AdmiralAsshat 1 day ago

Misread the title to mean that They Live inspired the concept of adblocking in general. Which would have been an interesting coincidence, since it did inspire one of the early Mozilla logos. [0]

[0] https://www.jwz.org/blog/2016/10/they-live-and-the-secret-hi...

  • dnpls 1 day ago

    Did something nefarious happen to your link?

    • AdmiralAsshat 1 day ago

      I guess JWZ has some sort of referral check that instantly black-holes any traffic coming from HN?

      And interestingly, the WayBackMachine snapshots are similarly boobytrapped: https://web.archive.org/web/20260115112314/https://www.jwz.o...

      So I guess google "They Live Mozilla Logo" if you want to see the article. Sorry about that!

      • matheusmoreira 1 day ago

        Just open a new tab and paste the link in.

        • ge96 1 day ago

          or another browser

        • biofox 1 day ago

          Ugh... that worked, but I gave up once I got to the home page.

          To quote the late, great, Ray Arnold...

          "I hate this Hacker crap!"

        • PhilipRoman 1 day ago

          It also sets a HN=1 cookie, so you may need to clear that or use incognito

          • matheusmoreira 1 day ago

            I see. I'm using Firefox's containers feature and that prevented the cookie from carrying over.

      • lukewarm707 1 day ago

        the original redirected to the softcore image and then the web archive link tried to rip my eardrums.

        this kind of adversarial 'defence' (attack) is new to me, maybe i'm naive but i didn't like it.

      • leephillips 1 day ago

        He’s had that in place for years. Yes, it’s special treatment for visitors from HN.

        • NooneAtAll3 1 day ago

          such information leak just means your browser isn't private enough

bloke_zero 2 days ago

I wish I could upvote this 10 times! I love the film - blew my mind when I saw it on cable just after it came out.

  • nephihaha 1 day ago

    One of the messages has changed of course. Nowadays it tends to be "stay fearful and do not reproduce".

    • rschiavone 1 day ago

      No it doesn't.

      • nephihaha 1 day ago

        Stay fearful is the constant message of the mainstream media. I could name dozens of such stories. There is always a story or two in the media at any given time to spark fear and anger and primal instincts.

        We are encouraged to sleep around, and both workplaces and pop culture discourage having a family by differing means.

    • ryanmcbride 1 day ago

      Nah the ruling class still wants poor kids who can grow up into wage slaves and soldiers, that's why they keep making contraceptives and abortions harder to access.

      • nephihaha 1 day ago

        I can get hold of "free" condoms from multiple sources. It is not hard to access contraceptives in much of the developed world except in remote locations.

    • vel0city 1 day ago

      Given the government trying incredibly hard to ban abortion and the Supreme Court musing they should overturn Griswold I don't their ideas are "do not reproduce".

      • nephihaha 1 day ago

        I don't live in the USA.

        • amanaplanacanal 1 day ago

          Now I'm curious where you are that you are being told not to reproduce.

    • NooneAtAll3 1 day ago

      I think you're several years late with this(?)

      no reproduction was indeed part of general transhumanism left (individuality doesn't work with parenthood obligations)

      but now with Europe and US economies on slowdown and with possibility of war looming, "your life for the country, your labor for the economy" starts to get steered/pushed towards by the elites (edit: pun not intended)

      • nephihaha 1 day ago

        With automation, the masses will have no jobs and the rich will need to stay on top. It is not beneficial for them to have a large angry underclass.

  • godshatter 1 day ago

    Track down the short story it's inspired by, Eight O'Clock in the Morning by Ray Nelson. I had read the short story somewhere, maybe in a compilation, and was delighted when the movie turned out to be obviously inspired by it. Helped me get even more enjoyment out of an already wonderful movie.

  • ge96 1 day ago

    The fighting scene was so funny PUT ON THE GLASSES!

    • leephillips 1 day ago

      Hilarious because it never ends.

EvanAnderson 1 day ago

Back in the late 90s I stood up a webserver in my office that returned fake banner ads for 404's. I used the in-house DNS server to vector "*.doubleclick.net" over to it.

We'd get amusing banner ads for things like cocaine-based nasal spray, renting pigs, and other vaguely off-color things in place of real ads. It was very, very amusing. I didn't tell anybody I was doing it and got some real laughs when people submitted helldesk tickets asking about the ads.

It got the axe when a technician printed some Mapquest directions that included off-color ads and left them laying around at a Customer site.

Aside: The fake ads came from a website called "Bannertown", (if memory serves). I believe it's long-since defunct. I'd love to find the ads today. They were very amusing.

dostick 2 days ago

Cool idea!the font weight should be extra/heavy, and not true black, dark gray.

  • kilna 2 days ago

    The heavier weights of League Spartan would be a good match.

robot-wrangler 2 days ago

Watch it if you haven't already. I accidentally landed in the middle of it while doing some illicit late night channel surfing when I was a kid.. this left quite an impression.

I think it was a healthy formative influence for me and primed me for rejecting fads / peer pressure, distrusting authority, etc. Probably also helped me to resist the more unhealthy aspects of a religious time/place, and I was even doing light reading on Cartesian skepticism a few years later, which got me into math. Didn't figure out the name of the movie until years later when it was a big meme.

This is not advice but I definitely advise you to show your small children this movie before they are old enough to think it's corny. They may have a schizophrenic episode or descend into solipsism sure, but they may also get scared as hell by monsters and learn some mental judo, and thank you for it later.

  • shrubby 2 days ago

    Nice pitch. I'll stream it right away!

    I've been watching Andor as a instructional manual recently and this seems like a good addition to the reality based manuals out there.

    Idiocracy, War INC etc.

  • riffraff 2 days ago

    My dad pitched this movie to me when I was a kid, as he was a Carpenter fan.

    Beyond the somewhat "obvious" message (for a grown up) it's just an eminently entertaining movie.

  • HerbManic 2 days ago

    What I find funny (only not really) is the wildly different interpretations of this film people have, for many they seem to be primed by other things to see in it what they want.

    Basically skeptical of common forms in modernity, that is very clearly the intention. However, I have also seen that in extreme far-right communities this film represents how Jewish people control the world... somehow I don't think that is what Carpenter was going for.

    Alas, once your works are in the wild it is out of the creators control in how they end up being used.

    • robot-wrangler 2 days ago

      It's interesting right? Now there's too much distrust of authority and also not enough. Even the word "skeptic" is sometimes used to refer to people who "do their own research" and doggedly latch on to wild conspiracy theories.

      Avoiding groupthink is another slightly different positive spin on (my read of) the underlying message. There's such a thing as toxic individualism too, but if there's a "bad" way to be a free-thinker then you could say it usually has a pretty limited blast radius for society in general and it isn't a contagious kind of madness either

      • qsera 2 days ago

        >wild conspiracy theories.

        Do you know the difference between a conspiracy "nut", and a rational person?

        For a "conspiracy nut", understanding that there is sufficient incentive (also implies a lack of deterrent) for X to do Y is proof enough that X is doing Y.

        For a "mainstream" person, that is not enough. They require real, solid proof to consider that X is doing Y.

        Note that this is about deciding their own behavior, and not about handing capital punishment for X.

        I ll let you decide who is smarter...

        • robot-wrangler 2 days ago

          Not sure you can purely talk about "is the motivation likely?" and end up with qanon stuff. This leaves out motivated reasoning coming from the rube, plus a bunch of other things like narratives that are sufficiently fun / scandalous /surprising

        • secretsatan 2 days ago

          Looking at conspiracy nuts joining ice and gleefully celebrating unidentified armed goons abducting people, i think they more likely think, well, i would do y, so they must be doing it against me.

        • M95D 2 days ago

          A "mainstream" person can also consider past evidence of A, B and C doing Y and assume that X is doing Y too without any evidence about Y.

          • jjcob 2 days ago

            "Mainstream" people will also look at past evidence that A, B and C did Y, and say something like "that was N years ago, surely nobody would do this today".

        • latexr 2 days ago

          > Do you know the difference between a conspiracy "nut", and a rational person?

          The former is trivially manipulated, can be made to believe anything by appealing to their inherent obvious biases, and will double down on their beliefs even when presented with irrefutable proof to the contrary. The latter can detect false dichotomies, understands answers are often nuanced instead of black and white, and is capable of changing their mind when new evidence comes to light.

          • qsera 2 days ago

            Yes, these categories are sometimes simply separated by what they considers as "irrefutable proof".

            • latexr 2 days ago

              See “The Final Experiment”.

              https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Final_Experiment_(expediti...

              In particular the “Reactions” section.

              https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Final_Experiment_(expediti...

              You’ll find this bit:

              > Alabama pastor Dean Odle suggested that Satan created a fireball to act as a false Sun.

              That is cuckoo cuckoo bananas to a point only “conspiracy nut” applies.

              • throw0101c 1 day ago

                See perhaps René Descartes:

                * https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evil_demon

                • latexr 1 day ago

                  That thought experiment assumes the whole world around you is a fabricated illusion. In which case it would be unnecessary for Satan to fake the Sun at that point, especially considering the pastor wasn’t even there. If everything around you is an illusion, there’s no need for 5D subterfuge chess, the devil could just fake whatever.

                  So no, Descartes doesn’t apply. Unless I were the one being tested (seeing as I’m thinking, and therefore am). In which case that particular lie would be especially hilariously stupid.

        • aa-jv 2 days ago

          The difference is that one follows the collective/reactive order of things, and the other doesn't.

          "Everyone knows" is the greatest conspiracy of all. Its quite possible to be a 'nut' simply by referring to what "everyone knows" ... this is a thought-stopping meme designed to end challenge to authority, since "everyone" is the ultimate authority.

      • pjc50 2 days ago

        So.. a lot of this is "negative polarisation" combined with "exactly wrong". People see something bad happening, or come to distrust a piece of mainstream belief/reporting when it gets caught in a contradiction or turns out on subsequent evidence to be wrong. That is the healthy side of skepticism.

        The problem comes in this causing people to do one or both of:

        - immediately flip to believing the direct opposite, without evidence that's true either (most things are not excluded-middle)

        - immediately imprint on the first non-mainstream source they find and start treating it as gospel

        > but if there's a "bad" way to be a free-thinker then you could say it usually has a pretty limited blast radius for society in general and it isn't a contagious kind of madness either

        It absolutely can be contagious. Sometimes that's for the good, sometimes bad, quite often the mixed result of getting to the right place only after a fraught disruptive time. Martin Luther, originator of the listicle, was correct in a lot of the theses but also started the domino chain for some of the most lethal wars in Europe. VI Lenin was right about the problems and wrong about the solutions. And so on.

      • keybored 2 days ago

        The system isn’t static. Anti-authority is not countered by authority, or the same kind of authority. It’s countered by co-opting anti-authority.

    • huijzer 2 days ago

      > extreme far-right communities

      Extreme libertarian seems a more apt description for those groups since they severely distrust government often also criticizing Trump and Netanyahu for example.

      • secretsatan 2 days ago

        A lot of them are very concerned about restricting the rights of others

      • aa-jv 1 day ago

        You don't have to belong to any particular in-group, except maybe humanity itself, to want to protect the human rights of people living outside ones' own nation/cultural identity. In fact, its kind of essential to the survival of the species to do so.

        This stereotyping you're doing is itself a manifestation of the very problem you're attempting to describe, which is that authorities murder with impunity, while we individuals can only organize among ourselves to address their crimes if - you know - we kind of get along.

        Which is less likely to occur if you label everyone who has a concern for human rights violations, an "extreme libertarian" or "far-right". Maybe you're right that 'only extreme libertarians question the actions of Trump and Netanyahu', but then again, maybe you don't care about human rights as much as you should - quickly - before your own human rights (to live) are put in peril by the war criminals you allow to rule you ..

        The corollary to your position is akin to this: "if you don't resist the war crimes and crimes against humanity that Trump and Netanyahu are committing - perhaps you agree with those crimes, and, therefore stereotyping you as a 'Trump'- or 'Netanyahu'-aligned type of person allows your position and indeed entire identity to be rejected, outright..."

        So, what'll it be? Shall we, human rights-concerned individuals, stereotype you? What are your political afflictions, just so .. you know .. they can be instantly rejected or discounted as invalid since you are a member of 'that filthy group over there', who seem to think that authorities should have impunity to murder ... ?

    • Nasrudith 2 days ago

      Meanwhile I've personally found myself completely unable to take it seriously due to the subliminal messages being "marry and reproduce" and "consume". Like people need sinister brainwashing to fall in love, have sex, or engage in hedonistic consumption. These are base biological urges that have existed regardless of societal economy for millennia! By casting it as something from a sinister conspiracy it makes the creator come across as someone completely insane from being so swallowed by their ideology. The sheer ridiculousness of it it brings to mind the "Mortal Engines" series and its incredibly dumb basic premise and the critical panning that it received. The lesson being, that just because something is an allegory or metaphor doesn't prevent it from being so incredibly stupid that it completely derails the message it is trying to send. Imagine if the billboards instead said.

      I recognize that this is certainly a minority view given how influential the film is. But I just plain cannot unsee it, like a Lovecraftian revelation and that ruins it for me from the start. Short of thinking Jodie Foster is talking to you through screens, it is very hard to look like an outright unhinged anti-Reaganist given the many legitimate things to object to about the man and his policies. Even if you agree with some of it, you can easily see where others would reasonably disagree. But this 'basic urges are part of a sinister conspiracy' sort of message? This managed to do it.

      • MagicMoonlight 2 days ago

        If it was a basic biological function then the marketing department wouldn’t exist.

        • autoexec 2 days ago

          Consumption and love/sex are things we tend to do naturally, but marketing just ramps it up to a level we probably wouldn't reach if we weren't forced or manipulated into it. Just about anybody can fall in love, but marketing can pressure you into thinking that not falling in love and being with someone means you've failed at life and marketing can fill with you anxiety if you aren't in love, or haven't had sex, or you've had sex too early, or not early enough, or not often enough, etc. Naturally they've got all kinds of things to sell you to help.

          • JuniperMesos 2 days ago

            Of all the phenomena in modern life a person might have anxiety about, the kinds of sex they are having (or not having) seem like the thing most relatable to their hunter-gatherer ancestors tens of thousands of years ago, long before the invention of marketing.

      • aa-jv 2 days ago

        Yes, thats the point of the movie - human beings' most banal desires can be and are weaponized against them.

        That you reject the entire premise of the movie because you can't "get over" this particular aspect, just means you've got your own loaded revolver in your pocket.

      • tokenburner 2 days ago

        > marry and reproduce

        I left that out deliberately, as I think they are a good thing

        Yes, I am aware of the irony of trying to manipulate people via messages

      • havblue 1 day ago

        I thought the billboard was more ironic: lots of people thought we were facing a population bomb at the time and now we're on the other side of the spectrum seeing a population collapse. For me just seeing something that I don't agree with doesn't automatically ruin my enjoyment.

      • onemoresoop 1 day ago

        > Meanwhile I've personally found myself completely unable to take it seriously due to the subliminal messages being "marry and reproduce" and "consume". Like people need sinister brainwashing to fall in love, have sex, or engage in hedonistic consumption.

        I thought the billboards and other displays were not subliminal but only viewed by the aliens and the sunglasses could see through that.

      • projektfu 1 day ago

        To be fair it was a mediocre film, definitely not one of Carpenters best, and is memorable mainly for the visual imagery of the billboards.

        But don't mind me, I'm here to chew bubblegum and comment, and I'm all out of bubblegum.

    • JuniperMesos 2 days ago

      > Basically skeptical of common forms in modernity, that is very clearly the intention. However, I have also seen that in extreme far-right communities this film represents how Jewish people control the world... somehow I don't think that is what Carpenter was going for.

      Say what you will about claiming that the Jews secretly control the world like the aliens in the 1988 John Carpenter movie They Live, the people making this claim are certainly not obeying, conforming, or refraining from questioning authority.

      • pjc50 2 days ago

        "Say what you want about the tenets of national socialism, at least it's an ethos" -- The Big Lebowski, another influential film to many people.

        • subroutine 2 days ago

          And let's also not forget that keeping wildlife, an amphibious rodent, within the city isn't legal either.

        • JuniperMesos 2 days ago

          I like The Big Lebowski, it has some fun lines, but John Goodman's Walter Sobchak doesn't have a monopoly on the English phrase "Say what you will about X".

          And indeed apparently the line was in fact "say what you want about the tenets of national socialism", not "say what you will about the tenets of national socialism" (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b_29yvYpf4w).

          • pjc50 2 days ago

            The second half of the line was also relevant, since the claim of Jews controlling the world was specifically a Nazi one.

            • ZeroGravitas 1 day ago

              That actually traces back further to, appositley, the White Russians and their Protocols of Zion to smear democracy as a Jewish plot.

              From there it spread to Henry Ford, Winston Churchill and Adolf Hitler amongst others.

              • kridsdale1 1 day ago

                Is that why Lebowski drinks White Russians exclusively?

      • autoexec 2 days ago

        > the people making this claim are certainly not obeying, conforming, or refraining from questioning authority.

        In my experience racists tend to just latch on to different authorities to blindly follow and obedience and conformity are even more strongly enforced. I've had long discussions with racists over the "rebel" identity they see in the confederate flag who shortly after demonstrated incredible amounts of boot-licking when it came to police. Most of the racists I've meet were very dedicated to hierarchies, a select set of social norms, old-fashioned gender roles, etc. and conformance was absolutely seen as mandatory.

        • cwillu 2 days ago

          But it's not The Federal Authorities™, so they don't think it counts as conformity.

          • kridsdale1 1 day ago

            Until it’s ICE boots to be licked.

      • cwillu 2 days ago

        They absolutely conform; by what mechanism do you think they all happened to pick the same bundle of labels and beliefs?

        • account42 2 days ago

          Of course, choosing to stand up to the man together with those like minded makes you the real conformist. A deep philosophical conundrum for the prepubescent.

          • wat10000 1 day ago

            Life got easier once I realized that being contrarian meant you were just as much controlled by other people as being conformist.

        • ClikeX 1 day ago

          I remember a conspiracy nut telling me "the truth", saying not to believe what the media told me, and do my own research. And then proceeded to point me to a few conspiracy influencers that were telling him what to think. It was very ironic.

        • throw0101c 1 day ago

          > They absolutely conform; by what mechanism do you think they all happened to pick the same bundle of labels and beliefs?

          Are you conforming/obeying when you believe the Earth is round? That the sky is blue? Perhaps a bunch of people picking "the same bundle of labels and beliefs" is… simply them recognizing/accepting reality?

          • the_af 1 day ago

            I don't think it's the same.

            I like to think of these supremacist/racist conspiracy theories as another form of control: in many cases these people are right to be upset, since they see things in the world that are truly unfair, but their anger gets redirected to bizarre beliefs and racism. So it's a way of controlling and channeling their anger to a place where real change becomes impossible, just anger and venting and weird beliefs in secret Jewish/Muslim/Woke/Illuminati cabals running the world.

            Real change is hard, and involves compromise and dealing with people with different ideas and goals. Anger against immigrants, or some ethnic or religious group, is easier.

            • JuniperMesos 1 day ago

              Immigrants are very often people from different ethnic and religious groups than you, who you have to compromise and deal with because they are present in large numbers in your poltical jurisdiction in a way they were not previously. Being angry at them for creating the conditions under which you have to compromise with them is normal.

              • the_af 1 day ago

                It's normal, but misguided to direct your anger at them. It's so normal it's the usual path the frustration is channeled, often with conspiracy theories such as "the replacement" etc.

                Compromising and dealing with people is what life's all about, but it's easier to hate than to build consensus and harmony.

                And of course, some people exploit these misguided tendencies because they want people not to focus on systemic inequalities that are the root of their problems, and instead blame everything on some other group of people that's different from them. Or because fanning the flames works as a ladder for them.

          • feoren 1 day ago

            > Are you conforming/obeying when you believe the Earth is round? That the sky is blue?

            No, I am incorporating multiple different lines of evidence from multiple sources, including my eyes, into a framework of knowledge that I am constantly challenging and questioning, and "the Earth is round" and "the sky is blue" have survived those challenges as good first approximations to the truth. Whereas "Jews control the world" has extremely flimsy evidence, strong counter-evidence, doesn't fit with my understanding of the world, and can be traced as a myth/meme to known bad-faith actors. Which, by the way, is all also true for "vaccines cause autism" and "the earth is flat".

            Not everything is the same.

          • pdonis 1 day ago

            Depends on why you believe those things.

            If you believe the Earth is round because someone you view as an authority told you, and you never asked for any reasons or evidence, then yes, you're conforming/obeying.

            If you believe the Earth is round because you understand the extremely strong evidence we have for that, then no, you're not conforming/obeying.

            > Perhaps a bunch of people picking "the same bundle of labels and beliefs" is… simply them recognizing/accepting reality?

            For something like "the sky is blue", sure--we can confirm it by our own observations and us all using the same word to describe the color we see the sky as being.

            For something like "the Earth is round", it's more complicated, because it's not obvious just from observation, at least not the kind of observation that ordinary people today are going to be making in their daily lives. But if, for example, you have enough experience on oceangoing ships, you're likely to have made observations that were part of what convinced certain ancient Greeks that the Earth was round. Or if you've observed enough lunar eclipses to see how the shape of the Earth's shadow appears on the Moon. Or if you've observed the Sun's angle above the horizon in the sky at enough different latitudes on the summer or winter solstice. But how many people have made those observations? Or understand what they tell us about the shape of the Earth?

            And of course people, even very large numbers of people, can also pick "the same bundle of labels and beliefs" about things that aren't reality. So no, you can't rely on that as an indicator.

    • nraynaud 2 days ago

      I have not clicked, but recently I was suggested a video whose title was more or less: “everybody thinks 1984 agrees with them”.

      • HerbManic 1 day ago

        I do recommend that one. Jacob Geller could talk for 3 hours about impressionist paintings and I guarantee it would be fascinating.

    • MSFT_Edging 2 days ago

      > somehow I don't think that is what Carpenter was going for.

      Same deal with the Starship Troopers movie. When Helldivers first came out, it was really incredible to see how many people truly didn't get the irony.

      • the_af 1 day ago

        > Starship Troopers movie

        This movie is so misunderstood. It's basically disliked by Heinlein fans who took offense, and by people unfamiliar with both Heinlein and Verhoeven who thought it was actually Beverly Hills + Space Fascism without irony.

        I like it for what it does, but I'm more of a fan of Robocop.

        • PaulHoule 1 day ago

          Unfortunately most Heinlein classics like Door into Summer or The Moon is a Harsh Mistress can't be adapted visually for various reasons.

          • the_af 21 hours ago

            I admit to my shame I've never read The Moon is a Harsh Mistress (I know, I know) but I have read Door into Summer and I think it could be easily adapted. I mean, they adapted All You Zombies and that was truly a challenge visually (for reasons I won't spoil here). In comparison, Door is a more straightforward time-loop + betrayal story of the kind that can be adapted to the big screen...

            Edit: unless you're referring to an icky age-related situation, but that could be fixed in the movie adaptation to make it less icky.

            Edit 2: wow, and it was made into a movie... by the Japanese: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Door_into_Summer_(film)

        • Der_Einzige 1 day ago

          Heinlein meant the book literally and not as a farse or satire.

          • the_af 1 day ago

            Yes, that's what I'm meant, I just worded it ambiguously. Let me make it more explicit:

            The movie was disliked by:

            - Fans of Heinlein, who took offense at what they thought was a mocking and misunderstanding of the source material.

            - People unfamiliar with Heinlein, and also with Verhoeven, who failed to understand the movie was satirical and thought it was actually endorsing a weird mix of Beverly Hills 9210 and fascism.

            In case you wonder, I have read Heinlein (not just Starship Troopers) and know what he meant. I also appreciate Verhoeven!

    • ClikeX 1 day ago

      To be fair, some people will always default back to "the Jews" any opportunity they get. That's not specific to this movie.

    • dfxm12 1 day ago

      When you're already promoting baseless conspiracy theories, what's a little more acting in bad faith?

  • Joel_Mckay 2 days ago
  • keybored 2 days ago

    What do they say about those who see through ideology.

deng 2 days ago

Oh the irony: "They Live", a movie famously about alienation and dehumanization, and you let AI do all the coding.

  • xnx 2 days ago

    Interacting with a computer in natural language is much more human than typing in special codes and punctuation.

    • deng 2 days ago

      So telling someone to make a table for you is more human than making it yourself, because you're using natural language instead of saws and hand planes?

      • GCUMstlyHarmls 2 days ago

        I would say yes, conversing between two humans, maybe even collaborating, is more human than a solitary human using inanimate objects.

        • anthk 2 days ago

          Even if the table collapses down badly instead of doing a proper one with a good set of tools?

          • tclancy 1 day ago

            Have you seen me work?

          • spacebacon 1 day ago

            I can't know how To hear anymore about tables

          • HeatrayEnjoyer 1 day ago

            But the extension works, not "collapses down badly."

        • spacebacon 2 days ago

          Basket weaving is more human than conversation. Language is entry level artificial man.

      • gchamonlive 2 days ago

        > telling someone to make a table for you is more human than making it yourself

        That's a bad comparison. You have to compare crafting a table manually to doing it via CNC.

      • ok_dad 1 day ago

        Yes, I build furniture for my wife’s designs. Without her my furniture wouldn’t exist. I’m the LLM in this case, capable of building things but not furniture design.

      • robotresearcher 1 day ago

        Commissioning a craftsman you respect to make custom furniture to your taste and specifications sounds human enough to me.

    • speed_spread 2 days ago

      The human world is full of special codes and obscure gestures that only have meaning if provided in the right sequence to the right people. Computer programming being documented and formalized makes it more accessible than many social circles.

    • sph 2 days ago

      Imagine writing this comment on 2013 Hacker News with a straight face.

  • dang 2 days ago

    What if it wouldn't get done otherwise?

    (Genuine question as we're all trying to figure this shit out)

    • deng 2 days ago

      I think we can agree that this is not something anybody will actually use, but rather an homage to "They Live", and IMHO, letting this be done by AI is in contrast to the basic premise of the movie.

      • dolebirchwood 2 days ago

        That argument could be taken to any extreme at the end of the day. They Live, at its core, is a commentary on unrestrained capitalism. You could fault OP for using a Google browser. You could fault OP for using a Microsoft cloud repository. The line may be blurrier than one thinks...

        • deng 2 days ago

          Any argument can be taken to any extreme. This is why it's a popular rhetorical tactic, called "appeal to extremes".

          • darkwater 2 days ago

            So, why did you use it in this case?

            • deng 2 days ago

              So you consider calling something "ironic" an extreme position? On a more general note, you will find that many people are uncomfortable with the idea that AI will replace human work, especially when it relates to art, which this project in question references.

              • darkwater 2 days ago

                But there are many more tech things we take for granted that could be seen as ironic as well. I think I never saw this movie but being a young adult and an Internet nerd in the late '90s early -00s I remember perfectly how many people were negatively discussing it because it was dehumanizing, destroying personal relationships in flesh and a long etc. And while the future turned out to be not so good as some early adopter thought, it also never turned into something so bleak as detractors said it would.

                And I think the same will apply here, with GenAI.

      • andai 2 days ago

        What's the premise of the movie? I thought it was about psyops.

        (Also interdimensional shapeshifting reptilians.)

      • tokenburner 2 days ago

        The joke wasn't worth 10+ hours manual work

    • d3ng 2 days ago

      I think this is false dichotomy. It's been a while since actually empowering and encouraging humans was considered normal and attempted at scale. But not that long. How quick we forget. I think it's worth getting back to.

    • ori_b 2 days ago

      We'd all be better off for it. I don't want you to take a shit on the table and call it dinner. Even if you don't cook.

      • dang 1 day ago

        That sounds like you're denying that anything valuable can be produced with these tools. That would be an extreme position.

        • ori_b 1 day ago

          When people burn down their neighbor's houses to roast marshmallows, I think that it's worth taking a strong position against them.

          If you listen to what effects the companies building this claim their products will have, you conclude that either they're going much farther than burning a few houses, or they're lying through their teeth. Neither of which lead me to thinking that the harm of empowering them is outweighed by having more low-effort software.

          So, yes. As someone that has to live in the world those assholes are building, they can go fuck themselves. I want nothing to do with their creepy, infantilizing, bleak, dystopian future.

          Maybe that's an extreme position, but I'm very glad I don't have children; I don't think I could look them in the eyes and tell them they had a bright future.

    • tokenburner 2 days ago

      It wouldn't have. I put this off for 11 years, the joke wasn't worth the manual effort required

      AI is amazing at jumping into an unfamiliar codebase, it was probably 20 mins total work

    • thesuitonym 1 day ago

      Why should anybody be interested in using software nobody was interested in making?

      • dang 1 day ago

        By that argument no software would ever exist.

      • tokenburner 1 day ago

        This is the labor theory of value

        Why should anybody be interested in using software nobody was interested in...

        Writing their own assembly for? manually allocating their own memory for?

  • gchamonlive 2 days ago

    Are you writing code in a computer instead of using pen and paper? Preposterous!

  • GroksBarnacles 1 day ago

    People have jobs and lives, let them make things quick with the tools available if its for fun.

  • tclancy 1 day ago

    I once built a Chrome extension to play this audio (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w8itH10OFc8), encoded as base64 in the extension, on certain UI interactions on a sports site. I did it all by my big self. Should I be proud of that? Because I think we both know the answer is no.

dueltmp_yufsy 1 day ago

They Live is such a good metaphor for so much of the modern world. Once you see it, cannot unsee.

akkartik 2 days ago

I never found the Matrix very impressive, because I'd been inoculated by this movie.

  • fedeb95 1 day ago

    they are two very different movies, especially considering all three of the matrix movies.

  • the_af 1 day ago

    Did you watch The Matrix on cinema, without knowing anything about the movie?

    Back when The Matrix first opened, it was still possible to go to the cinema without knowing anything about a movie. I watched it like this and my mind was blown. I thought I was about to watch a techno thriller about a hacker who resisted authority!

    I don't think I would have enjoyed the movie in today's hyperconnected internet culture, where we know what every movie will be about months and sometimes years before release.

    Wait, I'll make an exception: say what you will about The Force Awakens, but I totally thought -- based on the trailers -- that it was going to be about Han Solo and Chewie. When it turned out to be about a new character, Rey, I was completely and pleasantly surprised. Well done, trailer editors!

    • akkartik 1 day ago

      "Did you watch The Matrix on cinema, without knowing anything about the movie?"

      Yeah, that's what I mean. I went in not knowing anything, never having seen any trailers. And halfway through I went, "oh this is They Live, but the skeletons wear sunglasses."

tlhunter 2 days ago

My personal tagline, "I came here to kick ass, build web applications, and chew bubble gum. And I'm all out of gum." came from this movie.

  • DeathArrow 2 days ago

    And Duke Nukem.

    • hnlmorg 2 days ago

      That “kick ass & chew gum” line has been hugely borrowed, reused and parodied many times throughout the following decades since the release of this movie.

      In fact the whole movie is almost a parody of itself now due to how many scenes have since become a meme.

  • sdenton4 2 days ago

    I came here to kick ass and deploy microservices... And I'm all out of ass.

    • GCUMstlyHarmls 2 days ago

      I came here to shitpost and deploy microservices... and github is down.

  • sumtechguy 1 day ago

    I want to see the outtake lines they didnt use. Roddy Piper had tons of one liners he would use for wrestling.

  • ndsipa_pomu 1 day ago

    I came here to drink milk and kick ass... and I've just finished my milk

anthk 2 days ago

UBo Lite pales against the original UBo, it doesn't matter if it's a cool fork.

  • charcircuit 1 day ago

    I don't see ads with ubo lite. From my perspective it does just as good of a job.

Something1234 1 day ago

Waiting for this to show up as a pi hole extension.

khafra 2 days ago

Should be able to use the local LLM to generate a short "They Live" style phrase based on the content of the ad.

  • lproven 1 day ago

    Is the pervasive advertising not bad enough already that you want to waste time and energy inventing fake advertising using plagiarism bots?

    I can't offhand thing of a worse idea in the context.

minisini 2 days ago

I LOVE for someone to make a version of this for Apple Vision Pro. In fact I would put down $500.

  • HerbManic 2 days ago

    If AR ever makes it big, I think we have the first ad blocking idea already fleshed out. Would be kind of fun to see.

  • rickdeckard 2 days ago

    A $500 app for those $1000+ glasses which shuts people off from reality and create the impression for others that they look into their eyes (while in fact looking at a rendering of your eyes).

    There's some irony in here somewhere...

aruametello 1 day ago

perhalps ublock origin could merge this as an easter egg in the config?

(like a very poorly maintained easter egg, not a problem if is broken by something else)

  • shevy-java 1 day ago

    Well - while I like the movie, I'd also not want to see these slogans. I use ublock origin to get rid of unwanted content. I also simplify user interfaces a LOT. My default youtube view I have removed a lot of stuff from (hopefully one day I no longer have to use youtube; I don't want google in my life, but I haven't yet found enough motivation to degoogle my life completely); same with old.reddit.com back when I was still using reddit. So I think your proposal, while not bad in its own right, may not be ideal either - I'd not consider this an easter egg but rather content I'd want to block, so ublock origin would not do its job properly if it were to show this to me (and keep in mind I like They Live).

    I had a similar problem with Nate when he abused all KDE users with his "donate-now-or-else" daemon (https://old.reddit.com/r/kde/comments/1f42sew/kde_is_asking_...).

    I never ever want KDE widgets to pop up and pester me (that does not mean I have anything against donations; I have a lot against people who abuse the user base though, such as pestering them via unwanted pester-widgets. Sadly when you point this out on reddit, you get banned from #kde, same as when you critisize systemd on #linux - reddit censorship is out of hands).

throwaway2037 2 days ago

For any one not familiar with this cult classic film from the 1980s, you can view the trailer here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PeB3vdxF_jM

In short, aliens have invaded earth, but wear a special skin to appear human. To average people, they appear and sound identical to real humans. The lead character discovers that special sunglasses can show the aliens without their human-like skin. (They look a bit like the aliens from "Mars Attacks".) When wearing the sunglasses, most outdoor adverts are replaced with bland single-party-state-style propaganda encouraging people to consume, work hard, and follow the rules.

I can honestly say that the trailer does no justice for the film. It is much better than the trailer. When I saw first saw this, I was genuinedly spooked. One half of the film is good fun 1980s alien invasion beat 'em up, and the other half is a thoughtful commentary on the age of consumerism.

  • euroderf 2 days ago

    I'd say it's got more than a bit of documentary, considering current progress in terraforming.

    • whynotmaybe 2 days ago

      And the massive irony that it the clothing brand "Obey".

    • throwaway2037 1 day ago

      This is a great reply. Not exactly a documentary, but I will grant you "mockumentary" similar to Spinal Tap.

  • yard2010 2 days ago

    There is a good video that this cool philosopher made, I can't remember the name.. zazik?

    Edit: Slavoj Žižek. As always, phenomenal and humble take.

    "I’m already eating from the trashcan all the time, the name of this trashcan is... ideology"

    Slavoj Žižek on "They Live" (The Pervert's Guide to Ideology) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TVwKjGbz60k

    • g6taa 2 days ago

      Slavoj Žižek ?

      • yard2010 1 day ago

        Edit: Slavoj Žižek. As always, phenomenal and humble take.

        "I’m already eating from the trashcan all the time, the name of this trashcan is... ideology"

        Slavoj Žižek on "They Live" (The Pervert's Guide to Ideology) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TVwKjGbz60k

lifeisstillgood 1 day ago

Please add “Chew Bubble Gum” to the ad list …

Love the idea

wowczarek 1 day ago

I came here to chew bubblegum and say this ad revealer is a great idea, and I'm all out of bubblegum.

shevy-java 1 day ago

They Live was such a fun B movie. It is also kind of timeless.

It is far from a perfect or even very good movie, but the key messages are great and simple and the "chew bubblegem" scene is one very actionable scene. Long live Roddy.

specproc 2 days ago

I came here to block ads and chew bubble gum.

  • ZeljkoS 2 days ago

    And I am all out of bubble gum.

desdenova 1 day ago

It's slop though, which is even worse than the ads.

  • moffkalast 1 day ago

    > Each blocked ad gets a single phrase, picked at random from the list.

    The least it could do was classify images to some categories with a small vision model smh. They stopped using AI too soon.

  • matula 1 day ago

    Looking at the code (https://github.com/davmlaw/uBlock/commit/fa2de61ae69927591db...), there's not much I would do differently writing by hand. It breaks some formatting/style conventions from the rest of the file, which I would probably flag in an organizational code review... but otherwise the logic is solid.

    So is this "slop" simply because it's written by an LLM, even if the output is solid? Would it NOT be slop if it was worse code, but written fully manually? Honestly, I'm not sure I know the answer.

iririririr 2 days ago

on the same line, but less pop meme replacements

https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/artificial-cl...

it replaces terms used to exalt Artificial Intelligence to what they really mean, and some tongue in cheek jokes against things that are used to pass billionaires/tech as friendly (e.g. replacing bill gates with his actual name)

  • logicprog 2 days ago

    That's so obnoxiously stupid and annoying, wow.

    • ares623 2 days ago

      That's how most people feel when presented slop btw

      • logicprog 1 day ago

        Well yes, I'm well aware. They're both obnoxiously stupid and annoying, lol.

  • autoexec 2 days ago

    "Automated Incompetence" is probably better than "Artificial Incompetence" since the incompetence is 100% real.

  • desdenova 1 day ago

    A very good alternative to this vibecoded slop.

  • derintegrative 1 day ago

    Caution - At one point I was running a greasemonkey script to replace religious words with funny alternatives. Had a bad time when I installed it and forgot about it and it replaced my manager's first name, Christian, with the funny alternative.