Hacker Timesnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit | pseudony's commentslogin

Congratulations :)

As a Dane, I would say yes. Especially among boomers there was always a genuine appreciation of the US and its role as guardian of a rules-based international order and western civilization more generally.

I think that sentiment has gone, even as younger generations have increasingly incorporated English words, music, TV and more into their own, but you seldom hear the same genuine trust in the US as a force for good.


I'd say in Norway there's more inherent trust in America. People may appear a bit more critical, but by now it's part of the culture. Even though you have some regresion of that trust due to Trump and polarization, I'd say most people see the US as a core part of Western society, cultural and critical to defense.

Yes, it is all a conspiracy.

Or. Have you considered that the erstwhile closest military ally of the US increasingly diversifying AWAY from US programs actually is pretty noteworthy. You have had canadians boycotting US products, cancel trips to the US, their PM encouraging elbows up attitude and delivering a pretty noteworthy speech in Davos about charting a course for middle powers and you think it’s business as usual?


Wrong - I am very far from a catholic, but this just doesn’t reflect history.

They did a lot to make the middle ages more tolerable. After that, maybe they overstayed their welcome.


He didn’t say that. He said that he agrees with the pope on this issue. You don’t become a catholic from agreeing on an issue

Sure — we can play that game. Worked for a state org in an EU country too.

I disagree, I note that multiple countries have digital ministries drafting plans to drop Microsoft products or to begin a wholesale migration due to sovereignty and security.

Once something becomes policy at the highest levels, the individual orgs will have to follow, even if slowly.

I really think you are grossly misreading the last 12 months or so. There is a big difference between a municipality migration as a cost-saving move and the very state saying declaring a national security threat from foreign-based vendors.


Definitely. And then one could start wondering if the direction might reverse.


It would take something miraculous for the direction to reverse towards Europe. People have been complaining about European tech, economy, and freedoms (as in free speech) for decades now. Things have become worse on all of these fronts.

I think the AI act is a great example here. The EU came up with regulation for an emerging technology that basically killed the chance for Europe to compete. Lots of people disagreed with this criticism when the act was debated, but it turns out the critics were right. Europe will be buying AI services from elsewhere because Europe wasn't able to compete.

This entire way of thinking in Europe would need to reverse for there to be a chance that the brain drain changes course.


On the flip side, with the US cutting funding for scientific research, and increasing persecution of minorities within the US, I know a whole bunch of qualified scientists/researchers who are either moving to or actively hunting for a position in the EU


Really not many people outside far right proponents of hate speech (and more recently MAGA shills) have been complaining about free speech in Europe. Yes, there are laws against holocaust denial for specific historical reasons. The UK also had regulations on some Irish republican organisations access to TV, but not other forms of expression. And yes most European jurisdictions accept that speech can cause harm and try to balance this against free speech. But there is really no case that nonviolent political speech is -- in practice -- discriminated against in EU and UK.

On the IT and AI services: Europe hasn't really failed to compete in innovation, as much as scale of operation. That might change if we have a security imperative to protect our own markets for these things against an increasingly hostile US.


People have been fined and their apartments searched for insulting politicians online.

The fact that other Europeans aren't complaining about this makes it worse, because it implies that the society condones this behavior.

I'm sorry, but in no sensible society should the police raid someone's home because he called the deputy chancellor (think vice president) a dumbass on Twitter ("dummkopf"). Or more recently: police started investigating a man for calling Merz (the chancellor) Pinocchio:

https://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/german-police-probe-face...

>but not other forms of expression.

France - fined for calling Macron a "scumbag":

https://www.lemonde.fr/en/m-le-mag/article/2023/04/23/french...

UK - teenager sentenced for a "hate crime" for posting rap lyrics on Instagram:

https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-merseyside-43816921

This applies to other European countries too.


to europe? hardly. maybe to east asia ...



Look at what he does now, you honestly think a person this greedy would ever exercise less than maximum control?


I have built a relatively complete process supervisor in Go - cross-platform, http management API, separate actor-like goroutines for each process and the main supervisor. All using Minimax m2.1 on open code.

Sure, it needs steering, but I have actually preferred it to claude which is much too eager


Anticipatory compliance.

Great leader may sic the government on your subversive corporation if the poll numbers are too bad.


They could just sharpie a few zeros onto the figures.


You may say that, but last I checked, we don’t get stopped and shot in the streets by masked goons on government payrolls.


Sure, but I am talking about government-mandated surveillance through legislation.

Also, your police aren’t afraid to go the extra mile to quash dissent. Look at what’s happening in the UK for example with Palestine Action. The only difference is that they are less armed and better trained.


Remember how UK is not a part of the EU anymore for about a decade by now?


Pedantry at its finest. The UK is European and you know it - regardless of the technicalities.

Since you’re a pedant, look at what Germany is doing in this same area.


Oh boy, did I hurt your feelings or something? If you call this pedantry, I'll gladly be a pedant in your perception. I'll call you ignorant in return though. And since you are an ignorant (notice how I can also take an adjective and ascribe it to your whole personhood?) you probably won't know what the difference between Europe and the European Union is anyway, so there's little hope for a fruitful discussion.


Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: