Comment Re: WTF? (Score 1) 169
One of those things is a policy you support and are actively defending. I don't know why you are defending it.
You don't know much, do you?
One of those things is a policy you support and are actively defending. I don't know why you are defending it.
You don't know much, do you?
Christians have consciously and unconsciously been wanting to die and they think it "holy" and "god ordained" for them to bring us all down with them. it is rooted in shared religious psychosis on a mass scale.
Also, just to be clear:
I don't give a rat's arse which party you support.
I *do* care about what policies you support.
** uncommon
Maybe not blaming people on a self-help site would have helped them not to radicalize
They self-radicalized long before the word "incel" entered the common parlance. Which is what happens when you create an echo chamber of a bunch of angry lonely men and base post visibility on engagement.
Why do I care what the UN's preferred wording is?
You made a false claim about the origin of the terminology. You should care about being factually accurate.
The correct and proper legal term in the USA is "illegal alien"
It literally is not. That term, while it exists in the US code, is incommon. The most common term in the US code is just "alien", and when specifically discussing the undocumented, "Unauthorized Alien". I didn't include a discussion of US code just so you could pretend it didn't exist.
And I'm sorry if you don't like being called out for wanting cheap, exploitable labor to pick your damn cotton,
I'm struggling to understand what your argument is. You seem to be declaring that any job involving cotton is inherently slavery, even if the people are free to come and go as they choose and are paid for their labour. If that's not your argument, then please clarify, as otherwise, I'm baffled.
Democrats want cheap labor they can exploit.
Democrats (aka, the party that is constantly pushing for bills for higher minimum wages and mandates for better working conditions, while the Republicans do the opposite, pushing deregulation) want above all a regularized system with rules and oversight to prevent abuses. Most also want a path to citizenship for people who work for a given number of years with no criminal record (7 years is a common number suggested, though even decades would be better than "never"), though this is secondary to the primary issue. What Democrats do not want is a masked gestapo kidnapping people who want to be in the US working, from in front of their children, and throwing them into "Alligator Alcatraz".
These things are the exact same thing that the immigrants themselves want. You can't sit here and pretend to be an advocate for immigrants when arguing for policies that they are opposed to and opposing policies that they support.
Which makes them an almost perfect simulation of human intelligence.
Humans aren't infallible, but even pretty stupid people clearly do things when they think that "AI" currently can't. There is at minimum some kind of filtering and going back to the well happening that the LLMs can't manage. I am not ruling out them becoming capable of it in the future, but they are clearly not there now.
Which 2 statement are contradictory? Can you quote them?
That was literally my first reply to you in this thread. Can you read them?
Amazon CEO Wants To Put Ads In Your Alexa+ Conversations
If it's a free to use product the they can knock themselves out, they have to fund it somehow. If it's on a product I paid good money for they can expect two things (1) a class action lawsuit, (2) a whole lot of people will never buy another Amazon product again.
Also, not aware of or don't care how fat they are.
Not all Americans. Just about the same percentage that own iPhones. No correlation there.
Cool, I've found another angry embittered Android user
Not exactly much of a challenge.
True, but I'm collecting the full set, one specimen of each subspecies.
The computer on Star Trek is not intelligent, it's intelligence is simulated.
LLMs aren't even that smart. Their intelligence is imagined.
I used to work at an outfit that had a big conference room, with big beautiful windows, that faced out across an airfield into a wooded area (good hiding places). In order to mitigate such optical surveilance, the windows were equipped with small piezoelectric speakers. Driven with (I'm guessing) white noise.
If I'm understanding the article correctly, the conference room window mitigation wouldn't work against this. It doesn't rely on vibrations of the windows. Instead, you'd just need a piece of paper inside the room, lit by ordinary lamps. As long as the light reflecting off the paper could pass through the windows unmodified (i.e. the windows provide clear visibility) the white noise vibrations of the windows would have no effect.
On the other hand, lightweight curtains that blocked the view through the window would stop this technique, but probably wouldn't significantly reduce what was detectable from a laser bounced off the windows (assuming no white noise).
You didn't read correctly.
I think we're talking past one another. I'll try to be clearer.
I said, that if you think Play is keeping you safe, nobody prevents you from only using *Play*.
Sure, but that's not the point. The point is that Android does prevent most users from using anything other than Play. Not by actually blocking them from using other app stores but by simply not offering the option. And that's a good thing, because most users have no idea how to decide whether or not something is safe.
I think perhaps the confusion here is because you and I are looking at this from different directions. You seem to be looking at it from the perspective of what you or I might want to choose. I'm looking at it from the perspective of an engineer whose job is to keep 3B users safe, most of whom have no idea how to make judgments about what is safe and what isn't. Keeping them within the fenced garden (it's a low fence, but still a fence) allows them to do what they want without taking much risk. The fact that the fence is easily stepped over preserves the freedom of more clueful and/or adventurous users to take greater risks. I think this has been a good balance.
And while you are usually (not sure for all manufacturers) not prevented from using other stores
I'm pretty sure that the ability to allow unknown sources is required by the Android compliance definition document, and that a manufacturer who disables it is not allowed to call their device Android, or to pre-install the Google apps or Play.
Google does a few things to make it uncomfortable. Trusting the store is a one-time thing, but you still have to acknowledge every app install twice and updates require confirming you really want to update the app, while Play can update apps in the background, optionally without even notifying you.
Until Epic decides that they want their store to be able to install and update as seamlessly as Play can, and gets a court to order that. Still, your point is valid, there is still some friction for other stores. Is it enough? I guess we'll find out. Will it be allowed to remain? I guess we'll find that out, too.
So contradicting yourself further is supposed to make it better?
What happened to the deficit under Clinton, who signed a welfare reform bill that made substantive changes?
A computer lets you make more mistakes faster than any other invention, with the possible exceptions of handguns and Tequilla. -- Mitch Ratcliffe