

It only seems to make a difference when the rich ones complain.
It only seems to make a difference when the rich ones complain.
I read the article, and it’s way less bad than the title made it sound. They just set company chats to disappear after some number of days and told employees to not “comment before you have all the facts.” This has been the policy of every company I’ve worked at, including university IT and Amazon.
The title made it sound like they were deleting specifically chats related to open court cases, which is like level 10 ultra-illegal.
Link to the actual paper: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-025-08839-w
The repro and verification will take time. Months or even years. Don’t trust anyone who says it’s definitely real or definitely bunk. Time will tell.
The big symptom unique to burnout is anger. Ultimately leading to blowing up at coworkers. If you’re not experiencing that it’s probably not burnout.
Depression and ADHD might be good thing to check for.
We are all in agreement, the objectification and hypersexualization of breasts is part of the problem. But it is a symptom of a deeper cause.
Equating nudity with sex what leads to the “pornification” of our regular bodies. In countries where we feel safe being nude in public, there is much less sexual harassment and objectification.
I have to ask: would this story be so popular if they didn’t mention that the four people that did this were Chinese?
Racism doesn’t disappear just because the article doesn’t say the quiet part out loud. We all know the thought process that led to this article’s virality.
Let’s do better, Lemmy. We all have an opportunity to make the world a more tolerant and empathetic place through what we post and upvote.