lib.rs has a special surprise when you search "twitter" (lib.rs)
from qaz@lemmy.world to rust@programming.dev on 05 Aug 20:02
https://lemmy.world/post/34009033

#rust

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rtxn@lemmy.world on 05 Aug 21:00 next collapse

Searching for “twitter” redirects to the live version of this article: archive.ph/sJzRS

Deebster@infosec.pub on 05 Aug 21:40 collapse

I’m assuming that’s been there for a while since this was topical six months ago.

Anyway, while I am no fan of Musk or the site formerly known as Twitter, I think this is a bad thing. The author’s political views have been prioritised over users’ abilities to use the site; even if someone wanted to monitor X users in a way lib.rs approved of they couldn’t get help from the site to do this.

I think lib.rs has pulled stunts like this before, which is why crates.rs is usually recommended instead.

FizzyOrange@programming.dev on 05 Aug 22:07 next collapse

Yeah also calling anything where you raise your hand a “Nazi-like salute” is dumb af. Musk does enough real shit without having clutch at straws like this.

0_o7@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 06 Aug 02:14 next collapse

Oh of course that was just raising the hand. Sure bud. The timing and context also was perfectly suited to do “raise your hand” like you’ve waited your whole life for it, isn’t it?

Or that he’s been running a far-right social media platform on the internet. Or that he was supporting a president who ran on pale supremacy rhetoric. Or he was some rich guy that benefitted from apartheid south africa.

Nah, those are just coincidences. Just raising a hand, nothing more.

Flipper@feddit.org on 06 Aug 05:20 next collapse

Oh, he was also around that time part of a German party assembly. You know of the party where top politicians say things like. “The Nazis where not that bad” or " The Problem with the holocaust was, that it didn’t finish." That was probably an accident and misunderstanding too.

tagesschau.de/…/musk-afd-wahlkampfshow-100.html

staircase@programming.dev on 06 Aug 10:39 collapse

The title points out the problem. It DOESN’T MATTER what he intended; we already know his views. What matters is the message it sent to far-right supporters across the globe. He never made an attempt to address that.

Ephera@lemmy.ml on 06 Aug 01:09 next collapse

lib.rs has always been more opinionated, because it isn’t an official project. I imagine, those who look for opinionated will have no problem with this. It certainly made me like the site more.

thesmokingman@programming.dev on 06 Aug 02:04 collapse

Everything on the internet is shaped by political views. I don’t understand this take at all. All of the internet projects started as defense projects run by people that believed information should be shared and were taken over to become surveillance institutions. The notion that someone should run a free website indexing all rust crates is itself greatly informed by the politics surrounding FOSS and open information. How you respond to the paradox of tolerance is deeply political. We just happen to fall of different sides of the issue so I have no qualms calling it out.

Deebster@infosec.pub on 06 Aug 04:19 next collapse

Lib.rs could call it out and still return results for the search. Having said that, you can still view lib.rs/keywords/twitter or lib.rs/search?q="twitter" without any commentary, so it’s workaroundable (or inconsistent).

staircase@programming.dev on 06 Aug 10:36 next collapse

I don’t have a view on this particular case, but “calling it out” whilst still functioning effectively as normal is essentially a strongly-worded letter. F, and I can’t stress this enough, that. Protest cannot be subdued by convenience.

soc@programming.dev on 06 Aug 12:49 collapse

Ohh, boohoohoo, what are you gong to do, cancel your lib.rs subscription?

TheV2@programming.dev on 06 Aug 05:22 collapse

There is a difference between the influence and reflection of politics in everything we do, and an actively politically motivated action. Not that the latter is a bad thing.