Alphabet's Jigsaw Wants To Explain Tech Jargon To You, Launches Sideways Dictionary (cnet.com)
It might sound obvious, but the thing about tech is that sometimes it can get really, well, technical. From a report on CNET: So Alphabet wants to help make nitty-gritty tech jargon simpler to explain to the masses. On Tuesday, Jigsaw, a tech incubator owned by Google's parent company, launched a website called the Sideways Dictionary that takes jargon and puts it into terms normal people would understand. Jigsaw partnered with the Washington Post to build the tool.
So will WaPo's 'help' be fact checked? Why does the CIA want to turn technical jargon into a political weapon? It is bad enough tech companies let the CIA listen to everything we do, now they have to redefine words too?
Indeed.
Ad Blocking:
"Itâ(TM)s like vandalizing outdoor posters. A legitimate form of protest against adverts that have invaded public space. Or criminal damage to private property."
"Itâ(TM)s like fare dodging. If one person dodges their bus fare, it wonâ(TM)t have any great effect on the viability of the service. But if everyone does it, the bus company runs out of money and cancels the service."
"Itâ(TM)s like music piracy. Some people say ad blocking is to brands what music piracy was to music companies. You can see it as an existential threat, or a wake-up call."
Ironically I had to disable my ad-blocker to see that. Even without it, I can't seem to log in and add my own definition.
const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
Okay, so the idea is that we have these analogies that "regular people" can understand. Then I look at an analogy for "Hackathon"
Okay, let's go look up "cosplay." Nope. Not there.
So much for "regular people" understanding...
At this point it's more a joke than anything else... I like the ransomware.
"It’s like taking a hostage. As the name suggests, it’s a form of kidnapping, where your data is taken hostage (often using a virus) and a ransom demand follows. In the more sophisticated cases, even Liam Neeson can’t help you."