There’s more to Palestine than Gaza, so while your 3rd sentence is very much true and more central to the issue at hand, the first one is quite incorrect and might lead people to forget about Abbas/Fatah.
There’s more to Palestine than Gaza, so while your 3rd sentence is very much true and more central to the issue at hand, the first one is quite incorrect and might lead people to forget about Abbas/Fatah.
The utility is sufficiently explained by the fact that diligently denying things creates the impression that not denying things means that it’s true.
Strictly speaking, information technology encompasses software dev as a subfield. Practically, a large software development at a company has very different needs and strategic goals than what people usually understand as the “IT guys” so what you mentioned. So they are set up accordingly in an organisation.
Had the same situation.
At some point I just got used to enough of it that it’s quite functional.
I wish I could change some of the defaults, but for editing it fulfills most of my needs.
Boy, Oxo has has a terrible website. Decline their tracking and it gets stuck “Processing request” while blocking the whole page. Accept and it’s immediately usable.
For the FP4 they said one of the reasons they remove the aux input was that more people asked them to reduce the size of their phone than to keep the input.
There are approaches to delete topics from the trained model, so not sure this will keep them busy for that long.
Is being able to afford these things really not affecting anything?
Especially the pet sounds like quite a difference to me.
If the microchip just contains a unique serial ID you can check with the producer, it would be just as easy to print it in the casing or glue it to the side of the wheel, no need to implant it in the outermost layer of cheese.
I’ll have a much easier time replacing a passport compared to various certifications, people regularly lose their passport and there is a cost associated of 60 Euros.
The imminent threat of an invasion (assembled in staging area and ready to go) could have been tried before. It would have been very costly, but would have been necessary anyway for an actual invasion if the nuclear bombs didn’t cause a surrender (there was a coup attempt to prevent it, so it was never a sure thing even with the bombs).
I would experience negative emotions about Lemmy/k in if I found a reddit thread describing my problem and the lauded solution was changed to say the user moved there. It would not make me want to switch.
The police officers committed these acts while they were still in training as part of their dual bachelor’s degree.
Yet this is better than the alternative, it’s easier to get rid of them at the earlier stage.
If companies go pick the most professional applicant by their photo that is a reason for concern, but it has little to do with the image training data of AI.
Hopefully someone or some group didn’t kidnap her to force her to work as a nurse for them.
That does sound like one of the better scenarios to me.
I do think you have a point here, but I don’t agree with the example. If a fan creates the 1001 fan painting after looking at others, that might be quite similar if they miss the artistic quality to express their unique views. And it also competes with their source, yet it’s generally accepted.
The memorization is closer to that of a fanatic fan of the author. It usually knows the beginning of the book and the more well known passages, but not entire longer works.
By now, ChatGPT is trying to refuse to output copyrighted materials know even where it could, and though it can be tricked, they appear to have implemented a hard filter for some more well known passages, which stops generation a few words in.
Not really that big of a factor, German car owners will not drive around with flat tires if they notice, which is likely rather soon.
So what? It’s not the gotcha you apparently believe to have found, companies can have insurance…
Something like this?
https://www.technologyreview.com/2023/10/23/1082189/data-poisoning-artists-fight-generative-ai/