@esrtweet I wouldn't, trust reduces the cost of cooperation. Filtering people out who are products of a civilization that once rewarded trust in institutions will just result in a less efficient civilization (until it ceases to function at all.)
@preestylar@RadioGenoa yeah because the guy getting beat up isn't irish and isn't entitled to hospitality in a foreign country, how is this a difficult concept
@AStratelates I have some friends who had a positive screening result on a serious genetic condition that turned out to be false. They were really worried about it, good thing abortion didn't even cross their minds, as they would have killed their only son who came out completely healthy
Someone searched the names of the shooter, the victim, the presiding judge, and the lead investigator from 8 countries and the DC/Virginia corridor for months before the May 13 courthouse shooting in Clarksville. All exact quoted searches. Zero hits from any of these locations in the 2025 baseline. One of the names searched 28 times does not exist as a person anywhere on earth but later appeared in the arrest warrant.
I draw no conclusions from this, only where to look.
. Built an interactive viewer so you can see the data yourself. Click any bar, filter by geography, toggle individual names on and off. Everything is sourced from Google Trends and public court records. 80+ hours of , data collection across 3 machines, and analysis went into this
Ill release it to a few prominent researchers if interested.
Will open it to public soon.
@ArchetypeTheory trends hits are meaningless, when you look up a term it gets hashed with a hash function that pretty much guarantees a collision with a completely different term that somebody else searched. it's useful in aggregate like sampling is, but you can't prove someone searched something
@meyer_peace18@hd_nvim no I was implying that there's no benefit of "pure rust" over human-written zig when the rust code is slop full of unsafe blocks