Pretty fucking bold of these scientists to scrape one of my copyrighted photographs off the internet and then re-release it uncredited under a Creative Commons license because they used it for training data for an algorithm.
It's another episode of Silver Ball Century, my chronological playthrough of virtual pinball. In 1980, pinball is on top of the world. There are so many tables to choose from.
So I'm running stream raffles where viewers pick the tables, as long as they're from 1980.
Going live: https://twitch.tv/arborelia
2000: you search in English because there isn’t enough on the Web in other languages
2010: you search in English because what you find in other languages is SEO scam “translations” by WebHostingGeeks dot com
2020: you search in English so you can find Reddit results, the ones that still help
2025: you search in French because the chat-bots can’t fake expertise in it
2030: same but in Indonesian this time
@cshabsin Only second-hand I guess?
I know he was the guy who was, like, intentionally the main character of Usenet.
I know nothing about what he was actually like and I doubt I should get my hopes up too high for him being a nice person
My wife Kat made me an Earthbound PK Scramble seed called "Kat why". She knows what the settings are, I don't. https://twitch.tv/arborelia
I really think we need to reject the term "content creator."
That phrase is used by people who aim to Monetize™ us without needing to care about what it is we create. A "content creator" is there to make the stuff that attracts people so they can be fed advertising.
Call us what we are. Artists. Essayists. Film makers. Authors. Photographers. And so many others. We are creators, yes, but what we create has so much value beyond filling otherwise empty space on a website.
Earthbound PK Scramble, mystery random settings, with my wife randomizing a few more settings that aren't usually randomized:
@celesteh you can change papers! NCPWG can help if you can’t figure out who to talk to, or if your publisher claims they don’t do that.
Google Scholar, however, will down-rank the updated papers in its search results and keep auto-generating citations of your deadname for years.
@ingram I don't get credit for the web site, but I did work on getting IEEE to have a policy.
And if all these publishers can figure something out, why can't Google?
There's an #alttp #randomizer mode I've wanted to play except it broke in a way that defeated the point. I fixed it!
The point is to put progress items only in dungeons, so you don't have to search the overworld. Sometimes the logic would get tangled and it would be unable to put an item in a dungeon, so it would fall back to somewhere random in the overworld, so you _did_ have to search for it.
My fix is to put it somewhere obvious, like Link's house.
Trying it: https://twitch.tv/arborelia
I focus on the "shutting down Google Scholar" option now, more than the "listening to trans people" option.
We know by now Google is terrible at listening to trans people that aren't Google FTEs, but they're very good at shutting things down.
@chloe From most preferred to highest recall:
- something specific to your field (as an NLP researcher, I use aclanthology.org)
- Internet Archive Scholar (scholar.archive.org)
- Semantic Scholar (semanticscholar.org)
#introduction: my name
(I think this is the last of four introduction posts)
I got rid of one name a while ago, and replaced it with more names.
You can call me Elia if you know me, or Robyn if you know something I wrote. Neither of those is my deadname.
If you know a #Google employee, ask them what they are doing to shut down Google Scholar.
It is one of the few places on the Internet where calling a trans person by their deadname is standard and expected. The other places are hate sites and the New York Times.
#introduction: my battles
I was the first trans person to change my name on already-published research papers. I didn't think I was the first when I did it, which helped.
I'm part of the Name Change Policy Working Group (https://ncpwg.org) to make this easier for others. Many journals now allow name changes.
Google Scholar refuses to call trans authors by their names, or even talk to trans people. I made https://scholar.hasfailed.us. Google should either listen to us or shut down Scholar.
I like games that you can play again and they're different the next time: such as randomizers, roguelikes, and gender expression! Twitch stream: https://twitch.tv/arborelia
also at: https://cohost.org/arborelia