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They do do this as well - but speeding was/is such a people killing epidemic and cameras scaled better than people and are cheaper.


My totally wiser than anyone else Gran once said: "There is an excuse for everything except boredom".

Shamelessness is very definitely in vogue at the moment. It will pass, let's hope for more than ruins.

To put this another way, shame is only effective if it's coupled with other repercussions with long standing effects.

An example I have of this is from high school where there were guys that were utterly shameless in asking girls for sex. The thing is it worked for them. Regardless of how many people turned them down they got enough of a hit rate it was an effective strategy. Simply put there was no other social mechanism that provided enough disincentive to stop them.

And to take the position as devil's advocate, why should they feel shame? Shame is typically a moral construct of the culture you're raised in and what to be ashamed for can vary widely.

For example, if your raised in the culture of Abrahamic religions it's very likely you're told to be ashamed for being gay. Whereas non-religious upbringing is more likely to say why the hell would you be ashamed for being gay.

TL:DR, shame is not an effective mechanism on the internet because you're dealing with far too many cultures that have wildly different views on shame, and any particular viewpoint on shame is apt to have millions to billions of people that don't believe the same.


This is hilarious and reminded me of the two stints I had in India, for about 8 months in total at the turn of the century. I was a hippy traveler and asking directions for almost anything was par for the course. I never had anyone local say they didn't know where something was once asked, even though me following their directions lead to the intended target maybe 10% of the time. It was funny and infuriating at the same time :)

This is all very well if the goal was to sift the wheat from the chaff - but modern western education is about passing as many fee paying students as possible, preferably with a passably enjoyable experience for the institutional kudos.

I think that really depends on countries. I went to an engineering school only 15% of applicants out of high school were admitted and of those who were admitted only around 75% graduated.

Western education passing as many fee paying students as possible seems to be very much a UK/US phenomenon but doesn't seem to be the case of European countries where the best schools are public and fees are very low (In France, private engineering schools rank lower)


I wonder if education will bifurcate back out as a result of AI. Small, bespoke institutions which insist on knowledge and difficult tests. And degree factories. It seems like students want the degree factory experience with the prestige of an elite institution. But - obviously - that can’t last long. Colleges and universities should decide what they are and commit accordingly.

I think the UK has been heading this way for a while -- before AI. Its not been the size of the institutions that has changed, but the "elite" universities tend to give students more individual attention. A number of them (not just Oxford and Cambridge) have tutorial systems where a lot of learning is done in a small group (usually two or three students). They have always done this.

At the other extreme are universities offering low quality courses that are definitely degree factories. They tend to have a strong vocational focus but nonetheless they are not effective in improving employability. In the last few decades we have expanded the university system and there are far more of these.

There is no clear cutoff and a lot of variation in between so its not a bifurcation but the quality vs factory difference is there.


On other side in western systems funded by taxes the incentive is still to give out as many degrees as possible as schools get funding based on produced degrees.

Mostly done to get more degree holders which are seen as "more productive". Or at least higher paid...


You're probably being downvoted as most here are conflating WhatsApp and FB as both are owned by Meta so you're distinction is moot in the context of this discussion.

Access to this site has been blocked by the Protective DNS Service of the UK National Cyber Security Centre via CloudFlare

indeed, an artist is just a middle class artisan!

was fully expecting:

    mv folder folder-old
    git clone git@github/folder

Presumably only some Scottish people have an interest in undermining the UK? Latest (2024) results from YouGov suggest yes/no is 34/49 to the question 'Should Scotland be an independent country?' [1]

1. https://d3nkl3psvxxpe9.cloudfront.net/documents/Internal_Ind...


More recent results from YouGov (November 2025) put yes/no at 39/41 [1] while other polling companies put yes in the lead [2].

[1] https://ygo-assets-websites-editorial-emea.yougov.net/docume...

[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Opinion_polling_on_Scottish_in...


Out of the 26 polls since the GE, 13 are pro indy 13 aren’t. But it’s worth noting that 9 of the 13 pro-indy polls were commissioned by strongly pro-Indy groups (The National, The Herald, STV News), which seems like it could have some selection bias.

The Herald[1] and STV News (neutral as a broadcaster) are not strong Pro-Indy groups.

The National certainly is.

DOI: Scotsman not in favour of independence.

1: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Herald_(Glasgow)#Political...


I honestly wasn't trying to game my reply, I looked for the latest results on their site and clearly failed at that!

Scotland is part of GB, so the fairly likely Northern Ireland exit will be the big blow to the "UK"

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