Riskable

Father, Hacker (Information Security Professional), Open Source Software Developer, Inventor, and 3D printing enthusiast

  • 43 Posts
  • 2.27K Comments
Joined 3 years ago
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Cake day: June 23rd, 2023

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  • When incinerated in a waste incineration plant, they release climate-warming CO₂ into the atmosphere. Recycling is therefore the better option: Used plastics provide the raw materials for new ones, closing the loop.

    Bullshit. Studies have shown that recycled plastics generate much more microplastics pollution than original stock.

    There’s more to plastics than just recycling and CO2 emissions.

    This new material needs equivalent microplastics testing before any sort of conclusion can be made about it being better.




  • Mourning doves are dumb as bricks though. We have an open doggy door (had to remove the flap because the chihuahua couldn’t push it open) and every now and again a small bird gets trapped in our patio. It’s almost always a mourning dove.

    Robins, cardinals, orange-beaked birds (forget the name), and boat-tailed grackles can get out pretty fast on their own if I just open a door and shoo them around for a bit. Mourning doves will bloody themselves trying to get out through the screen over and over again until I catch them with my hands (which I’ve done at least six times now).

    They’re a staple food for the ospreys, eagles, red tailed hawks, and cooper’s hawks though. I find bunches of their bloody feathers in the yard all the time 🤷


  • Riskabletolinuxmemes@lemmy.worldTook you a while...
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    1 day ago

    No, it could be true. AI—especially with .NET—tends to generate exceptionally verbose code. Especially if you use “AI best practices” such as telling the AI to ensure 100% code coverage. Then there’s the, “let’s not use any 3rd party libraries, because we are Microsoft” angle.

    .NET is already one of the most absurdly verbose languages (only other widely-used language that’s worse is Java). Copilot could easily push it over the top 🤣

    All it would take would be for Microsoft to have AI rewrite some of the core libraries.



  • Talk about the wrong response!

    If they want people to not look away or do something else while the movie is playing you gotta keep it interesting.

    Ya know, like perhaps making movies that aren’t just rehashes of the same old stories.

    Make movies and shows that keep people on their toes!

    Making a crime drama? Throw in some traveler from the future or a demon or both! Give the judge two heads because of a “merging accident” or something!

    Putting together a horror movie? Throw in some romance among the monsters! Have them feed each other eyeballs or something!

    Making an anime? Try something totally radical! Like a male protagonist with non-dark hair that has a personality, or make a couple—in love—who get stuck somewhere together, alone have actual sex (like normal teens would) or something!

    Making a K-drama? Add a black guy and make him one of the main characters… Haha, just kidding! That would be too radical! That’d be just as extreme as making an anime that covers the time period a few years after “the hero” formed his harem!


  • Note that there’s more than one model to do pixel art and there’s pixel art LoRAs that do a decent job. There’s loads of flexibility when generating this kind of thing.

    Also, you can just tell it to generate a thousand over like 10 minutes and pick the best one and use that as a base to improve upon. AI is just a single tool in the workflow.

    I also want to point out that not everyone can just pay someone. Don’t be paternalistic: If people want to use AI in their workflow for any reason that’s their concern. To angrily throw your hands in the air and say, “I’m not touching it because AI!” is like giving free money to the big publishers.

    You’re setting a completely unnecessary high bar, “you must be this rich to ride.”


  • This is my take at well, but not just for gaming… AI is changing the landscape for all sorts of things. For example, if you wanted a serious, professional grammar, consistency, and similar checks of your novel you had to pay thousands of dollars for a professional editor to go over it.

    Now you can just paste a single chapter at a time into a FREE AI tool and get all that and more.

    Yet here we are: Still seeing grammatical mistakes, copy & paste oversights, and similar in brand new books. It costs nothing! Just use the AI FFS.

    Checking a book with an AI chat bot uses up as much power/water as like 1/100th of streaming a YouTube Short. It’s not a big deal.

    The Nebula Awards recently banned books that used AI for grammar checking. My take: “OK, so only books from big publishers are allowed, then?”






  • unless you consider every single piece of software or code ever to be just “a way of giving instructions to computers”

    Yes. Yes I do. That’s exactly what code is: instructions. That’s literally how computers work. That’s what people like me (software developers) do when we write software: We’re writing down instructions.

    When you click or move your mouse, you’re giving the computer instructions (well, the driver is). When you type a key, that’s resulting in an instruction being executed (dozens to thousands, actually).

    When I click “submit” on this comment, I’m giving a whole bunch of computers some instructions.

    Insert meme of, “you mean computers are just running instructions?” “Always have been.”


  • In Kadrey v. Meta (court case) a group of authors sued Meta/Anthropic for copyright infringement but the case was thrown out by the judge because they couldn’t actually produce any evidence of infringement beyond, “Look! This passage is similar.” They asked for more time so they could keep trying thousands (millions?) of different prompts until they finally got one that matched enough that they might have some real evidence.

    In Getty Images v. Stability AI (UK), the court threw out the case for the same reason: It was determined that even though it was possible to generate an image similar to something owned by Getty, that didn’t meet the legal definition of infringement.

    Basically, the courts ruled in both cases, “AI models are not just lossy/lousy compression.”

    IMHO: What we really need a ruling on is, “who is responsible?” When an AI model does output something that violate someone’s copyright, is it the owner/creator of the model that’s at fault or the person that instructed it to do so? Even then, does generating something for an individual even count as “distribution” under the law? I mean, I don’t think it does because to me that’s just like using a copier to copy a book. Anyone can do that (legally) for any book they own, but if they start selling/distributing that copy, then they’re violating copyright.

    Even then, there’s differences between distributing an AI model that people can use on their PCs (like Stable Diffusion) VS using an AI service to do the same thing. Just because the model can be used for infringement should be meaningless because anything (e.g. a computer, Photoshop, etc) can be used for infringement. The actual act of infringement needs to be something someone does by distributing the work.

    You know what? Copyright law is way too fucking complicated, LOL!