Eranziel

@Eranziel@lemmy.world
0 Post – 44 Comments
Joined 1 years ago

No, close the lid because that's how you avoid coating everything in the room with a film of urine and feces. Open toilets are disgusting.

It's broken now? I'd say that's a bold assumption that it ever worked in the first place.

Edit: to be clear, I mean that it is and always has been an impossible problem. The only reason it ever worked is because some broker company wanted it as a feature, not because anything compelled them to give original artists a cut. And that's before you consider the question, "but how do you know the NFT was made by the original artist?"

The issue with "Human jobs will be replaced" is that society still requires humans to have a paying job to survive.

I would love a world where nobody had to do dumb labour anymore, and everyone's needs are still met.

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Libre Office

He can give himself whatever titles he likes, that doesn't mean he makes any positive technical contribution.

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Lol, then they would have to demonstrate that there were damages. The worst a TOS violation will get you is a ban.

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You can very safely remove the "probably" from your first sentence.

It's not infantilization. These bills are designed to prevent "one more hoop" design by the company to make it too annoying to unsubscribe. Your position assumes good faith behaviour by the company with the newsletter. That is absolutely not a given.

Yeah, exactly. The issue is precisely that it's NOT just showing search results. MS's software is generating libelous material and presenting it as fact.

Air Canada was forced to give a customer the compensation its chat bot made up. Germany/Europe in general is a bit stronger on public protections than Canada, so I'd expect MS would be held liable if this journalist decides to press a suit.

I think OP is conflating the amount that a YT channel sees per ad vs the amount that YT would keep. These are not the same thing.

Plus, YT gets their share of every single ad seen every day. The economy of scale obviously is paying off.

It's more because of the temperature differential. The more difference between the temperature of two objects, the faster they change temperature. A radiator with 50 degree water is ~30 degrees warmer than the room (or 80+ degrees for a steam rad), while cold water is going to be 10-15 degrees cooler than the room. Any colder and you need to use not-water so it doesn't freeze. Condensation or frost is also a big concern to avoid property damage.

NFTs do not solve the problem of proof of ownership. Nor can they. If someone steals it from you - whether by trickery, force, or any other means - it's just as lost to you as any other stolen thing, digital or physical. (Not to touch on the fact that NFTs to date have just been URLs to web hosted media, i.e. ridiculously non-unique and insecure.)

Also, your whole paragraph about theoretical NFT replacement for DRM is just describing a different kind of DRM.

Your former coworkers are incredibly lucky that after showing management how to turn 80h/week into 4h/week, they didn't keep the automation train going. Because the very next thing they would do is lay off 90% of the staff and make the remainder still work full time.

Automation should do what you did - give people more time off. Just about every corp uses it to minimize labour costs, though.

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I mean, there is a hard limit on how much info your brain can take in. It's time. Every hour spent learning one thing is an hour not spent learning everything else.

In other words, AGI is what every layperson thinks of when people talk about AI. It's (sort of) what you see in the movies.

LLMs, and every other AI technology we currently have, do not actually have any form of intelligence. They're called AI because the sub-field of computer science that they arose from is called AI, and has been for decades.

"Strategy" implies he actually thinks about it. I think it's just a reflex; fault belongs elsewhere, always. The man is incapable of critical thought, especially inward.

Yeah, this. I'm certain there do exist people in this world who have a chart like this. Probably they just happen to enough sense to not post the chart online, or are too obscure for theirs to become the meme.

Same. As it should be.

"Just stop considering it scandalous" is a severe lack of imagination. Even if/when the stigma of "having a sex life" is gone, the great majority of people consider their sex life to be private. Video floating around that looks like you having sex is a very different thing to hearsay rumors.

Keep in mind that the exact same techniques could be used to sabotage adult relationships, marriages, careers, just as easily as teenage bullying. This isn't a problem society can shrug away by saying sex should be less stigmatized.

You are making it far simpler than it actually is. Recognizing what a thing is is the essential first problem. Is that a child, a ball, a goose, a pothole, or a shadow that the cameras see? It would be absurd and an absolute show stopper if the car stopped for dark shadows.

We take for granted the vast amount that the human brain does in this problem space. The system has to identify and categorize what it's seeing, otherwise it's useless.

That leads to my actual opinion on the technology, which is that it's going to be nearly impossible to have fully autonomous cars on roads as we know them. It's fine if everything is normal, which is most of the time. But software can't recognize and correctly react to the thousands of novel situations that can happen.

They should be automating trains instead. (Oh wait, we pretty much did that already.)

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This. Satire would be writing the article in the voice of the most vapid executive saying they need to abandon fundamentals and turn exclusively to AI.

However, that would be indistinguishable from our current reality, which would make it poor satire.

Meanwhile the C-suite are getting record compensation and stock buybacks. There is no "budget shortfall", it's just typical greed at the top that's hoping the rank and file will swallow it.

I don't know about the regulatory side, but Boeing gutted their experienced engineering corps starting about 10 years ago. In the pursuit of profit of course. I think we're seeing the effects of that finally coming to the fore.

My understanding of the role of the regulatory agencies for stuff like this is that they can ground a model of plane if they believe there's a systemic issue. Like we saw with the MAX.

Bullshit generator generating bullshit, news at 11.

There is no way that arming Taiwan results in Taiwan starting a war of aggression against China.

What arming Taiwan does is make it an increasingly bad idea for China to invade Taiwan. It's a deterrent to make sure the nuclear power who constantly threatens Taiwan (read: China) doesn't think they can just go and take what they want without consequence, and probably commit a little genocide on the side.

You know, like Ukraine.

I kind of disagree with you, in that when I think about the standalone meanings of the words in each phrase, I think they do say the same thing.

The meaning of the words "You are welcome [to the help I gave you]" implies, to me, that there wasn't actually anything to offer thanks over. You're acknowledging their thanks, but telling them that they are welcome to take/use whatever it is you're talking about. [EDIT: normally when someone tells me I'm welcome to something, I feel less compelled to ask and thank in the future. "You're welcome to anything in the fridge", for example.]

It does not imply, to me, that I would appreciate them returning the favour. That might be implied meaning in the phrase, but it's definitely not what those words mean by themselves.

In any case, "You're welcome", "no problem", "no worries", etc... are all idioms that mean something different than what their individual words mean. The phrases as a whole carry a different meaning than the words themselves suggest.

The fundamental difference is that the AI doesn't know anything. It isn't capable of understanding, it doesn't learn in the same sense that humans learn. A LLM is a (complex!) digital machine that guesses the next most likely word based on essentially statistics, nothing more, nothing less.

It doesn't know what it's saying, nor does it understand the subject matter, or what a human is, or what a hallucination is or why it has them. They are fundamentally incapable of even perceiving the problem, because they do not perceive anything aside from text in and text out.

Came here for this, thank you for your service.

That analogy relies on the reader having any idea what wire EDM manufacturing is. ;) Not exactly an everyday topic.

"Sealed" is also a vague suggestion with HVAC. Every ducting join, every piece of equipment, all of it leaks. I shudder to think how much heating/cooling is wasted that way.

My guess is that your name is so poorly represented in the training data that it just picked the most common kind of job history that is represented.

I agree that LIDAR or radar are better solutions than image recognition. I mean, that's literally what those technologies are for.

But even then, that's not enough. LIDAR/radar can't help it identify its lane in inclement weather, drive well on gravel, and so on. These are the kinds of problems where automakers severely downplay the difficulty of the problem and just how much a human driver does.

That attitude is a one way street to genocide. I recommend you rethink it.

I don't disagree that the people with money who are funding this kind of development don't care about regulations or safety.

That said, the idea that they'll do it out on the open sea or in space are absolutely laughable. Those ideas pitched so far completely ignore all the obvious engineering problems. Not to mention that going to international waters to avoid regulations means that the navy of that country you're thumbing your nose at now has free reign on you.

Iron would be a terrible metal for coinage, since it would shed rust all over everything after being handled. Some coins might be cast from iron (if it's cheaper than alternatives, idk) but plated in other metals to prevent that.

If an LLM had to say "I don't know" when it doesn't know, that's all it would be allowed to say! They literally don't know anything. They don't even know what knowing means. They are complex (and impressive, admittedly) text generators.

What part of "we paid these guys and they said we're fine" do you not? Why would they choose and pay and release the results from a company they didn't trust to clear them?

I'm not saying it's rotten, but the fact that the third party was unilaterally chosen by and paid for LMG makes all the results pretty questionable.

Yeah, 100%. This is the town's fault IMO - not maintaining the markings in the first place (it's not the contractor's fault that the old marking is non-existent), and then probably refusing to pay the contractor "extra" to repaint the whole thing.

I think most people with critical thought realize that's the true intent. But the mask-on justification is to prevent campaigning at the polling line.

Agreed. Don't make a threat - just make the GDPR complaint. Inform the company if you want. How many times have you remembered to follow up on one of those threats to see if you should still make a complaint?