Lets you turn it off for good…until Google removes that feature
Lets you turn it off for good…until Google removes that feature
Circulators have already existed for quite while for electromagnetic waves. Maybe some of the ideas here can be used to improve them though?
Sounds like a bad thing tbh.
It’ll heat the planet up a lot more too if it scales up
In my opinion, yes. If it has telltale signs of being AI generated, it’s garbage.
I guess they did bother to create something, although with minimum effort. It comes across as insincere most of the time.
Now ppl just need to jam the controller/video frequencies it uses to counter it.
Disclaimer: don’t do this unless you want the FCC knocking on your door too
Looks like a new CVE dropped lol
Interesting experiment, but I’d rather have a personal machine that isnt completely useless when/if the internet goes out. Also would be nice not to depend on a centralized service that could easily revoke access.
Seems like it’s better suited for company work computers.
No it won’t, but maybe it will make unit tests easier to write.
Yup. I need to remember to block that whole domain next time it pops up in my feed.
The data protection laws are good, but a lot of the other bills for banning dark patterns and other annoying “features” sound difficult to enforce
Let’s hope nobody gets left on read
That’s true, but no way for us to know that these companies aren’t storing queries in plaintext on their end (although they would run out of space pretty fast if they did that)
I think they mean that a lot of careless people will give the AIs personally identifiable information or other sensitive information. Privacy and security are often breached due to human error, one way or another.
You’re probably right. I bet they’ll try to make all the profit they can on the game in its unfinished state until they can’t anymore.
I hope they open-source the game, rather than abandon it.
Apparently the warrant was served only after an discovering evidence from an unrelated (or semi-related?) arrest? The article didn’t specify if his ransomware worked, but I doubt it did if it was mostly GPT-generated. I guess the intention and confession is enough to make charges stick though. Wouldn’t be surprised if whatever GPT service he used also flagged him as suspicious and led authorities to him.
Delay, deny, …distract?