Sounds like typing on a keyboard made of Jujubes.
Sounds like typing on a keyboard made of Jujubes.
… sometimes results in weird behaviors because evolution finds a solution you never thought of, or it finds a solution to a different problem to the one you were trying to get it to find a solution to.
Those outcomes seem especially beneficial.
But it takes ages, …
Is this process something that distributed computing could be leveraged for, akin to SETI@home?
Sorry for hitting you at a vulnerable time.
I’m on MBin. Your username is displayed as: walden. I can mouse over that to learn that your full username is @walden@sub.wetshaving.social.
This is the same thing as email domain names and display names. Yes, scammers still exploit that, too, but for the most part, people have gotten used to also looking at the actual full email address, and not just the display name or mailbox name. The same can happen here.
Still, I would much prefer if the default view here showed the full username and not just the display name.
Again, completely pulled from my ass. Take with a boulder of salt.
You’re under arrest. That’s ass-salt.
“We have noticed that this model hallucinates less,” Tworek says. But the problem still persists. “We can’t say we solved hallucinations.”
On one hand, yeah, AI hallucinations.
On the other hand, have you met people?
Bad actors can afford $50 the same as good ones.
The difference between $0 and $50 isn’t really relevant.
LetsEncrypt is legit. A downside is that the certs expire after 90 days. However, that also carries an upside in that it limits the damage in case a certificate is compromised. There are procedures by which you can automatically renew/request (I forget whether they allow renewing an existing cert or require a brand new one) LE certs and apply them to your application, but that can be fiddly to configure.
If you’re not comfortable with configuring automatic certificate cycling, a long-term paid cert would be more appropriate.
And “WE BUY GOLD!!!*”
*for a fraction of its actual value
I’m sure the ancient Greeks said similar things about their steam pinwheels.
Each is a technology with unique features for its time, and where there aren’t any practical applications initially.
The ancient Greeks invented steam power, but didn’t take it any further than a novelty. That doesn’t make steam power a “scam.”
The technology isn’t, but it can be easily abused by malicious actors, using the exact same methods as shown in Wolf of Wall Street.
Trump pump and dump.
Me either. Good thing I don’t care!
What ads?