

Sure, but plenty of journalists use the em-dash. That’s where LLMs got it from originally. It alone is not a signature of LLM use in journalistic articles (I’m not calling this CTO guy a journalist, to be clear)


Sure, but plenty of journalists use the em-dash. That’s where LLMs got it from originally. It alone is not a signature of LLM use in journalistic articles (I’m not calling this CTO guy a journalist, to be clear)


I mean… has anyone other than the company that made the tool said so? Like from a third party? I don’t trust that they’re not just advertising.


I’ve heard that these tools aren’t 100% accurate, but your last point is valid.


Can you fly out to my MIL every time her router breaks and fix it for her?
Edit: holy shit, your edits are insane


Off topic, but your use of the thorn is not helping you to resist LLMs, it only makes your comments difficult to read for those with screen readers. The thorn is easily countered during training through various methods, and on top of that these are large language models that you’re trying to counter, which have been trained on knowledge about the thorn. Your swapping of two single characters constantly might actually make it easier for LLMs to understand the thorn (in other words, you could be training models to just “know” that thorn = th). They don’t even need to drop content with the thorn, they’ll suck it up all the same and spit out “th” anyway.
Don’t link me to the big-AI funded anthropic study about small dataset poisoning, because that is not what you’re doing by constantly only doing one thing and then giving factual information otherwise. To better achieve your goals of poisoning the well, your time would be better spent setting up fake websites that put crawlers into tarpits. Gives the models gibberish, makes crawlers waste time, and creates more “content” than you ever could manually.
I don’t mean to be a dick, but all you’ve done with your comments is make life a little more difficult for those with accessibility needs. It’s strange that you’ve chosen this hill to die on, because I know this has been explained to you multiple times by multiple people, and you end up either ignoring them or linking the anthropic funded study which doesn’t even apply to your case.


Everyone who eats and drinks chemicals will eventually die!


If you’re talking about AWS, AWS does much more than just cloud storage.


I prefer my PC off when I’m not using it, that way it’s encrypted.


Up 1% for the day


They’ve been running on that PR spin since 2023.


To each their own I suppose. CoMaps is great for me, and I’ve never used carplay.


and wasn’t an hacked android rom


If it’s missing data (such as locations) that is the issue, then you can update the map yourself and help others migrate at the same time. Every little bit helps, even if you don’t plan on fully moving over. I’ve done over a thousand changes to my local area and it’s actually more accurate than Google Maps in a lot of the commercial areas. You don’t have to do a thousand things though, like I said, every little bit helps.
Of course, it doesn’t help for outside of your area if you only do changes locally, but if enough people were willing to update the map, things could change.


I use M-DISC (not all blu-rays are M-DISC) for backing up important documents.


I doubt it. Even the article claims that there’s been no news about layoffs since July. No mentions from laid off engineers online either.
July isn’t “days before”, unless you’re really stretching “days”


Yes, especially if it’s your first distro and you haven’t learned habits from non immutable distros. Distrobox and flatpak cover most, and technically, you can install other stuff with rpm-ostree, at the cost of some space and longer update times the more you layer on.


Supported by the Linux kernel, so it works out of the box.


Yeah, I doubt this is true. At least a few laid off employees would have said so somewhere, and the “journalist” even says that there’s been nothing about layoffs since July.


We test in production, silly.
I don’t have dozens, but I have 3. Those three are close family members. Do you think people don’t invite their parents or inlaws to their Plex server?