instance, run the latest version of Lemmy:
https://lemmy.ml/post/41016280
EDIT2: I submitted a post to [email protected] at https://lemmy.ml/post/41019532 to make the devs aware of the interaction, if they weren’t already.


It’s not visible via lemmy.today’s Web UI:
https://lemmy.today/post/44629301
Checking whether it’s just lemmy.today somehow mangling things, it doesn’t look like it. Here’s beehaw.org’s Web UI directly:
https://beehaw.org/post/23981271
As of the moment, both are a link to an image (though lemmy.today is proxying the link to that image):
https://fedia.io/media/93/77/937761715da35c5c9fb1267e65b4ea54c2b649c2eebbf8ce26d2b4cba20097bf.jpg
Same behavior seen when browsing lemmy.today in Eternity.
EDIT: Fedia.io is running mbin. You submitted it via fedia.io. This community is on beehaw.org. I wonder if there was some kind of recent mbin/lemmy compatibility bug? I’d check fedia.io’s Web UI, but it currently disallows anonymous browsing (probably because of all the AI web scrapers hammering Threadiverse instances that allow anonymous access).


If you were trying to link to an article, you just linked to an image.
I’ve never used it, but Timekpr-nExT says that it does this, and it appears to be packaged in Debian trixie, so it’s probably in all the Debian-family distros.


“What really happened? Soviet good will changed the world, voluntarily. And Russians gave up thousands of square kilometers of territory, voluntarily. Unheard of. Ukraine, part of Russia, for centuries given away. Kazakhstan, given away. The Caucasus too. Hard to imagine, and done by party bosses,” Putin said.
“Unheard of” seems like a stretch. There sorta was this period of decolonization.


Even if the text is removed, if the font is a proportional one, the very exact dimensions of any removed text plus knowledge of stuff like kerning can reveal the text.


Virtual keyboards have never been great
I’m actually surprised that nobody ever fundamentally reinvented text input for touchscreens in a way that caught on.


I’d like to be able to get touchpads with physical buttons on laptops. Very few manufacturers do them, especially if you want three.
China has a pretty substantial demographics problem. Like, I’m not saying that this particular policy is the way to handle it or that it’s effective, but it’s very probably going to have a lot of unpleasant effects if they aren’t able to turn it around. You’d expect them to be trying to do something about it.
https://www.populationpyramid.net/china/2024/
Their 50-54 age cohort is about 120 million.
Their 0-4 age cohort is about 50 million.
They currently have 1.4 billion people.
The UN projects them to have 633 million people in 2100.
If you want to have elderly people retiring and working-age people supporting them, then your ratio of retirees to working-age people going way up is going to create some pretty serious issues. Do you just have increasingly-decrepit people work until they go? Tax the working population a lot more? Slash the standard of living for the elderly? All of those are going to seriously suck for at least some portion of the public.
searches
https://www.cfr.org/blog/what-chinese-pension-system-and-why-are-its-problems-hard-fix