skisnow

joined 1 month ago
[–] skisnow 0 points 2 days ago (2 children)

It’s not that unpopular of an opinion lol

Go take a look at the downvotes I got, versus the updoots that the people are getting by justifying it as "corporations bad, defrauding them good"

[–] skisnow 22 points 2 days ago (4 children)

Yeah, having only just switched from GMail to Proton last week my heart sank when I saw “Proton are MAGA”.

Then I spent three minutes reading up on it and it’s like, the CEO said one thing about policy on regulation of big tech that was critical of the Democrats for not doing enough, and the internet has decided that means he’s MAGA.

[–] skisnow 34 points 3 days ago (26 children)

My unpopular opinion (and I'll eat the downvotes) is that CV fraudsters don't get prosecuted nearly enough.

It's not just faceless billionaire companies you're fucking over, it's the other candidates who actually put in the effort to become competent at the job you lied to get.

I'll never get my head around the popularity of the idea that lying on a CV doesn't make you a liar.

[–] skisnow 27 points 4 days ago (1 children)

Fifteen years ago trans rights was barely a topic at all. The Christian Right’s adoption of it as a suddenly important social issue (after losing the gay marriage debate) was a cynical and deliberate piece of political manipulation, based on careful research into what topics various factions of liberals were divided on.

They realized that there was a big enough subset of feminists that could be persuaded that trans rights were an attack on feminism, to be able to turn them against mainstream liberal thought and thus get their votes, and all they had to do was destroy the lives of a few hundred thousand people who they’d previously never given a second thought to.

Worst of all, it seems to have worked.

[–] skisnow 2 points 4 days ago

America today is not substantially different to the America that dropped more tonnage of bombs on each of Laos and Cambodia than were dropped by the Allies during the whole of WW2, destroying whole villages and murdering hundreds of thousands of innocent civilians in stark violation of international law and the Geneva Convention.

Nobody came even close to being brought to justice for that, so why would things be any different now?

[–] skisnow 3 points 4 days ago

Ah right, the rules changed about 10 years ago.

[–] skisnow 12 points 4 days ago (1 children)

I once had a coworker whose CV said she had a BSc from Oxford University.

Clearly neither she nor our hiring manager knew much about Oxford.

[–] skisnow 9 points 4 days ago (2 children)

I’m not doubting the events of that London story, but under UK law knowingly employing illegal workers is an unlimited fine plus 5 years jail time, and even employing one by mistake after not doing the correct checks is up to a £60,000 fine, so it was deliberate than it was quite a gamble…

[–] skisnow 1 points 4 days ago (1 children)

It's a nice thought, but the difference is that if you grow 1 tonne of rice you only need to find a buyer for 1 tonne of rice. If you've invested in a film then you need that film to play in as many markets as possible to stand any chance of recouping that investment.

[–] skisnow 7 points 4 days ago (4 children)

For a given individual, sure. If you're trying to do some statistics over a whole group that you have no other record for, it could be useful.

[–] skisnow 9 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

It sounds ridiculous now with everything that's happened in social media in the meantime, but I can see that being a thing in 2006 when the vibe of social media was very different to what it's become now. Back then it was just a tidy little PHP site for you to chat and share photos with friends and family on. Literally nothing appeared in your feed that wasn't a post from a Friend. It was basically a Whatsapp group with a photo gallery feature.

Since Facebook didn't have the baggage it has now, it's much easier to read refusing to join your girlfriend's circle of friends and family back then as a wider rejection of her as a person, same as if you refused to join her family Whatsapp/Telegram/whatever group chat.

I'm not taking her side here, but I wanted to give a bit of perspective for people looking at it through the lens of 2025.

[–] skisnow 2 points 4 days ago

Serious answer, that's not ever what would get prosecuted. What would get you prosecuted in your scenario is e.g. sending a memo to the network of malls you operate saying "do not renew or accept new leases from McDonalds", or to the accounts department of your company saying "do not accept any staff expense claim receipts from McDonalds".

(I'm not supporting the bill by the way, just answering your question at face value)

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