EmbarrassedHelp
EmbarrassedHelp t1_iuich33 wrote
Its interesting that Google Colab also had a similar issue recently where they accidentally banned a ton of users. I wonder what's happening on the backend that's causing these issues?
EmbarrassedHelp t1_iuic5wo wrote
Reply to comment by sweetblerd in Instagram Is Having Issues, Some Users Claim Suspensions by NBAtee
Honestly I'd prefer they target the bot accounts trying to scam people in the comments instead of sex workers
EmbarrassedHelp t1_iugamas wrote
Reply to comment by chronoistriggered in Richard Branson declines invitation to debate death penalty with Shanmugam, says TV format 'turns serious debate into spectacle' by chronoistriggered
> lol just how many different ways do u need to change the yardsticks.
> this is the absurd quality of reddit discussions
Absurdity? You literally implied that Singapore should just brutally slaughter everyone in government.
I said that Singapore was behind a good portion of the world on the issue of making same-sex sexual activity legal, after you tried to use it as example of Singapore's system working effectively.
EmbarrassedHelp t1_iug9c11 wrote
Reply to comment by chronoistriggered in Richard Branson declines invitation to debate death penalty with Shanmugam, says TV format 'turns serious debate into spectacle' by chronoistriggered
> Singapore just repealed buttsex law because of increased pressure from citizens.
Well we should consider welcoming them to the 21st century then for doing the bare minimum at a snail's pace.
> Even in a dictatorship/monarchy, citizens can change things if they are really motivated. Ever heard of the French Revolution.
The French Revolution involved purging society of royalty and those supporting it. Singapore isn't going to do that anytime soon.
EmbarrassedHelp t1_iug88m2 wrote
Reply to comment by tr3v1n in Richard Branson declines invitation to debate death penalty with Shanmugam, says TV format 'turns serious debate into spectacle' by chronoistriggered
Its crazy to see people cheering for Disneyland with a Death Penalty
EmbarrassedHelp t1_iug7vj4 wrote
Reply to comment by chronoistriggered in Richard Branson declines invitation to debate death penalty with Shanmugam, says TV format 'turns serious debate into spectacle' by chronoistriggered
Singapore is a civilian dictatorship though, so its not like the citizens have a chance at influencing the leadership's opinion on the death penalty.
EmbarrassedHelp t1_iuf1q6j wrote
Reply to Online age-verification system could create ‘honeypot’ of personal data and pornography-viewing habits, privacy groups warn by Lakerlion
> Other groups have called for an effective ban on online pornography. Anti-porn group Collective Shout called for all pornography to be treated under the same classification as child sexual abuse material or terrorism material, which would be required to be removed or blocked in Australia.
Its no surprise that the groups pushing for this massive privacy invasion are batshit insane.
EmbarrassedHelp t1_iu2ly2w wrote
Reply to comment by groveborn in FBI probing ex-CIA officer's spying for World Cup host Qatar by redemption_time
Some of these ex intelligence officers are using their skills to attack citizens of the US and its allies. For example: https://www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/usa-spying-raven/
> he had joined Project Raven, a clandestine team that included more than a dozen former U.S. intelligence operatives recruited to help the United Arab Emirates engage in surveillance of other governments, militants and human rights activists critical of the monarchy.
> Stroud and her team, working from a converted mansion in Abu Dhabi known internally as “the Villa,” would use methods learned from a decade in the U.S intelligence community to help the UAE hack into the phones and computers of its enemies.
> “I am working for a foreign intelligence agency who is targeting U.S. persons,” she told Reuters. “I am officially the bad kind of spy.”
EmbarrassedHelp t1_itzndwr wrote
> OnlyFans is not alone in taking steps to address online safety. The government's long-delayed online safety bill proposes heavy fines for websites failing to protect children.
This news article is promoting the absolutely horrendous clusterfuck that is the "Online Safety"
> The NSPCC said neither the current regulation nor the planned legislation go far enough.
And these idiots want the legislation to be made even worse.
EmbarrassedHelp t1_itxg3z9 wrote
Reply to comment by A_Vandalay in US Space Systems debriefs Jeff Bezos and Blue Origin executives on military space weapon applications and opportunities by upyoars
Their engineers didn't come up with a rocket design that could operate in the dark, and they got upset at NASA for it. PR-wise they have a lot of work to do lol
EmbarrassedHelp t1_itt524o wrote
Reply to comment by MaverickMeerkatUK in TIL that flight recorders must be able to withstand an acceleration of 3400 g for 6.5 milliseconds and that this is roughly equivalent to an impact velocity of 270 knots (310 mph; 500 km/h). by IchBinKoloss
Probably goes a bit faster than that when nosediving into the ground
EmbarrassedHelp t1_itt4qhb wrote
Reply to comment by shingofan in TIL that flight recorders must be able to withstand an acceleration of 3400 g for 6.5 milliseconds and that this is roughly equivalent to an impact velocity of 270 knots (310 mph; 500 km/h). by IchBinKoloss
That can be solved up until a certain point by submerging everyone in liquid and forcing them to breath liquid oxygen. We'll also have to inject liquid into their body cavities as well.
https://space.stackexchange.com/questions/5635/max-g-survivable-suspended-in-water
EmbarrassedHelp t1_itt4c1x wrote
Reply to comment by EndlessEmergency in TIL that flight recorders must be able to withstand an acceleration of 3400 g for 6.5 milliseconds and that this is roughly equivalent to an impact velocity of 270 knots (310 mph; 500 km/h). by IchBinKoloss
> Granted, crashing full speed into a vertical granite cliff might exceed those specs, but that's an edge case and we'll put it in the training docs that doing so is ill-advised.
We should setup a remote control passenger plane filled with crash test dummies to test this, to see if it does exceed the limits of the black box.
EmbarrassedHelp t1_itseet5 wrote
Reply to comment by WhatTheZuck420 in How Google’s former CEO Eric Schmidt helped write A.I. laws in Washington without publicly disclosing investments in A.I. startups by ChocolateTsar
> so don't elect morons.
If it only it were that simple and easy lol
EmbarrassedHelp t1_itobof4 wrote
Reply to comment by JesusLiberty in How Google’s former CEO Eric Schmidt helped write A.I. laws in Washington without publicly disclosing investments in A.I. startups by ChocolateTsar
Congress already has completely uneducated people like Anna Eshoo leading the charge on terrible ideas about AI. So, clearly he and rational experts have less control than most people thing.
EmbarrassedHelp t1_itob4ht wrote
Reply to comment by Zeppo_Ennui in How Google’s former CEO Eric Schmidt helped write A.I. laws in Washington without publicly disclosing investments in A.I. startups by ChocolateTsar
Its politics, so I'm going to say probably no. Especially with that idiot Congresswoman Anna Eshoo attacking open source AI research, and yet somehow she on the congressional AI group.
EmbarrassedHelp t1_itoavf1 wrote
Reply to comment by Ok-Relationship771 in How Google’s former CEO Eric Schmidt helped write A.I. laws in Washington without publicly disclosing investments in A.I. startups by ChocolateTsar
I'm wonder what sort of legislation and regulation he helped pass? I imagine that most large industries have people like that in governments.
EmbarrassedHelp t1_itgjhhu wrote
Reply to comment by reconRyan in EU Lawmakers Must Reject This Proposal To Scan Private Chats by pfaccioxx
The EU is being targeted by Ashton Kutcher and his Thorn organization because of its status as a global regulator. So, you aren't safe from this bullshit if you live outside the EU.
EmbarrassedHelp t1_isp0hol wrote
Reply to comment by glenn-jocher in [D] Now that Colab has introduced "compute units". Which are the best free/cheap alternatives? by zuccoff
Kaggle's free tier seems to give more GPU time than Colab Pro right now
EmbarrassedHelp t1_ismn0ph wrote
Reply to comment by coffeeandtrout in In a novel experiment, brain-like human tissue implanted in rat brains influenced the rodents' behavior by le75
I wonder if you could slowly replace a living person's brain with newly grown cells to combat aging with this idea?
EmbarrassedHelp t1_isgoo3p wrote
They are still being used to correct faces and other issues with diffusion model outputs
EmbarrassedHelp t1_is8kugw wrote
Reply to comment by MitsyEyedMourning in Feds: Ex Louisville Police Officer Used Law Enforcement Tech To Help Hack Sexually Explicit Photos From Women by FuegoFerdinand
This is also one of the reasons why police cannot be trusted with encryption backdoors either.
EmbarrassedHelp t1_ircm1je wrote
Reply to comment by IanMazgelis in [R] Google announces Imagen Video, a model that generates videos from text by Erosis
Its certainly harder to trust closed source implementations can do what they claim to do
EmbarrassedHelp t1_ir6q39f wrote
Reply to [R] Google Colab alternative by Zatania
Even with Colab Pro, you are going to run out of GPU time really quickly. Kaggle's free tier for example gives you more GPU time than Colab Pro does at the moment.
EmbarrassedHelp t1_iujv16x wrote
Reply to my female cousin got a new handsome, tall boyfriend and my mom is sad that my boyfriend doesn’t compare by RemoteAnything1265
She needs therapy