According to the South China Morning Post, showing videos to Ding Ding could actually harm his eyesight. Basically, too much screen time might lead to permanent eye damage, which could make life pretty stressful for the chimp. “If a chimp can’t see properly, it can’t interact with humans. And that could make him anxious,” a zoo worker told reporters. “We really don’t want that to happen.”
To get the message across, the zoo has put up a notice outside Ding Ding’s enclosure. It shows a cartoon of the chimp watching a phone with his hands held out and the word “NO” written in big red letters. There are currently no penalties in place but visitors are being urged to respect the rule and not tempt Ding Ding with videos.
Orbot is a free VPN and proxy app that empowers other apps to use the internet more securely. Orbot uses Tor to encrypt your Internet traffic and then hides it by bouncing through a series of computers around the world. Tor is free software and an open network that helps you defend against a form of network surveillance that threatens personal freedom and privacy, confidential business activities and relationships, and state security known as traffic analysis.
Social media erupted with bewildered reactions from attendees. Some praised the band for forcing a conversation about surveillance that most people avoid, while others expressed discomfort with the unexpected data capture.
Unlike typical concert technology that enhances your experience, this facial recognition system explicitly confronted attendees with the reality of data capture. The band made visible what usually happens invisibly—your face being recorded, analyzed, and potentially stored by systems you never explicitly agreed to interact with.
The audience split predictably along ideological lines. Privacy advocates called it a boundary violation disguised as art. Others viewed it as necessary shock therapy for our sleepwalking acceptance of facial recognition in everyday spaces. Both reactions prove the intervention achieved its disruptive goal.
Your relationship with facial recognition technology just got more complicated. Every venue, every event, every public space potentially captures your likeness. Massive Attack simply made the invisible visible—and deeply uncomfortable. The question now isn’t whether this was art or privacy violation, but whether you’re ready to confront how normalized surveillance has become in your daily life.
A severe injury to one of these major arteries can lead to exsanguination, or bleeding to death, within minutes, sometimes as rapidly as one to two minutes for the aorta or carotid artery,
it would be translated to English as "i don't wish you a happy birthday" but "happy birthday" is so common, it is quickly enveloped in "happy birthday", "joyeux anniversaire".
just tried this today, with most of the other foss translators on fDroid. Uninstalled it after it translated one of my test phrases with the exact opposite.
Don't trust it, if you're trying to communicate with somebody who doesn't speak a language you can understand.
do LLModels need to be credited?