I like stinky tofu a lot. I’m Canadian. I’m excited to see my country grow. I’m new to lemmy. I prefer local communities over public ones, until I’m convinced otherwise. I’m bad at writing bios.
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stinkytofuisgood@lemmy.cato
Canada@lemmy.ca•6 dead, shooter dead, 25 injured in Tumbler Ridge B.C. school shooting
4·1 month agoI agree with you wholeheartedly. To phrase it a little differently; people need to provide a moment to show empathy, reflection, and assistance if possible. To let the event sink in. This gives the victims the acknowledgment and understanding they deserve, and makes the general public more deeply impassioned as a result.
Absolutely there needs to be political follow-up to dig to the root of the issue and take the necessary actions to prevent repeat cases.
I don’t think my (our) community should be put in this main list. But I’d like to mention it:
If you check it out, please read the sidebar to see if it’s right for you.
Thanks!
stinkytofuisgood@lemmy.cato
Canada@lemmy.ca•6 dead, shooter dead, 25 injured in Tumbler Ridge B.C. school shooting
271·1 month agoAs an individual I want to express my condolences to everyone in Tumbler Ridge, and may the victims rest in peace. This is a national tragedy.
I hope the community is offered ongoing psychological care and that there is an immediate effort to mitigate physician shortages that they are already suffering.
To feel how I felt when I read the news this morning, I can’t even begin to imagine the grief, misery, anger, sadness, and whirlwind of emotions from those directly impacted.
There is a period of respect where politics on the matter should take a backseat, but I will say that the BC leadership and federal government should discuss what they have learned from this tragedy. I have no answers.
Right now, I just want to express my support to anyone who may be reading this that was affected. If anyone needs somebody to talk to privately, for any reason, please know I am here if you privately message me.
stinkytofuisgood@lemmy.cato
Canada@lemmy.ca•The subject of Lyme disease is littered with misinformation. Celebrities are part of the problem, experts say
4·2 months agoTo add to this: pharmacists are able to prescribe medication of certain classes, for certain conditions, depending on the province. Here is a list with more details for anyone interested:
stinkytofuisgood@lemmy.cato
privacy@lemmy.ca•Washington Post Raid Is a Frightening Reminder: Turn Off Your Phone’s Biometrics Now
5·2 months agoIt’s always a concern when travelling to another country. There’s the decision between biometrics, passcode and/or burner. When travelling, always keep in mind that legality varies, and a country’s compliance with their laws varies as well…
Prepare ahead of time, always.
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stinkytofuisgood@lemmy.cato
Canada@lemmy.ca•The subject of Lyme disease is littered with misinformation. Celebrities are part of the problem, experts say
5·2 months agoCelebrities, AI, Reddit, lemmy - a short and incomplete list of places to not take medical advice or diagnose from. Doctors have doctorates in their field of expertise for a reason. If I want to complain about my achy joints here, I will. But I sure as hell won’t trust my personal health decisions to somebody without proof of competence.
stinkytofuisgood@lemmy.cato
Buy Canadian@lemmy.ca•Think you're buying Canadian at the grocery store? That product may actually be from the U.S.
5·2 months agoThey’re just easy to ignore, although I suppose cigarette warnings are large and graphic but that doesn’t stop most either…
I suppose those who care would read it in any form. Maybe this followed by some sort of promotional videos to alert the general public? I would take this type of info-graphic in any form though.
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stinkytofuisgood@lemmy.cato
PC Gaming@lemmy.ca•Three RTX 50 cards reportedly make up 75% of NVIDIA’s Q1 2026 supplyEnglish
2·2 months agoNvidia will prioritize AI and more than likely know when to bail before the bubble bursts. They will have made boatloads for shareholders while leaving so many others in financial ruin. Whether those caught in the bubble burst should have known better… I guess it’s a case by case basis.
stinkytofuisgood@lemmy.cato
Canada@lemmy.ca•Ottawa is giving greenhouses a tax break. Will it help lower food prices?
4·2 months agoI am in support of helping Canadian businesses, especially in the current political climate. What I am not so confident in is the willingness of food suppliers to pass savings along all the way to the customer. Grocery stores have used inflation and price fixing tactics here for far too long for them to have earned my trust. Grocery stores must be seriously audited and regulated accordingly. By all means, make a profit - no brainer. But your profits now are bolstered by hurting 99% of Canadians who need food to survive.
stinkytofuisgood@lemmy.cato
Buy Canadian@lemmy.ca•Think you're buying Canadian at the grocery store? That product may actually be from the U.S.
6·2 months agoBeautiful! I agree. But not like our current warning labels, which are mostly relegated to a small black and white box in the corner.
stinkytofuisgood@lemmy.cato
Canada@lemmy.ca•Anyone else feel like Shoppers pharmacies are aggressively trying to charge extra fees?
3·2 months agoTry a locally operated pharmacy or another option in your area if possible. Shoppers is hit and miss in my experience (majority misses).
Costco has a $5 prescribing fee and doesn’t require a membership for pharmacy. If you have a pharmacy close to a Costco you can try asking them to price match the Costco dispensing fee. It usually works, and then you can support a local pharmacy instead of Costco. If you like the pharmacy and have the funds in the future, you’re always free to pay the original dispensing fee as a show of support - I just mention this as an option, not suggesting anyone must.
stinkytofuisgood@lemmy.cato
PC Gaming@lemmy.ca•Vampire: The Masquerade – Bloodlines 2 left a gaping, $28 million hole in Paradox's year-end financial reportEnglish
3·2 months agoPart of what ruins games for me are the massive publishers behind them. EA, Ubisoft, Rockstar.
The games may be great. The developers may be great. The studios (by and large) interfere in the process of development, the monetization, the end-of-life plan…
For me, when I have the chance to play games, I’ve found myself opting for smaller studios or indie games.
Also I want to shout out Ross Scott of Accursed Farms. He covers so many cool and obscure games. He has worked incredibly hard towards enacting pro-consumer business practices in the gaming world. He’s a very smart and pragmatic guy. I would highly recommend anyone who’s into gaming to check out his site and content.
To me, he’s been an inspiration in his uphill battle of the Stop Killing Games initiative. He’s been working through the apathy, the negativity, the doubt. It’s actually incredible what he’s achieved. A man with passion and a plan, who happens to also make some damn good game related videos.
Ok I realize this just turned into a love letter for Ross Scott. I’m okay with that.
stinkytofuisgood@lemmy.cato
Technology@lemmy.world•Euro firms must ditch Uncle Sam's clouds and go EU-nativeEnglish
3·2 months agoSelf-hosted is a great way to go for those who can afford the initial cost and can get the setup done. I’d love to see more of it but I also know that most people won’t do that, and I get it because if I asked my mom to self-host right now I think her brain would explode.
Second best we can do is start using and promoting alternatives. Us nerds tend to be some of the earlier adopters. If enough users flock to the right platform, and if the platform is easy for non-nerds to sign up, then the shift may happen. Now is a climate where the desire for change is higher than normal.
No company is too big to dominate the landscape, the momentum and desire just needs to grow. And we should be careful of jumping from one pirate ship to another pirate ship. TikTok to Reels, Twitter/X to Threads, these are not the kind of changes we need to encourage.
But I’m not one for social media overall, so I can’t do much except inform my family and friends in a way that doesn’t drive them crazy. To anyone reading: don’t be that guy either, because if you pester too hard you’re likely to breed resentment and cause people to become further entrenched in their current habits.
stinkytofuisgood@lemmy.cato
Technology@lemmy.world•Euro firms must ditch Uncle Sam's clouds and go EU-nativeEnglish
1·2 months agoWhen it comes to LLM AI usage, there’s definitely a few things you can consider.
I’ll reference OpenAI as you mentioned but it can apply to others as well to varying degrees
First is that the OpenAI has the goal of making a profit, but the market is getting more saturated, the costs to run data centres increases with model complexity and user base increases.
Funding is being pumped into them by investors, government in the US and other non-AI companies are banking on AI to bolster the economy and profits respectively. For things like ChatGPT they offer paid plans for consumers but this is a small fraction of their revenue.
The stats show they are losing money quickly. Investors want profits, the company wants dominance, the government seems to be approaching it from a “too big to fail approach”.
So we’re slowly seeing shifts; in the US, ads are being experimented with in ChatGPT, models are being chosen that use less tokens and less computing power, etc.
There have also been studies showing the diminishing returns of the thinking that “a bigger model is better”.
There’s also the question of how much they care about correct answers. They are surely aware that most don’t understand how an LLM AI works, that most will not do much research to fact-check answers, that most will consider convenience to be king.
Their token system is a huge balancing act and I’m not fully convinced they know what works and what doesn’t.
AI is being propped up, it shows signs of a bubble. Not to say AI is going anywhere, but when the pop inevitably happens, the LLM AI landscape will leave behind a lot of failure and monetary loss, and a few winners. Think dot com bubble for reference but in a whole new era of computing.
The circular economy going on and the investment from private and US government entities can only keep this train on the tracks for so long.
If I were to subjectively answer your question in a phrase: I don’t think they really do care too much at the moment.
stinkytofuisgood@lemmy.cato
Technology@lemmy.world•Euro firms must ditch Uncle Sam's clouds and go EU-nativeEnglish
18·2 months agoData sovereignty and social media sovereignty is something I’d love to see worked on more. I mean, the shift is already happening to a larger degree as you know if you’re reading this comment.
It’s a sad state of affairs when the average Joe needs to consider these things - or maybe it’s a wake up call to our relative complacency over the past decades?
I prefer to keep my data outside of the US. Canada for some, specific EU countries for others. But bills like Chat Control are even threatening other nations’ long-standing privacy norms. The burn-out will be real for some, those who didn’t care may not until it directly affects them. Others will hopefully find a balance they believe suits them.
The floor is lava! Have to keep jumping around!
stinkytofuisgood@lemmy.cato
Canada@lemmy.ca•Trump threatens Canada with 50% tariff on aircraft sold to U.S.
4·2 months agoSetting aside the main discussion for a moment (I think it’s been covered thoroughly by now), just a friendly reminder to diversify news sources and read past the title.
I think, we’re in a Canadian space, outside of the de-facto mainstream social media platform and further delegated to a Canada-centric platform. I really do think that we’re all going to benefit if we take this explosion in popularity here to make sure we better ourselves online at the same time. I have been guilty of it, so many of us have.
It’s easy to get caught in the negative news cycle, and even knee-jerk reactions from the headlines. But Trump is not our president and he never will be. Our helm is navigating the rough waters. Take solace in the captain’s fortitude and give him time to weather the storm. Unless the ship starts to sink, we’re all better doing what we can to make this ride as bearable as possible.
I am not saying outrage is invalid. Every Canadian has the right to feel strongly about what’s going on. But, let’s not play the game too much when we know the game is rigged. The house always wins, unless we realize that we don’t have to play against the house.
Much love from Canada.


Sorry, my second time posting in this thread, a little more clearly this time… Haha it’s late and this post woke me from a bit of a daze.
For those thinking this is harassment I’d like to quote something for your consideration relating to freedom of expression in Canada:
Section 2(b) - Freedom of expression - Government of Canada website
(and in French)