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Cake day: June 5th, 2025

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  • From the article: “We found no evidence that red light cameras improve public safety. They don’t reduce the total number of vehicle accidents, the total number of individuals injured in accidents or the total number of incapacitating injuries that involve ambulance transport to a hospital.”

    If you have any research that contradicts it I’m open to reading it but the evidence indicates there are just as many serious accidents.


  • “Evidence clearly shows that camera programs are effective at decreasing the number of vehicles running red lights. In one study in Virginia, red light cameras reduced the number of total drivers running red lights by 67 percent.” Seems pretty effective to me.

    At reducing that one behavior? Sure, but we also have to look at what other impacts it has.

    We could reduce the number of people running red lights by 100% if we removed traffic lights, doesn’t mean it’s a good solution.

    "When the Houston cameras were removed, angle accidents increased by 26 percent. However, all other types of accidents decreased by 18 percent. " So, a net increase in accidents. I can’t make their numbers match up with their conclusion.

    The next sentence is “Approximately one-third of all Houston intersection accidents are angle accidents. This suggests that the program’s drawbacks canceled out its benefits.”

    Say there are 100 accidents, 33 of which are from people running red lights.

    A 26% decrease in red light running accidents results in 9 fewer accidents from running red lights. (.26*33=8.58)

    An 18% increase in other accidents results in 12 more accidents from people slamming on their brakes. (.18*66=11.88)

    So a net increase of 3 accidents.



  • kuhli@lemmy.dbzer0.comtomemes@lemmy.worldPhoto enforcement cameras
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    3 days ago

    American roads are massive and built so you can safely drive way higher than the limit, which means most people do. It sucks and the solution is to design roads better.

    Currently we just have a system where going the speed limit causes backups and people make dangerous maneuvers to get around you.

    Hell, I even got pulled over for ‘impeding the flow of traffic’ once when I was going slightly over the speed limit. Pig just gave me a warning, and I certainly would’ve succeeded in contesting it if he hadn’t, but our whole road infrastructure sucks









  • Stories like this are presented from the POV of the guy, even from that perspective it’s not ‘good’, at best it’s just not ‘bad’

    There’s nothing wrong with asking but also like don’t just drop it out of nowhere.

    Even if the vibes are right, you can’t just walk up to someone, say ‘wanna date?’ and get good results. That’s especially true if you open by saying you were evesdropping.

    Chat with someone for a bit, see if you click before asking them on a date. Even just buy them a drink and give them the option to approach you.

    She was a massive dick, but that doesn’t mean he handled the situation well.





  • Difficulty settings are, first and foremost, accessibility settings.

    I have to disagree with this. Difficulty settings are at best a bandaid solution to accessibility. The vast vast majority of difficulty settings change the overall gameplay experience, games are far too complex for ‘just make it easier’ to be an appropriate approach to accessibility.

    Just reducing enemy health, simplifying enemy ai, etc. can only make a game more accessible as a side effect, it doesn’t address the actual accessibility issues people might have.

    I also don’t think games should have hard modes. They should have exactly 1 difficulty the developers balance around.

    There absolutely should be accessibility options that have the side effect of making the game easier but making the game easier is the wrong approach to make it accessible.

    My suggestion would be stuff like tuning response windows to the results of a reaction time test, aim assist options, visual cues for sound effects, etc. Those make the game easier but do it by addressing a single specific issue, or combination of issues, someone’s dealing with instead of just slapping on a one size fits all solution.