• 5 Posts
  • 10 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 5th, 2023

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  • I love my current pixel 5. Ive had it for several years now, and the size is really nice. My battery is starting to show wear and the charge port doesn’t connect very well, although I probably just need to give it a good cleaning.

    Unfortunately, Google will only push security updates until this October. Third-party OSes like Calyx or Graphine will keep the open source components patched as long as they can, but they can’t fix any bugs in the proprietary pieces.

    Although its definitely more expensive, I keep thinking about grabbing a refurbished pixel 7 or 6, since google promises 5 years of security updates.






  • My app of choice is AntennaPod, mainly because its the best app I’ve found on FDroid.

    Recently I’ve been listening through Newbie Star Trek, just because I really enjoy TNG and its nice to hear the discussions about it. I also listen to Security Now(since I do cybersecurity), the citizen’s guide to the supreme court, and no bullsh!t vegan.



  • I need to do more reading and thinking on this topic tbh. I used to have a utilitarian/reduction of suffering approach, but utilitarianism, if you really put it to the test, has some weird implications (Peter Singer, The Experience Machine, the ones who walk away from omelas, etc), so I’m exploring a deontological approach, based mainly on Kant, with some minor tweaks.

    Here’s my current draft:

    Act such that you treat sentient beings always as an end and never as a mere means.

    The basic idea is that animals are beings with unique wants, needs, desires, and fears, so its wrong to disregard those by treating them as a mere means to an end.

    I like this approach because it solves some problems with suffering based moralities (if I kill someone with no pain but I get joy, is that wrong?) And it also allows for mutually beneficial relationships with animals. For example, if I keep a companion animal, while respecting them as an individual, that’s okay.

    It also, I think, is useful when talking about, say, wool. Technically, shearing wool from sheep reduces the suffering of sheep, but the wool industry treats the animals as a mere means to their wool, which is wrong (and that’s reflected in the way sheep are treated on those farms).

    I do admit that it has some problems that need to be resolved. First, its difficult for me to argue that sentience is something intrinsically valuable. The difference between using someone as a means and an end simultaneously is also fairly gray. For example, someone could argue that killing animals isn’t using them as a mere means as long as you “respect the animal” and use them for food. Which obviously I don’t condone.

    I think I need to read Korsgaard and a few other philosophers lol.