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Joined 6 months ago
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Cake day: January 7th, 2024

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  • If society collapsed, resources required to survive have primary value. Food, water, clothes.

    But the idea of money will still exist. Precious and rare metals will be worth something in a barter economy.

    If you think it would be difficult to defend, you know it would still have value.

    The easiest way to defend it is to keep it secret.

    This is the way the world worked for a long time. That’s why the idea of a treasure map exists.




  • The point is to prove that copyrighted material has been used as training data. As a reference.

    If a human being gets asked to draw the joker, gets a still from the film, then copies it to the best of their ability. They can’t sell that image. Technically speaking they’ve broken the law already by making a copy. Lots of fan art is illegal, it’s just not worth going after (unless you’re Disney or Nintendo).

    As a subscription service that’s what AI is doing. Selling the output.

    Held to the same standards as a human artist, this is illegal.

    If AI is allowed to copy art under copyright, there’s no reason a human shouldn’t be allowed to do the same thing.

    Proving the reference is all important.

    If an AI or human only ever saw public domain artwork and was asked to draw the joker, they might come up with a similar character. But it would be their own creation. There are copyright cases that hinge on proving the reference material. (See Blurred Lines by Robin Thick)

    The New York Times is proving that AI is referencing an image under copyright because it comes out precisely the same. There are no significant changes at all.

    In fact even if you come up with a character with no references. If it’s identical to a pre-existing character the first creator gets to hold copyright on it.

    This is undefendable.

    Even if that AI is a black box we can’t see inside. That black box is definitely breaking the law. There’s just a different way of proving it when the black box is a brain and when the black box is an AI.


  • Exactly.

    People were simultaneously told different things by different people on what would happen of the country voted leave. A lot of it obviously false even at the time.

    People might have known what they were voting for. But what they were voting for had no basis on what the government would actually do.

    Then we had the prime minister who held the referendum resign.

    A new prime minister is chosen in a private election amongst members of the conservative party (about 100,000 votes will do it normally but no one actually runs against them). This becomes a theme.

    There is legislation passed which essentially puts a clock on the process. If nothing passes we’d just revoke laws and break treaties.

    This was meant to scare the EU into giving us what we wanted. The EU was not overly concerned.

    The government put some very shoddy legislation together. We got a pretty poor deal from the EU, well we were pretty desperate.

    The government couldn’t pass that legislation

    We had an election for a new government

    The government lost seats and lost their majority

    The government then joined with a religious extremist party in Northern Ireland to give them a majority.

    The shoddy legislation becomes not only shoddy but also more extreme, It still can’t pass.

    The prime minister is ousted by their own party.

    We get a new prime minister.

    They still haven’t decided on the legislation but they tell everyone what they want to hear.

    We have an election

    The government gets a big working majority

    The shoddy extreme legislation, which we now know from first hand accounts the prime minister didn’t understand, still can’t pass.

    The government literally breaks the law and closes parliament illegally to try and run the clock closer to the point where we take a bonfire to massive ammous of legislation.

    The government are then forced back into the house by the courts

    Eventually at the last moment a deal is passed. It’s really bad for the UK economy, and the UK in general.

    The UK leaves the EU. Northern Ireland doesn’t. Well it sort of does.

    COVID and Another 2 prime ministers later and Brexit deals are still being negotiated.

    Essentially he EU has everything it needs. It’s protected the interests of bordering nations like the Republic of Ireland and France. The UK has increased friction on trade, labour issues.

    The current big issue is that France no longer helps us stop people crossing the channel. That was an EU agreement. So our government, now spends it’s time and energy trying to deport people to Rwanda, breaking the entirely separate European Convention on Human Rights Churchill’s government basically wrote and passed after the second world war.

    It’s worth noting that this government has had a vote share of 36.1% pre referendum in 2015 36.9% post referendum in 2017 42.4% post deadlock in 2019 (with the opposition getting 40%)

    The conservative party got that lock in 2019 on 55% of the seats with 42.4% of the vote

    Since then they’ve rotated people in and out of government to essentially do the bidding of the one who pays the most into their individual campaign funds against each other.

    The government refuse to allow an election even while they’re essentially changing constantly.

    We haven’t really got democracy in this country. We disenfranchise a lot of people through our electoral system by design. We concentrate power to a minority.

    It’s a mess.




  • I don’t connect mine .

    But I wanted a washer dryer that had a heat pump drying system.

    The one I got on sale also had an auto dosing tray for detergent and softener.

    Genuinely very pleased with all the features my “smart appliance” has.

    It uses less power, less water, less detergent. And it weighs and uses humidistats to not over dry my clothes.

    The dumb ones that just work on set timers are less efficient than one measuring the load to decide how much water to use and when it’s dry.

    I suppose I used to eyeball detergent but now a 40 wash bottle lasts me 50 washes.

    Long warranty on it I hope I’ll never have to test. But it’s there.

    To get that I ended up with a WiFi enabled machine and just never put it on a network and turned its own broadcast off.

    I occasionally set a time on it. But genuinely throw in the clothes, push 2 buttons, and walk away.

    Any appliance that can now be a heat pump instead of an element, or actually measures things instead of using timers is a genuine improvement. Even if it’s fairly rudimentary still.

    Not everything is worse if it’s more complicated.



  • All it is is whether a compound word is common enough.

    It starts in speech when the words are repeated next to each other often enough they start being thought of as one word. But can’t be shortened.

    If, in context, every time we said farmer we ended up saying dirt farmer. It would become compound. But in reality we’d just end up saying “farmer” when the context makes it clear. You’ll see this in writing about farming all the time, initially stating the type of farmer then just saying farmer.

    Flag pole started out separately, but in some conversations it would become one object. Every time we talked about the flag pole it would be one word, flagpole. But saying just “pole” would be ambiguous. There are other poles around.

    It trends towards shortness, if context allows us to drop a word altogether we will, if it doesn’t it gets compounded abbreviated.

    No formal rule for this at all, but that’s the way it happens. People try to say things more efficiently without confusing meaning.