Difference between revisions of "Unholy Things in Computing"
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* Predatory computing (see tracking). | * Predatory computing (see tracking). | ||
* Malware (doesn't exist in an honest world) | * Malware (doesn't exist in an honest world) | ||
| + | * Wild West AI/LLM Industry. Everyone working for themselves, no collaboration. No central database for LLMs. | ||
| + | * Foolishly fighting against AI/LLM with things like https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anubis_(software) (it's hopeless). | ||
| + | * GDPR - The Europeans made the internet worse, by requiring popups that pester users about cookies. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_Data_Protection_Regulation | ||
Revision as of 09:06, 8 January 2026
Unholy things:
- Excessive whitespace design (hard on the eyes)
- Javascript bloat (slow)
- Loading screens (slow)
- Pop ups (interruptions)
- Tracking, analytics (Breaks the golden rule. Perpetuates a rat race economy)(computers that take advantage of your behavior as you use them)
- Maze programs or websites
- Memory obfuscation (paging)
- Excessive dependencies / libraries (npm / node.js comes to mind)
- Dependence on an online/cloud service
- Having a program fail and not notify the user (failing silently)
- Security (a demonistic self perpetuating industry)(endless cat and mouse chase)
- Predatory computing (see tracking).
- Malware (doesn't exist in an honest world)
- Wild West AI/LLM Industry. Everyone working for themselves, no collaboration. No central database for LLMs.
- Foolishly fighting against AI/LLM with things like https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anubis_(software) (it's hopeless).
- GDPR - The Europeans made the internet worse, by requiring popups that pester users about cookies. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_Data_Protection_Regulation