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Cake day: November 21st, 2025

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  • Devial@discuss.onlinetoTechnology@lemmy.world*Permanently Deleted*
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    2 months ago

    Visa workers aren’t replacing American workers, they supplements them. Workers on visas are a pain in the ass. No company is ever gonna hire a non permanent resident if there’s an equally qualified native citizen available for the position.

    Countless studies have shown that immigrant labour is a boon to the economy, and immigrants statistically create demand for more jobs than they take.

    Foreign workers are also a massive boon to tax income. Some other country spent 18 years paying for their income less childhood and education, and then they leave that country, and start paying taxes in America.




  • Click bait is anything that is designed to bait people into clicking a link. Virtually every headline and content title on the internet is click bait to some level.

    Malicious click bait is when headlines either outright lie, or imply things that aren’t accurate to the content.

    The phrasing of this title implies that the creation of a privacy tool is what the creator got arrested for, which is in fact inaccurate to the content, as the reason wasn’t creating the tool, the reason was using the tool for money laundering.

    So imo it’s 100% fair to call this title malicious clickbait


  • The article headline is wildly misleading, bordering on being just a straight up lie.

    Google didn’t ban the developer for reporting the material, they didn’t even know he reported it, because he did so anonymously, and to a child protection org, not Google.

    Google’s automatic tools, correctly, flagged the CSAM when he unzipped the data and subsequently nuked his account.

    Google’s only failure here was to not unban on his first or second appeal. And whilst that is absolutely a big failure on Google’s part, I find it very understandable that the appeals team generally speaking won’t accept “I didn’t know the folder I uploaded contained CSAM” as a valid ban appeal reason.

    It’s also kind of insane how this article somehow makes a bigger deal out of this devolper being temporarily banned by Google, than it does of the fact that hundreds of CSAM images were freely available online and openly sharable by anyone, and to anyone, for god knows how long.