Maybe that's because of much I learned about about color, but I very quickly get to a point where the correct answer can only be 50% blue, 50% green. Answering either blue or green feels wrong to me.
I have a very unscientific feeling that the scientific consensus will probably one day end up being something like:
sun is good for you in moderation, the amount that is ok depends on your skin color, how tanned you get, in which part of the world you are and how often you are outside. Avoid too much sun and avoid sun burns and also avoid crazy strong sunscreens that block the benefits of getting sunlight. The lifestyle that some people have of spending the whole year inside in an office and that spending their all vacations roasting at the beach is very unhealthy because body does not have time to adapt.
It's also known that sun exposure causes the vast majority of visible skin aging.
So I choose to use overkill sunscreen on my face and neck to preserve my youth and balance that out by using no sunscreen on my legs.
In the summer, running around in shorts, I should get plenty of sun.
In the winter, I supplement vitamin D anyway
- We need to control our own destiny and not get locked into a closed vendor.
- We need to protect our data.
- We want to invest in the ecosystem that’s going to be the standard for the long term.
Thank you Meta for being the bright light of ethical guidance for us all.
So we've now learned that copyright is determined by communications protocol. If you're using torrents it's copyright infringement, if it's the web then it's public domain.
Being curious about the world is a good thing. The mental structure I created for myself is that accomplishing things is more important to me than following any of my interests so I focus on the things I really want to accomplish and chaos of interests is the place for play and self-development.
From my experience random good things happen when you can balance things.
"You wouldn't stream a car for free would you?"
This is just playing with meanings but for most musicians having their music on Spotify or on torrents is pretty much the same. the only difference is that only in one case there's a company profiting in the process.
Musicians put their music on Spotify out of their own will. If they don't like it they can withdraw. Unless they sold the rights to a music label, but that's also their decision.