The realisation as you go through life that things just aren't as good as they should be is hard. The more you learn, the more you are exposed. What is new, perhaps, is that the scale of bullshit is bigger and the spread of it more actively pushed than before.
How to cope? Damned if I know. I just try to shut it out as much as possible.
(BTW, your colleague may just be exhausted with change, or demoralised or depressed themselves. It's hard not to judge people when you see the answer so clearly, but it's a trueism that everyone walks their own path and you just don't know what's going on in their life)
As a 54 year old who has just had two weeks of agony because he forgot his age and tried to deadlift a 225kg motorbike by himself, I'm going to skip this one because I clearly haven't learned anything.
I think what you're looking for is known as kiosk software. Basically a locked down browser that has limited or zero user interaction possible.
Or by deliberately breaking DNS on that host. Add the entries you want to allow to /etc/hosts and not supply any upstream DNS servers. (Change of needing maintenance if those sites change IP)
The truth is, we don't need AI to have misinformation, and AI is not the biggest problem in the current post-truth society. There has been a war going on globally in undermining truth for a long time. The old saying, "The first casualty in war is truth" is invalid now, because truth is no longer relevant and lies are weaponised like never before in history. People don't want to be certain of something, their first reaction to news is to react at a deep and emotional level and the science of misinformation is highly refined and successful in making most people react in a certain way. It takes effort and training not to do that, and most of us can't.
Journalists have been warning us about this for decades but integrity costs money, and that funding has been under attack too. It's pretty depressing whichever way you look at it.
In every case I've known, anywhere claiming "zero censorship" either adopts it sooner or later, or disappears - and in every one of those cases, it was a godawful place to be 100% of the time. IME, those who do say they want this tend to be either edgy teenagers, crackpot conspiracy theorists or psychopaths.
Sure, you can say "well, zero censorship except bots" - well that's censorship, isn't it? And given no anti-bot tactic is reliable, you'll be blocking humans. Or you can say, "zero censorship except CSAM, or extreme pornography, or anti-terrorist" and you're either applying societal laws or your own morality on others. You can't use "no censor" and "except" in a sentence without contradiction.
If you want zero censorship, I don't think Lemmy is for you. I don't think the fediverse is for you. But if you disagree, then run your own instance and put it on an onion address, please stop trying to rant at us for not sharing your views.
I do agree there is nuance, and it is very difficult to balance these things when there is often not a great choice about who ultimately ends up with your money.
Nice - always fun to glimpse someone else's workflow and how they've approached some of the same problems.
As a fellow lazy person (I use this term advisedly - lazy people work hard to find the easiest way to do something well) I like the thinking that I can see here. Thanks for sharing.
A book. Teach yourself Perl in 30 days. (Edit - may have been 21 days)
I bought it around 25-30 years ago. I have dyslexia and autism and have had problems learning from books in the past, but something about the way that was written just clicked for me.
It allowed me to write some pretty cool software, including a huge system that ran a large animal charity for a very long time, tons of automation software and scripts, and several full webuis. Indirectly it led me to a new career where I write perl every day.
(I can write in many other languages now, but that was the keystone of everything for me)
This isn't new.
The realisation as you go through life that things just aren't as good as they should be is hard. The more you learn, the more you are exposed. What is new, perhaps, is that the scale of bullshit is bigger and the spread of it more actively pushed than before.
How to cope? Damned if I know. I just try to shut it out as much as possible.
(BTW, your colleague may just be exhausted with change, or demoralised or depressed themselves. It's hard not to judge people when you see the answer so clearly, but it's a trueism that everyone walks their own path and you just don't know what's going on in their life)