• 22 Posts
  • 451 Comments
Joined 11 months ago
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Cake day: June 22nd, 2024

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  • Microsoft destroyed any potential for DNT acting as a user choice by enabling it by default in IE. The DNT header was an incredibly weak line of defense anyway. Mozilla implemented a voluntary scheme, …

    • either naively thinking that profit-driven corpos would respect user choice despite it being obvious at the time already that UX research had, to a degree, already veered toward exploiting psychological weaknesses of users;
    • or alternatively, they simply wanted to protect the profits they generated from putting a Google search field into everyone’s browsers.

    Make your pick. It’s not a particularly good look either way, I think.


  • You didn’t just “contextualize.” You minimised the number: “Yeah, that totally sounds like a lot in a country of 84m. /s” Those are your words, verbatim.

    Oh dear. Is this “argument” anything but bad faith? I basically said that that is a normal-enough number in a country of 84m.

    It was 3,000 officers. Germany has 333,000 full time officers. That’s 0.9% of the force. Hardly grossly disproportionate to the benefit.

    It seems to me that 0.9% is 50% larger than 0.6%, so dunno about that. And it’s not just any police, as far as I am aware, it’s Federales rather than low-level local trainees.

    If we extend your logic, police should just stop investigating burglaries. I might even agree.

    That’s awfully sweet of you, given how you apparently just came up with “my logic”.

    I consider catching smugglers

    You do realize that “smuggler” most likely primarily refers to people who bought more cigarettes in Poland/Czechia than the legal limit allows, right?

    I am very anti-smoking but finding small-time tobacco tax evaders wouldn’t be a priority to me. Especially since Germany still allows cigarette ads in POS locations and cigarette giveaways on festivals.

    and terrorists more important.

    Now, you’ve mentioned “terrorists” a number of times. The report speaks only of “extremists”, i.e. people holding extreme world views who likely acted out on demonstrations or are otherwise accused of a smaller crime.

    Where do the terrorists you mention come from?


  • Belated but:

    • “Energy” is not the same as “electricity”, as the former includes a lot of thermic processes.
    • To some degree, it is to be expected that renewables make up a smallish share of primary energy consumption for a while longer–despite displacing large amounts of burning processes. As electrification and solar/wind/battery buildout continues, primary energy figures will go down while electricity figures will go up.
      • Wind/PV installations consume far smaller parts of the energy they produce for their own operation than coal/gas/nuclear plants do. The figures for plants that burn stuff are usually atrocious, especially for technologies like coal or nuclear where most of the plants are old (i.e., it’s often a on the order of a third of the energy produced being lost to the environment right at the plant).
      • Heat pumps draw around 2/3 of their thermic energy from the environment for free, whereas anything that burns stuff loses some of the energy to the environment instead.
      • Electric cars use most of their energy for movement rather than acting as rolling boilers, i.e. you drive using 80% of the power rather than driving on somewhere between 20-30% of the power and otherwise generating a lot of heat.
    • Finally, looking at Electricity Maps, wind produced 2020: 8.7%, 2021: 9%, 2022: 13.36%, 2023: 16.7%, 2024: 22.4% of electricity. Generating around twice as much with around twice as much capacity seems fairly logical to me too. In addition, there are some yearly fluctuations too, i.e. if demand remained level and there were no further buildout, there might be years where the figure would drop below 20%. (Electricity Maps is not to be consumed without a generous heaping of small print when it comes to the CO2 numbers they produce but the generation/consumption numbers are good.)



  • I am saying that it does not sound like a very effective measure.

    There are, give or take, 2m crime suspects per year in Germany–while many are likely counted twice, the number still gives an idea of the dimension. That makes roughly 5500 criminal suspects per day. 70 suspects/2d is 0.6% of that.

    In addition, I find it exceedingly likely that they caught a bunch of low-level people who didn’t care to protect themselves but missed out on higher-level, systemic cases they’d have caught given a different personnel allocation.









  • Und zweitens, so Staatskanzleichef Florian Herrmann (CSU) würden zusätzliche Steuern im Widerspruch zum Bürokratie-Abbau stehen. Der Verwaltungsaufwand wäre enorm, solche Steuern brächten “wenig Ertrag”, seien aber “mit hohem Aufwand” verbunden, ergänzt Innenminister Joachim Herrmann (CSU).

    Einerseits können das doch Kommunen entscheiden. Wenn sich das nicht lohnt, machen die es doch nicht. Und andererseits erwirtschaftet Tübingen netto 900.000€, oder in anderen Worten: Hat 90% Gewinn und auch noch weniger Müll auf der Straße.