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Watch out Picasso.. I'm taking up art!
bubsmeany
After adding an RSS feed to my blog, I've become quite smitten with RSS. It's allowed me to get to know some of my favorite Mastodonians and Blueskiers better because now their blogs are directly updated in my feed and, as such, have quite enjoyed a lot of interesting and niche articles lately. One thing is certain, however : having images in the reader as well as the actual article makes for a better overall experience. But what images should be used?
It's a bit of an ethical and legal quagmire, honestly. I'll start with the low hanging fruit : AI generated images. Of course, AI generated images created by models trained on copyrighted material are a big non-starter for me. It's obscene that techbros were just like "hey, let's just shit all over legal and moral standards and use a bunch of cool stuff created by other people and not pay for it." The whole "move fast and break stuff" is a cute moniker until it's used to just ignore the law while simultaneously trying to make the creators that were stolen from obsolete. An argument could be made for models trained entirely off of public domain images + images approved by the copyright holders, but people aren't "moving fast and breaking stuff" to do that because, let's be honest, it's not going to be as profitable as legalized theft.
But my issue goes a bit deeper - what about any copyrighted image, period? Regardless of common conception, fair use is far from black and white. Putting the fact aside that this is technically a universally available blog and fair use varies from location to location, I'll focus immediately on the United States. There is a four-factor test that must be passed before fair-use applies and, even if you are 100% confident you are within the boundaries of fair use, it still won't potentially stop a copyright holder from making a claim. And that, in and of itself, is enough to keep me from playing in that sandbox; I've got too little time to dilly-dick around with concerns of that nature (especially for use in this blog which, last I checked, isn't making me any dough). Moreover - I'm not out to use somebody's shit in something if they don't want me to just out of principal... even if they won't ever come after me. So where does that leave me?
At this point I've decided to use public domain only images in my blog. But, instead of becoming a Steamboat Willie, Winnie the Pooh, and Funnyman fan site, I've decided to control my own narative and primarily use my own photos and drawings (as bad as they may be). Oh, and any of those photos or drawings you see? They're my gift to you, open internet. Not that you would ever want to, but feel free to use them in any way, shape, or form possible as long as you aren't doing nazi-adjacent shit with 'em.
Enjoy - if you can!

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RSS feeds are dead..right? Right?!?
bubsmeany
For me, the internet as I had come to accept it broke irreparably in November, 2022. IYKYK. If not, here is a
quick, boiled down recap. It's far from a perfect article, but the nuances are exhausting and out of the scope of this post. Interested parties can go pick a lot of scabs on Bluesky and Mastodon for the gory details.
That said, a lot of fractures existed well before that. Even before big-tech added the term "AI" to their collective spank bank, too many high-quality thought pieces were living in paywalled gardens, not to mention Google was already shitting all up in the comfy search-engine bed it had masterfully crafted since the late 90s. The promise of Web 3.0 turned into nothing more than NFT shills and offensively named crypto meme coins.
1% at a time, the internet had become a sort of
Ship of Theseus, with all the parts being manufactured by Wish.com to make folks behind the curtains cabbage while simultaneously ruining.. well.. almost everything else involved.
Anywho, back to RSS feeds.. literally and as an informative device. Yet again, shit is broken...
I dilly-dicked around on my Android Play Store (yea, I'm too cheap to be an iPhonesman), and boy oh boy the search sucks there too. Most of the "top searches" are just sponsored article thieving aggregators that cram ads down your throat. And while it looks like a fun little game, walking across a bridge and shooting up an overwhelming opposing army with giants isn't what I searched for.
But I did find a couple of usable apps. One is an open source project named
Feeder which is my personal favorite, but isn't as "casual internetter" friendly. A servicable alternative is
Feedly, which offers less friction to build up a quick feed and is also available on iOS. I'm currently dabbling in both.
But what is a good "starter pack" to get ya going? Well, if you want to add
Undistinguished.com now that I added an RSS feed I'd be honored! That said, my personal RSS feed includes a bunch of blogs of my Fediverse + Bluesky friends, a few old podcast buddies of mine, and the following techy news sources I trust and enjoy :
So while RSS may never party again like it's 1999 (or especially the mid 2000's), maybe we can pitch in to collectively get it a babysitter so it can keep partying through the 2020's...
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Reading is fundamental, but not very fun
bubsmeany
I'm late to the Nate Bargatze train, but the guy speaks to me at a level few ever have. This particular dialogue struck a chord deep in my soul :
I am a very poor reader, oftentimes having to read the same sentence repeatedly to get it to "stick". I tried CliffsNotes in high school, but quickly learned even Cliff was too verbose for my pallette and hoped secretly he had a simpler brother named Chuck to boil things down further. So yea, I don't read books either Nate... and I, as well, wish I did..
In reality - I'm relatively certain I have an undiagnosed reading disorder but, having grown up when I did, it made more sense to mask imperfections instead of trying to improve them... so here we are... bumblefugging through my literary existence ...
Unfortunately, almost as if by proxy, my writing skills are pretty rudimentary as well. So trying to coral my thoughts and formally "blog" about them is proving.. challenging...
..but I'm trying! Prior to Mastodon and Bluesky, Twitter helped me and others "squeeze the life" out of a digestible character limit (..yes.. I know the character limits on Masto are instance specific... not the point ... ), which is why I likely gravitated toward them in the first place; there was less of "Uncle Wayne brain dumping about politics for 8 scrollable pages on Facebook"... ain't nobody got time for that.
So this blog is gonna act as somewhat of a "learning ground" for me to practice expressing myself through writing in a comprehensive way. I'll never be a "writer", mind you, but forcing myself out of my comfort zone in a "non-tech" way can only help me at this point. And who knows... maybe, just maybe, one day I'll even read another book...
Wish me luck!