• Sanctus@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    If you’re going to do illegal shit, or shit against the owner class, don’t use modern technology to do it.

    • renzev@lemmy.worldOP
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      8 months ago

      I find that a large number of conspiracy theories are asking the right questions, just not providing the right answers. Does big tech want to control our minds with 5G towers and microchips hidden in covid vaccines? Probably not. Does big tech want to control our minds with social media and invasive advertising? Absolutely. Is the world controlled by a secret society of lizard people? Probably not. Is the world controlled by a not-so-secret society of billionaires and politicians? To a large extent. Even those awful racist or bigoted conspiracy theories start to sound somewhat palpable palatable if you filter out the racist or bigoted part. Do Jews make life for the rest of us miserable by controlling the economy? No. But replace “Jews” with “the owning class”, and suddenly it kind of makes sense.

      EDIT: Is the government putting chemicals in the water that turn frogs gay? No. Are corporations putting chemicals in water bottles that turn frogs into hermaphrodites? Literally yes

      EDIT PART TWO - ELECTRIC BOOGALOO: Palatable, not palpable. Words are hard.

    • Vladkar@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      I recently had to fax a document to the government, which meant I had to print the thing, then pay $12 at OfficeMax to send it. Absolute bedlam.

      • cm0002@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        From time to time I have to sign a form that specifically says “Print and sign, no digital signatures”

        I use Adobes “draw a signature” feature to do my squibble, then place it on the signature line taking at least a little care to make it look handwritten (So like a portion of my signature is dipping below the line etc.). Finally I print to PDF (Even if it is already PDF) and email that or use one of those fax apps if fax is absolutely required.

        I haven’t had any such forms rejected (Well, at least not for “improper signature” or whatever) and I’ve been doing it on forms for well over a decade now lmao

    • LittleBorat2@lemmy.ml
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      8 months ago

      I am always pissed off when someone sends me a document to print, sign, scan and send back. You are still missing your stupid fax machine, don’t you?

      I have no printer because it’s not worth the upkeep, so I have to walk down the street to a copy shop and print, sign, scan and send back my personal data there.

      Thank you, fax machine person.

      • renzev@lemmy.worldOP
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        8 months ago

        Is pasting in your signature digitally not an option? That’s what I’ve been doing all my life, but then again the area where I live is quite progressive in terms of technology.

        On a related note, someone should make an image filter that makes digital documents look like they’ve been scanned in. Would save a ton of paper and people’s time lol.

        • FierySpectre@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          Problem with that is that simply pasting your signature is in no way legally binding. Someone could crop your signature out of a random document and then sign a bunch of papers with it.

          With a paper copy you’re supposed to keep the hard copy (and so is the other party, that’s why you always sign in doubles).

          Hell even printing, signing and scanning is quite vague in terms of legal value… You’d have to actually send the original hard copies by mail to be 100% covered. (With a registered letter at that).

          Digital signing will supposedly make this whole process easier, but doing that digital signing can only be executed by a small amount of certified organisations. (As in everyone can digitally sign something with their own keys, but it won’t be legally recognized)

          Not a lawyer, just someone who tried to figure out how signing legal documents works to include it in an inhouse program at work

    • bfg9k@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      Sometimes don’t have a choice, at least here in AU there are lots of government institutions that still only accept paper copies of certified documents either snail mailed or physically handed in

    • Gabu@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      It also can’t be used to track you if your printer is kept off the internet

  • saltesc@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    The K in CMYK is grey, not black. The other ink tones are added to make it appear black.

    Edit: It seems people don’t want to hear that. But sorry, that’s how CMYK works. Black is roughly C=75 M=68 Y=67 K=89 in most major colour profiles used for printing. When you tell your printer to print something black, it won’t use just Key (around 85-90% grey), and will apply normal CMYK blacks which use value from all 4 inks.

    It’s been like this for 120 years and is not a “big printer” conspiracy. If you don’t like this, don’t use a CMYK printer. It’s just going to print CMYK values with CMYK inks like you told it to and none of those inks is black.

    • Hobbes_Dent@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      That’s not really the case (grey), but it’s what happens by default.

      The K does stand for blacK. The four are mixed to create a richer black than the black alone would provide - which conveniently looks better and uses more ink.

      The software and printer are more than capable of not using “rich black” outside of images, but even the solid black ink will look muted to people used to seeing the mud from all four colours in their 12 point Times New Roman.

      A sad state really that in 2024 we still have an ink racket.

    • davel@lemmy.ml
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      8 months ago

      My color laser printer uses only K to print blacK. It takes four cartridges, and I’ve only had to replace the C, M, and Y cartridges once in the 15 years or so I’ve owned it, because I almost never print pages with color.

      • lemonmelon@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        It sounds like your printer has a true monochrome mode you can specify. Makes and models that are more user-hostile often use drivers that default to grayscale for non-color prints.