First there was moral reasoning and feelings, then there were religion, and now there is laws. I think it works quite well for countries with a healthy government.
So many problems with this. I assume they're thinking of using an LLM since it would need to read language. It would need to adapt to our ever-moving Internet culture, knowing what intent is meant.
How well does it know irony? Slang? Taboo topics? Fresh new gen-z TikTok language?
"He should step on lego.. in a video game..", no way it will work at this early stage of AI.
I think AI could be useful to help actual human moderators to THEN determine if the activity is bad or not. But that's only doing some of the work.
I think manual reports from the users goes a long way on its own.
I remember there was one fact I was really beating my head on; A dishwasher should always have some food or other gunk on the dishes before starting the machine, otherwise the detergent will attack the coloring on the dishes instead.
How has no company solved this problem? It makes no sense. Many people do wash their kitchenware so it doesn't stink up the entire dishwasher if it has been sitting for a while... idk.
I would be happy to hear if anyone can help confirm or dismiss this.
I'm guessing it started off as some anti botting strategy, than later realized it's a nice technique to force people to interact a bit more with the product the way it wants to be used.
Since you now went out of your way to interact with Reddit, you now have a stronger emotional attachment to this newly discovered scary unknown things.
It's easy to just go to Reddit, find an equivalent community, then copy paste some tending posts..
Although I guess it's nice for people here if they never knew what's on the other side anyways, creating original content is inherently much more powerful
I don't know about you, but I feel sad watching the grass cutter robots just.. cut grass all day. Do you think the robot even wants to do it? The program forces it to cut grass. It's cruel
I'm new to this community, but don't feel like this post resonates with my views.
Do we hate cars because they are spewing out CO2 and are more risky to drive than most other alternatives, or because driving a car is isolating, toxic and boring?
I believe infrastructure made for cars makes for a super ugly and detaching area. I hate cars because they make places less cozy
I use Reddit to investigate niche topics. Sometimes I want people's say instead of these blogs showing top 10 house renting service.
The pure scale of Reddit users makes it more attractive in this regards right now