I found some of my favourite bands by downloading mislabelled songs on limewire.
I found some of my favourite bands by downloading mislabelled songs on limewire.
I think I’ve used Amazon a grand total of twice in my life. Got a cheap knockoff of what I actually ordered both times.
It may prompt people to recognizing things they had glossed over before.
Language learning models are all about identifying patterns in how humans use words and copying them. Thing is that’s also how people tend to do things a lot of the time. If you give the LLM enough tertiary data it may be capable of ‘accidentally’ (read: randomly) outputting things you don’t want people to see.
The actual text used is [::: spoiler spoiler] then [your message] then [:::]. The second “spoiler” can be replaced by whatever word you want.
this
There’s a spoiler button just above the text box.
I can’t wait until people find out that you don’t even need to train it on secrets, for it to “leak” secrets.
I’ve seen a living zombie hoard before, at a dump in Nicaragua where they lived. I was told they got high on sniffing shoe glue, which literally causes the brain to decay while they’re still “alive,” but they just shambled around in a big mob, seemingly aimlessly, with glue smeared under their noses.
And people wonder why there’s so much push back against everything corps/gov does these days. They do not act in a manner which encourages trust.
Copy/paste someone else’s code into your own project then play games/watch anime for a while.
potentially harmful
Oh for fuck sake. No, failing to give a voice to the hypochondriacs who bleat about every medical condition under the sun in any random social media thread isn’t “potentially harmful” by any stretch of the imagination. Frankly, constantly obsessing over such things is itself causing harm.
All of it, because apparently humans were wholly unprepared for using computer technology responsibly.
I can understand what you mean.
I suppose on my end the reason that social media exists was as a forum for open communication with strangers that you would never actually meet in real life, generally to discuss interests and hobbies, or to just shoot the shit. I’ve never viewed it as a platform for replacing the methods we already had for communicating with people we did know in real life, such as phone, or just meeting with them face to face.
It worked pretty well for what it was created to do, then corporations and governments thought they could profit off of it. I assume they were also concerned that people were starting to talk about things they didn’t want people to talk about, like their penchant for buying and selling children.
It’s almost like trying to run the world on social media was a shit tier idea.
Yea, seems like a fun and quirky feature, but unfortunately I don’t think there’s anything big tech companies can do at this point to turn things around with public opinion given how utterly egregious their other sins have been (and continue to be).