• someone@lemmy.today
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    3 hours ago

    There are so many speech restrictions and humans rights violations in China that scare the hell out of me, but then I see rulings like this and their progress on robotics and tech and I think “Well, they are doing something right…” I hope one day there is more free speech for people in China who deserve to be able to say what they want.

    It’s a great ruling because companies that would normally favor efficiency and profit increases are in a better position to take these existing workers and utilize them in different ways than just have everyone fired en masse and then somehow the market will sort it out. Even under classical economic theories, governments are supposed to regulate externalities and AI displacing workers too rapidly could be considered a type of externality.

    • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      17 minutes ago

      There are so many speech restrictions and humans rights violations in China that scare the hell out of me

      I hear an earful about how horrible and repressive the Chinese state government is to its citizens from the outside, largely by national media talking heads and Big Data surveillance company flaks. Meanwhile, the consequences of talking shit on the Chinese internet - account suspension/deactivation, getting in trouble with your employer/school possibly with the threat of firing/expulsion, periodic investigation by state police for threats of violence, possible restrictions on business/travel because you’ve been added to a “watch list”, potential for arrest on some bullshit charge - seem to be all the same kinds of consequences periodically doled out to western citizens.

      I’m told Americans have “free speech”. But then the Supreme Court lays so many caveats down that even a silly toothless joke is strictly prohibited under US laws. I’m told Chinese officials are brutal and draconian and mean-spirited, but they don’t have anything approaching our prison population. I haven’t seen evidence of any kind of mob-rule social media gang dedicated to doxing Chinese dissidents, either. So they manage to stay ahead of Canary Mission and Project Veritas in that regard.

      I hope one day there is more free speech for people in China who deserve to be able to say what they want.

      I want to know what that’s supposed to look like in practice. Where can I find the Free Speech that the Evil Foreign Country is supposed to one day get?

      Because if the dream is an American style system of free expression… What are we pinning for, really? Chinese Alex Jones and Tucker Carlson? Uyghurs given the Palestine Action treatment? An independent Taiwan that enjoys all the diplomatic kindness we afford to our neighbors down in Haiti and Cuba?

      What are we even asking for?

      • kiagam@lemmy.world
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        22 minutes ago

        I saw that protests are free as long as they are against the local government. People can complain online and in-person against local authorities and demand central government step in to save them, too. But if the rethoric starts going to “central government is wrong”, then it gets supressed

        • dreadbeef@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          11 minutes ago

          I heard online that it’s illegal to be against Christianity in America, as well as it being illegal to be against fascism, or ‘anti fascist’ in the USA as you’ll be labelled a domestic terrorist. I heard in America that the cops won’t kill you if you are a white person walking at night but not if you are a black teenager. I heard in America that the government will allow your father to shoot you until you die if you disagree with him politically but ask to see his gun. I heard in America you will be killed by the government for being homeless poor and there’s nothing anyone will do about it.

          But America is where freedom is. If you live in any conditions freer than that, you are actually in a less free country than America because actually America is actually freer than any other country actually.

          • kiagam@lemmy.world
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            12 minutes ago

            I understand the parallel, but all you said can be confirmed or denied by several sources I have access to. I don’t have alternative sources for most of the claims about China. Could you provide them? When I read about these things, it seemed trustworthy.

            Also, I’m not even american, chill. I am not chinese either, I don’t have a horse in this race. Both can burn in nuclear winter as far as I care

            • dreadbeef@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              10 minutes ago

              by several sources I have access to

              Does your government limit your access to any sources?

              But also all of those things are true and verifiable. That’s freedom in America baby—free to be rich and if you’re not filthy rich and just middle class or above you’re good as long as you’re white and male. Not so free for many other people.

              • kiagam@lemmy.world
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                6 minutes ago

                What I mean by “have access to” is that information about china is scarce unless you are reading in chinese and talking to chinese people. I will be visiting there later this year btw and have family that goes frequently for business, but that doesn’t really show political reality

              • kiagam@lemmy.world
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                7 minutes ago

                No, third world country that doesn’t give a shit and isn’t technically capable of doing anything to that scale (maybe I saw a DNS block once? And only on the ISP DNS)

    • vagrancyand@sh.itjust.works
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      2 hours ago

      It’s almost as if the speech restrictions and human rights violations are grossly exaggerated or entirely misreported by companies that are exclusively funded by the US intelligence community. . .

      Don’t get me wrong, some still do exist (especially on the company side of things). Since, you know, it’s a country consisting of 1/7th of humanity; but equally it’s pretty silly to think 1/7th of humanity is too stupid to do anything about a single supposedly hyper repressive government that allegedly doesn’t let them speak against it.

    • humanamerican@lemmy.zip
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      1 hour ago

      I bet in China you can talk about the genocide in Gaza without getting beaten, jailed, or deported.

      • pelya@lemmy.world
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        28 minutes ago

        Try saying Tibet on a bus stop, and watch your ass getting hauled to the nearest police station in like 30 seconds.

        • humanamerican@lemmy.zip
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          24 minutes ago

          Perhaps. And if not that, I’m sure there are other forbidden topics there.

          Just like in the West.

          The difference is that the West pretends to care about free speech and even uses it as an excuse to bomb/sanction/invade other countries.

  • FlyingCircus@lemmy.world
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    4 hours ago

    I would kill to live in a country like China that optimizes its economy for use value over exchange value.

    • Tiral@lemmy.zip
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      4 hours ago

      Honey, I used to live there, and I hate to burst your bubble, but there’s a huge HUGE difference between what China says and does.

      • VeryFrugal@sh.itjust.works
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        1 hour ago

        Tankies call you out for patronizing when literally every single comment ever by tankies on Lemmy are patronizing and calling out people for “being brainwashed capitalistic libs”. Yikes.

      • FlyingCircus@lemmy.world
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        3 hours ago

        I’ve heard from many other Chinese people who say the opposite, so I’m gonna go ahead and press X to doubt.

        Edit: I also don’t really care what someone with enough resources to emigrate has to say. I’m more concerned with ordinary workers, who have a 90%+ approval rating of the CCP.

        • Saffire@sh.itjust.works
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          2 hours ago

          I agree with everything you posted except I have to also press X to doubt on your claim of 90%+ approval ratings amongst ordinary workers. You can’t get 90 percent of people to agree on anything else in the world, except the CCP? It just doesn’t compute as a real number for me I guess. But I’d love to be proven wrong.

        • Doomsider@lemmy.world
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          1 hour ago

          What do the rural poor in China think of their new billionaire class and their ever increasing wealth gap?

          • FlyingCircus@lemmy.world
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            1 hour ago

            They probably hate it, but are glad that they have the CCP to prevent them from gaining political power as well as economic power.

            • Doomsider@lemmy.world
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              1 hour ago

              The CCP are the wealthy people in control. Those are some good mental gymnastics.

    • humanamerican@lemmy.zip
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      1 hour ago

      If those policies aren’t enforced it hardly matters. 996 is technically illegal there but last I checked some of the richest companies in China were still practicing it.

      Happy to be shown evidence to the contrary, but I don’t think the plight of Chinese workers is better than Americans, and certainly not Europeans.

    • Afaithfulnihilist@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      4 hours ago

      This one policy is better in this extremely superficial description.

      Neither country has workers rights on par with Europe for example.

    • mountainbear49@programming.dev
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      3 hours ago

      Did you even hear about America’s Apple’s Foxconn factory in China where the factory has nets on the windows to stop the frequent ‘inconvenient’ problem of cheap labor workers attempts of window jump suicides, for example? Co-operative structure (worker-owned) companies have more likelihood to have more human policies to, uh, themselves, than ponzi scheme corporations. Despite a fancy socialist (‘communist’) sounding title of government structure, Russia and China both took International Monetary Fund (IMF) loans, with their conditions of worker rights suffocation policies and market concentration monopolization policies. America’s and China’s feudalist monopolist billionaires have a lot more proximity of ideology than either of their propaganda machines has acknowledged so far.

      • BarneyPiccolo@lemmy.today
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        3 hours ago

        Yeah, I know about all of that, and they still have a better working environment than Americans.

        As China has prospered, they have managed to reduce most poverty in their nation. As we have prospered under MAGA, Americans’ quality of life is decreasing, and the slide is increasing. China is going the right way, we are definitely going the wrong way.

        I’m not saying that China doesn’t have issues, but they are still committed to the betterment of their country’s future, while American leaders are ONLY concerned with exploiting our country and it’s people to the absolute maximum degree. They don’t want to leave one illegal penny on the table.

        I don’t want to be China, but I don’t want to be MAGAMERICA either.

        • Doomsider@lemmy.world
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          1 hour ago

          Typical Chinese factory workers have 10-12 hour shifts 6 days a week. Many workers literally live at the factory. Sounds way better than the US or Europe.

      • boonhet@sopuli.xyz
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        6 hours ago

        996 is not legal either and yet many companies did that. I’m sure many still do, it’s a hypercapitalist country just like the US.

  • hahattpro@lemmy.world
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    10 hours ago

    Step 1: give unrealistic KPI, cited performance increase due to AI Step 2: put employee into PIP Step 3: fire employee due to performance Step 4: do stock buyback because you have extra budget from firing employees

  • Rimu@piefed.social
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    14 hours ago

    How the hell does an article that we can’t even read get so many upvotes.

    Stuff like this really shakes my belief in the voting system.

    • Dr. Moose@lemmy.world
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      10 hours ago

      Because hate for AI is so blind that you can post anything and people will immediately fall for it.

      • Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        5 hours ago

        My take as well.
        Was recently “assaulted” by a load of China-stans. So I assume this is similar pro-china (neutral about it) or at least anti-US (positive about that) community upvoting it.

    • Barrington@feddit.org
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      11 hours ago

      It’s one of those subscription blocks you can get around by selecting reading mode in Firefox.

      I’m not sure if it works for other browsers but I was able to read the article.

    • qaz@lemmy.world
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      10 hours ago

      People only read the title, not the article

      You can’t require reading the article before someone vote/comment, but what if communities could enable “ponder voting” where users can only vote 30 seconds after viewing the post? This would prevent people from scrolling by from voting, but people who at least slightly skim the article first won’t be affected.

      Probably not viably due to it having to be supported by all platforms, but just a thought.

      EDIT: It could work by returning a JWT with a post ID and time when fetching the post and having the vote endpoint support providing it. Although, I can also see it being a bit annoying and being trivially bypassed by adding some code to the client.

  • Aatube@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    15 hours ago

    I’m not going to hand my money to that paywall on such an overstimulating website riddled with AI.

    China (its court, anyways) is a civil law jurisdiction (i.e. precedent doesn’t exist too much) so I’m curious what law’s letter is being applied here.

    • iglou@programming.dev
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      9 hours ago

      Not really to be honest. They’re an authoritarian regime, but they do a lot of social policies. It’s a weird mix but not a new one.

      • FlyingCircus@lemmy.world
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        4 hours ago

        It’s not nearly as authoritarian as people like to claim. Chinese citizens hold tens of thousands of protests each year against a wide variety of topics, and the government is legally required to respond to them. As a consequence, the Chinese government is orders of magnitude more responsive to local corruption or abuses of power than almost any western country.

        • iglou@programming.dev
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          4 hours ago

          It absolutely is. Have a look at the definition of authoritarianism, China checks all the boxes.

          • Amnesigenic@lemmy.ml
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            2 hours ago

            Literally all governments are definitionally authoritarian, it’s a stupid criticism

            • iglou@programming.dev
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              1 hour ago

              Absolutely not! I encourage you to re-read the definition of authoritarianism and research a bit more about the governments all around the world!

                • iglou@programming.dev
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                  46 minutes ago

                  Ah! So you consider that every single restriction a country applies makes it authoritarian. Yeah, I don’t think you understand authoritarianism, and in today’s context, that’s dangerous.

                  But I won’t lose sleep over it!

      • kkj@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        8 hours ago

        Turns out when you run a government like a corporation properly, you can think about long-term profits instead of only next quarter. It isn’t fully-automated luxury gay space communism, but it’s a hell of a lot better than neoliberalism.

        • prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          3 hours ago

          Turns out when you run a government like a corporation properly

          This is not what China has done though…

          Stop trying to launder this “run the government like a corporation” garbage

          • kkj@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            2 hours ago

            In the sense that they’re maximizing (tax) revenue by investing in infrastructure, maintaining a strict hierarchy, and so on, not the Reaganite destroying it and selling it off for parts.

      • Treczoks@lemmy.world
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        8 hours ago

        It is indeed a weird mix in China, but I had not expected this one. Its a law that could be useful everywhere, even though it is hard to prove.

    • Miaou@jlai.lu
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      6 hours ago

      Of all place? Have you been living under a rock?

  • anon_8675309@lemmy.world
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    5 hours ago

    One has to wonder if they do this to influence USA. I mean it’s china, they do whatever they want to people.

    • Atomic@sh.itjust.works
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      4 hours ago

      Believe it or not, but everything is not about the US. Sometimes countries decide on policies without a single thought as to what the US thinks about it

    • prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      3 hours ago

      I’m far from a China cheerleader, but they lifted billions of people out of abject poverty over the course of like 20 years.

      Or do you think that was also somehow about the US?

  • Amnesigenic@lemmy.ml
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    14 hours ago

    Can’t say anything good about China without droves of butthurt westerners showing up to regurgitate outdated state department talking points and be weird & racist