Comment Re: Isn't this fraud? (Score 1) 62
"US Copyright Office has recently decided that AI cannot be an author of a creative work"
So if AI is a "co-author", but can't be an author, that just leaves the human as the sole author.
"US Copyright Office has recently decided that AI cannot be an author of a creative work"
So if AI is a "co-author", but can't be an author, that just leaves the human as the sole author.
the only time I like AI is on a search engine in my web browser when it gives a clean & concise answer to my question.
If AI could make accurate TL;DW summaries for videos, then they'd really have something. I hate when I search for something and the only answer happens to be presented in the form of a damn YouTube video.
You jest, but the reason I pulled the trigger on a 15 Pro right after the 16 was announced was because I wasn't interested in my phone having a bunch of useless AI shit. That and the $100 discount that the outgoing model typically gets until stock runs out.
Turned out that Apple's AI features were mostly vaporware anyway. That being said, I'll still happily request my check for what'll probably be like tree fiddy and one of those white Apple decals that they don't give you anymore.
It won't work: Google is a for profit company, and there are A LOT of profits to be made in the made from the military. They will stop operating in the UK before they give up that much money.
DeepMind is the core of Google's AI research, and it began as a UK company that Google purchased. It's still the case that the bulk of their core researchers are there. Ceasing operations in the UK would not only cost them a lot more than the US DoD will ever pay them, it would also cost them a lot of critical AI expertise.
That's kind of the point I was making. You don't see the connection.
I don't either. Can you spell it out?
Yeah, but this isn't analogous to giving a kid one beer, it's more like getting them a fake ID so they can buy their own. One is a one-time event, the other is continual access.
To what, exactly? The answer to that question matters quite a bit.
Crypto grift, AI bubble and psychopathic billionaire CEO.
Or the administration could ask congress to pass a law to this effect. Like we used to do back during normal Republic times. Could have done that with the tariffs and then they'd have been legal.
Tariffs, deportations, attacks on drug boats, wars... almost all of the illegal shit the Trump administration has done could easily have been made legal by the GOP-controlled Congress. Early on in Trump 2.0 I wrote several letters to my very MAGA Senator, Mike Lee, begging him to sponsor and support legislation to do exactly that. Not because I thought the things Trump wanted to do were good but because I saw huge potential harm to the Republic if Congress just allowed the executive to flout the law.
Of course, Lee never responded to me. At all. And never lifted a finger to provide actual authorization for Trump's lawbreaking -- and, of course, Trump never asked the GOP Congress to do it.
The only reasonable conclusion is that Trump and the GOP (and SCOTUS) don't want the president to be constrained by law, and so Trump is deliberately doing all of this without Congressional approval in order to firmly establish the precedent that he doesn't need Congressional approval. He's doing the same thing now with the Iran war, having run out the 60-day clock but refusing even to ask Congress to authorize him to continue. GOP leadership is waffling, making up stuff (not found in the law!) about how the 60-day clock "stops" during a temporary ceasefire.
The truth is that Trump wants to be King, and the GOP wants him to be King. If Mike Johnson and John Thune wanted to, they could make Trump's actions lawful, but they want him to be able to ignore the law.
Microsoft pays its employees so well.
Just like all those other programmers people say deserve their rich salaries.
Yes, but some things are universally inappropriate. The sexualization of minors, letting minors consume things that cause developmental problems, giving adults the opportunity to f-k them...
Sure, and for those really severe issues we draw hard lines in somewhat arbitrary places, based on broad averages. And for some of them we also don't get too aggressive about parents who transgress the rules in small ways -- for example, if you let your 15 year-old son have a beer on a fishing trip you're technically committing a crime but no one is going to prosecute you. The same is true for helping a kid to bypass age checks to access social media or whatever.
The government could, in theory, pay child psychologists, to gather information about the child, perform interviews and analyses and produce a recommendation/strategy...
I cannot think of anything more dystopian.
You lack imagination, then. And, how would this be any different from school counselors and similar who regularly do these same sorts of things, though typically with a focus on education rather than, say, maturity for social media use?
They don't really. Any debris caused by Starlink are likely short lived enough that crap in the orbit will be gone by the time a replacement is launched. Also Starlink doesn't need every orbit to get complete coverage so losing a bunch is meaningless. In fact they lose on average a satellite or two *every single day* without coverage being affected. Literally several hundred satellites deorbit from their constellation every year.
SpaceX could replace them faster than Russia could take them out. That would be a war of launch capacity and cadence, and SpaceX outlaunches the rest of the world combined.
Pascal is not a high-level language. -- Steven Feiner