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const_void, in Is CCleaner still people's preferred computer cleaning app?

Imagine running an operating system that needs third party “cleaning” utilities

wildcardology,

Let me guess. Linux user?

Grenfur,

Naa cast-iron pan user. Throw that shit in a fire, melt away the bad and star it over.

Also kidding, but maybe.

pivot_root,

Gentoo, probably. Don’t want your operating system being bloated down by having to be compatible with other people’s devices /s

SharkAttak,
@SharkAttak@kbin.social avatar

Nah, Arch most likely.

I don't use Arch, btw.

otter,

Imagine interacting with other human beings without being a cringelord. No really, try.

lastweakness,

People like you are why the Linux community is viewed as being toxic.

DreamySweet,

They were never needed.

TallonMetroid, (edited ) in What companies have made your blacklist?
@TallonMetroid@lemmy.world avatar
  • Chipotle, for union busting
  • Walgreens, for attempted corporate inversion
  • Chik-fil-a, for general Christofascist asshattery
  • Hobby Lobby, for general Christofascist asshattery
  • Walmart, for general corporate asshattery

I’ve also been trying to find an Amazon Smile alternative after Amazon killed it earlier this year, but haven’t had any success yet.

Haus,
@Haus@kbin.social avatar

The first time I ever saw a reference to "Chik-fil-a" was on a resume, and I it made me wonder if the applicant was mentally competent.

CriticalMiss,

I wouldn’t judge people like that. You don’t know what happened back then, there is a chance they grew up as a person or they were tight for money and took whatever job paid the most with their available skill set.

jballs,
@jballs@sh.itjust.works avatar

Can’t believe I had to scroll down this far to find Walmart. No one does small business destroying, union busting, supplier squeezing, and employee exploitation quite like the Walton family.

cerement, in What companies have made your blacklist?
@cerement@slrpnk.net avatar

(not only have none of these companies made any effort at improvement, they’ve consistently gotten worse as time goes by – remember one comedian commenting “the bar was on the ground and y’all brought shovels”)

b3an, (edited ) in What companies have made your blacklist?
@b3an@lemmy.world avatar

Amazon, PayPal, Google. Did I say PayPal? Oh, right and don’t forget PayPal.

Mouselemming,

Tell me about PayPal?

astanix,

PayPal acts as a bank without having to follow any banking laws. You have 10k in your PayPal account and PayPal decides its theirs? No recourse for you.

Just search paypal took my money and you can read all the horror stories.

Mouselemming,

I only have PayPal linked to a credit card, so I can always pit that ruthless company against them, I guess. But it does sour me on them if that’s how they treat their merchants

ArugulaZ,
@ArugulaZ@kbin.social avatar

Patreon, too.

intensely_human, in Why do people hate on mobile games, call them "not real games" and mock them, when some mobile-exclusive games are the best games I've played?

How do you know they’re looking at you weirdly?

Blackout, in What companies have made your blacklist?
@Blackout@kbin.social avatar

Taco Bell has tried to kill me more than once. After the 6th time I said enough was enough.

magnetosphere, in What companies have made your blacklist?
@magnetosphere@kbin.social avatar

Very, very few. I figure that all large companies are awful in one way or another; the only difference is whether we know about it or not.

I prefer to shop locally when it’s an option. I like feeling as if my business genuinely matters.

JimmyBigSausage, in What companies have made your blacklist?

X, Musky asshole

Tesla, Musky asshole

Chic Fil-A, homophobic corporate politics

T-Mobile, does not stand behind promise at purchase

Verizon, loud skank stores

Papa Johns, owner asshole opposed Obamacare

Hobby Lobby, right wing Christian asshole ownership/products opposed Obamacare

MyPillow, asshole MAGA owner

Trump brand any business, asshole MAGA cheeseturd ex-president loser of 2020 election by many votes

Too many more to name, and too many worthwhile brands and businesses to support.

JusticeForPorygon, (edited )
@JusticeForPorygon@lemmy.world avatar

My mother regularly goes to Hobby Lobby because its the only craft shop nearby. God I wish she’d just buy her shit online. Probably get better quality too.

shalafi,

I didn’t have a ready answer to this post, but yeah, already banned:

  • Chic Fil-A
  • Hobby Lobby
  • Papa Johns

Add:

  • Jimmy John’s
JWBananas, in Spotify Wrapped 2023 - what 0.05% are you in over how many monthly listeners?
@JWBananas@startrek.website avatar
TootSweet, in What companies have made your blacklist?

Here’s one nobody has mentioned yet. Hasbro. Owner of Wizards of the Coast which recently tried to massively fuck over D&D players and sent hired mercinaries (literally Pinkertons) after one of their Magic: The Gathering players for something that totally wasn’t the player’s fault.

JusticeForPorygon,
@JusticeForPorygon@lemmy.world avatar

This sounds insane, can you provide more context?

BloodSlut,

They accidentally sent a notable player (dont remember if they were a content creator or something) an unreleased card. Pinkyboys showed up at his house and harassed him to return it.

TootSweet,

So, D&D first. WotC back in 2001 realized something. There are a few books that they sell a ton of copies of and make a lot of money off of. (The Player’s Handbook, The Dungeon Master’s Guide, Monster Manual, etc.) And then there are a ton more books that take a lot of effort to make but that they don’t sell many copies of so they don’t really make much money on them, but they still have to be made in order to ensure that the more profitable books sell. (These are mostly the published adentures.)

They figured that it would be in their best interest to incentivize third parties to write a lot of these published adventures so that WotC itself could focus more on the core books. So they licensed a lot of their core content under a license (The “Open Gaming License version 1.0a” or “OGL 1.0a”) that allowed third parties to use it in their own modules and sell those modules. It created a vibrant ecosystem of publishers.

The OGL 1.0a was intended as a perpetual license. They promised third party publishers that the wording of the license didn’t allow WotC themselves – creators of the OGL 1.0a – to revoke the license. (This was on an official FAQ on WotC’s site.) So you’d be able to sell your module that included verbiage and elements from official D&D materials forever.

Well, in 2022, they changed their tune. They created an “OGL 1.1” (which was not “open” the way the 1.0a was) and started pressuring publishers they partnered with to accept the new license. It basically allowed them to rip off any third party content and include it in official WotC stuff without paying the third party publisher and also ban the publisher from using the material they wrote. It also put ridiculous restrictions on virtual tabletop software (software for playing D&D remotely.) Now, that’s not so catastrophic because they couldn’t revoke the OGL 1.0a and publishers were under no obligation to accept the OGL 1.1, right?

Well, they came up with a legal argument why the language of the OGL 1.0a that they’d been telling everyone couldn’t be revoked on existing works actually was something they could revoke. Basically, if they convinced a court they could do that, every third-party D&D module that relied on the OGL 1.0a would have to accept the OGL 1.1 terms that would let WotC rip off their work or stop sales immediately.

There was massive backlash from the community. D&D players were remarkably unified in their response. And the CEO of WotC was really tone deaf and dismissive and soured WotC’s relationship with the D&D community even further. Enough subscriptions to D&D Beyond (an online service owned by WotC) that shareholders started asking tough questions at shareholder meetings.

So, finally, WotC hired a slick PR firm to smooth things out. And, honestly, I have to admit they did good. They ended up leaving the OGL 1.0a in place (unrevoked it, sorta). But also, WotC had already said “actually, we can revoke it” and nobody trusted the OGL 1.0a any more. So WotC also dual-licensing the same OGL-1.0a-licensed content also under a Creative Commons license that is (more certain to be) unrevokable and is more open than the OGL 1.0a. The upcoming version of D&D will be OGL 1.1 only, but players and third party publishers are pretty unified on the idea of refusing to migrate to the new version and the current version is safer from the evil clutches of WotC than it was before this whole fiasco went down.

Now, the consensus among the D&D players is that WotC isn’t the bad guys so much as Hasbro, WotC’s parent company. When WotC backpeddeled and did the dual licensing thing, I decided to end my boycott of Hasbro. (I was actually DM’ing a D&D campaign at the time.) I looked forward to buying more D&D books. To seeing the latest Transformers movie and the D&D movie. Stuff like that.

And then, very shortly after that all went down, there was the other fiasco started by WotC.

I’m a little less familiar with this one, but some player of Magic: The Gathering purchased packs of MTG cards from a small reseller and the reseller fucked up. The reseller, not knowing the difference, gave the customer packs of a not yet released but similarly-named line of cards that weren’t supposed to be available to customers at all yet.

The customer made an unboxing video of these not-yet-officially-released cards and stuck it on YouTube. And that’s when shit hit the fan. WotC could have DM’d the customer on YouTube and asked if the customer could take down the video and exchange the cards for the ones he’d actually purchased, but instead they sent the actual, literal Pinkertons (a private security/mercinary company known for union busting and lots of illegal quasi-military/quasi-police actions against innocent people) to go harass the customer’s neighbors and intimidate (like while sporting assault rifles and body armor and camo – on the customer’s front porch) and bully the customer.

Now, my understanding is that the customer did nothing legally wrong. The fuck up was the reseller’s. The customer was under no legal obligation to return the cards or take down the video or otherwise cooperate in any way. The customer also said in later videos about the whole situation and the visit he got from the Pinkertons that they would totally have fully cooperated if they’d have just contacted him and asked.

As soon as I heard about WotC sending the Pinkertons after a customer, I recommitted to boycotting Hasbro and I intend never to end that boycott. I really didn’t expect something far worse to follow right on the heels of the OGL 1.1 fiasco.

Sendbeer,

Man, that was a very thorough write up! I was familiar with the DND shit but not the Magic stuff. Was a sad read, but glad to know about it.

TootSweet,

Glad it was informative! Back when the D&D situation was all happening in realtime, I was so addicted to any and all news about it. I watched all there was to see about it on YouTube constantly. (And there was a lot.)

I’ve never played Magic, but especially given how soon after the D&D debacle it went down, it felt like a continuation of the same story. So I watched a lot about that as well.

Lennnny, in What's the simplest thing humans are too dumb to grasp?
@Lennnny@lemmy.world avatar

I saw a toddler eating a banana and it bit its own thumb and then did an angry cry

niktemadur, (edited ) in What companies have made your blacklist?

The ones that I come across nearly every day in one way or another:

Twitter - manipulation, right wing bullshit
Facebook - privacy, manipulation
Reddit - manipulation, right wing bullshit
Walmart - exploitation, right wing bullshit
Nestle - exploitation
Chick Fil A - right wing/religious bullshit
Papa Johns - right wing bullshit
McDonalds - exploitation

Extrasvhx9he, in What companies have made your blacklist?

Seagate, it let me down too many times

DeathWearsANecktie,

I bought a Seagate external hard drive a few years back and it shit itself within the first few months. That was it for me with Seagate.

Now I have a western digital one instead and it’s much better.

Extrasvhx9he,

Yeah bascially drilled the 3,2,1 backup method into my skull because of seagate

jamyang, in Is CCleaner still people's preferred computer cleaning app?

Bleachbit vs BCUninstaller vs WinDirStat vs Wiztree, which should I prefer? I am currently using BCU.

shalafi,

Wiztree is so much faster than WinDirStat it’s silly. Never looked back. Maybe things have changed?

jamyang, (edited )

Is wiztree much better than BCU and Bleachbit? Like, removing al the vestiges of an uninstalled program. I feel like BCU is half-assing it. Earlier I used to use Revo Uninstaller which is I think much better than BCU.

themurphy,

I’m using BCU with no complaints. Why do you think Revo is better? Curious to know if it’s worth switching over.

jamyang,

Revo has nice UI. All the options are present in aesthetically and it’s easy to use. But it has a free and a paid version. Which led me to install BCU. But I don’t think BCU is good at cleaning up vestigial files after uninstalling a program. There’s always some files left unremoved which have to be deleted manually after a program is uninstalled. I didn’t have this issue with Revo.

Evotech,

TreeSizeFree

morphballganon, in What companies have made your blacklist?

Any company with an ad that makes me wait or click more than once.

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