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567
Joined
3 yr. ago

  • There is also an unreadable (due to compression) watermark under to it, how would I know it is actually an artists signature?I assume then it is, and of an artist you recognize to be credible?

  • Oh you want the code not rendered into html!Drops the code in javascript when it is received from the backend.

  • Ok but has this actually been proposed by an archeologist in accordance with the evidence we have? Is this a possible recreation or has it in effect already been disproven with what we know?

    There's a big difference between "in 2024 an archeologist asked an artist to paint this" and "someone on ticktock ai generated this".

  • 5k/month? That’s a whole lot. Probably not much when you have 100k people, but still.I could easily set up a PB server with raid for half a years worth of that. Throw a second one in for another half a year at a different location, heck add a third. Were is this money going?

  • One time then? There are backup services that actually charge a single amount? An amount that also beats consumer hdds by quite a bit?Do they put it on tape once and store it in some warehouse until you pay to access it?

  • Per year?

  • KDE cursor shake is enabled by default. And an easy to find checkbox in the settings.I don't think most Windows 10 or 11 users look through the old control panel anymore. I have honestly never seen anyone enable the ctrl cursor highlight before, but the cursor shake is enabled on most KDE systems I interact with.

  • genkernel is basically deprecated. You can use distkernel and supply your own config or config mods.

  • Yeah, I would expect it to be hard, similar to asking an llm to substitiute all letters e with an a. Which I'm sure they struggle with but manage to perform it too.

    In this context though it's a bit misleading explaining the observed behavior of op with that though, since it implies it is due to that fundamental nature of llms when in practice all models I have tested fundamentally had the ability.

    It does seem that llms simply don't use double spaces (or I have not noticed them doing it anywhere yet), but if you trained or just systemprompted them differently they could easily start to. So it isn't a very stable method for non-ai identification.

    Edit: And of course you'd have to make sure the interfaces also don't strip double spaces, as was guessed elsewhere. I have not checked other interfaces but would not be surprised either way whether they did or did not. This too thought can't be overly hard to fix with a few select character conversions even in the worst cases. And clearly at least my interface already managed to do it just fine.

  • I'd expect tokenizers to include spaces in tokens. You get words constructed from multiple tokens, so can't really insert spaces based on them. And too much information doesn't work well when spaces are stripped.

    In my tests plenty of llms are also capable of seeing and using double spaces when accessed with the right interface.

  • This seems to match up with some quick tests I did just now, on the pseudonyminized chatbot interface of duckduckgo.chatgpt, llama, and claude all managed to use double spaces themselves, and all but llama managed to tell I was using them too.It might well depend on the platform, with the "native" applications for them stripping them on both ends.

    Mistral seems a bit confused and uses tripple-spaces.

  • That graph does contain bees among wasps.

    To be specific, bees are a "Cladistically included but traditionally excluded taxa" of wasps, since they are within Apocrita.

    The common-language definition of wasp is literally "A member of Apocrita ... except bees (and ants)".It's the same situation as saying a chicken is a dinosaur, and why the field often uses "non-avian dinosaurs" instead for clarity.

    This wikipedia diagram from the Aculeata article is a bit more concise:

    Take now for example Stephanoidea, "a superfamily of parasitic wasps within the Apocrita". Clearly wasps, yet equally closely related to yellow-jackets and honey-bees.

    Edit: mixed up Aculeata and Aulacidae. Edit2:

    If you go further into Apoidae, even there you still find plenty more "clearly wasp" type species:

    Take Sphecidae:

    Or Philanthidae:

    All on the same level as actual bees (Anthophila).

    I think also in terms of vibes it feels right to call bees a subset of wasps.

  • Bees are technically a kind of wasp.

  • Parnets

  • Got Em!

    Jump
  • Export the apk via adb and then install it from the file on future devices?

  • Also the norm tho, afaik

  • My bank had a device that was basically a simple android phone running the 2fa app. The phone app got updated through new versions and eventually got the drm treatment, but the old app keeps working because it is still running on those dedicated 2fa "devices".Naturally the bank is now trying their best to make people deregister the old "devices" and switch to only the "app".

    The old app has no internet permissions. It reads qr from the camera and shows verification as a 6 digit code.The new app has internet permissions and is integrated with other apps so you can conveniently accept the request of your banking app in the 2fa app (on the same phone) with a single tap via an overlay. 2fa.

  • Yeah, on some fundamental level.Most linux distros would be very moddable repairable off-the-shelf cars. LFS would be your diy project with various guides. And gentoo would be a parts garage with their own guides and precompiled kits of components, so you can either follow those sets and build a more off-the-shelf car or diverge at any point for any section and run wild. But also you can still use the machine shop of the store and they offer to custom build some consumables for you and keep shipping them.

  • Personally, if any country's president was to do the same in Finland, I would see that as an actual act of war by his country.

    It was said in the UN, if the UN is controlled by US interests like that it has failed. Both being in UN buildings and travelling to and from them must be protected by diplomatic immunity, else what is even the point of having a UN?

  • That's one transaction per 17 seconds?!

    Should be a lot more, about a transaction every 4s.There is mention that 456 transactions were affected but only 115 invalidated.

    how much did it cost to complete the attack?

    The attack may have been an unexpectedly sucessful malicious mining strategy, so it would be a sideeffect of months of regular malicious pool mining. It would be about as expensive and profitable as regular mining.For half a quarter of the network, the revenue would be on the order of 5 million usd per year, the cost I can't judge.

    Seriously, how is Montero relevant in any way if its performance is so poor?

    That's usage not performance. There aren't any wait-times for transactions and as far as I can see there would be no problem with having 10x or 100x as many transactions if there was demand.