I have had similar thoughts, I think the answer ultimately lies in active mods that can really get to know a community and it's users and identify when users are pushing a narrative even if they can't confirm if they are a bot or not.
Also as @dessalines@lemmy.ml pointed out, user registrations. On startrek.website we have a question that is easy for a star trek fan to answer but not easy for a bot (although getting back to your concern, chatGPT probably would have no problem)
Some more popular games will have mods to make the Xbox buttons look like a DS4s buttons, buuuut if the game studio devs didn't create the assets then they didn't create them.
From the first time I'd heard about this I could not believe this was ever going to get as far as it has, and after watching the trailer I still can't believe it.
I'm with you. Tiktok is about as "healthy" as vaping. There are other just as bad (if not worse) apps out there, and the reasoning is stupid and has some first amendment concerns. But I won't die on the protecting Tiktok hill.
I loved the constant pop-ups with offers for things I could purchase. If I don't purchase something frequently enough I get sad so it's nice to have an OS that cares about my well being.
The cocktails make me think he might be doing a "fuck it" and simply being lazy with shaving. Regardless, it will be funny when he grows a better beard in a single episode.
Interesting take that feels dismissive to me, what about the episode makes you draw that conclusion? It strongly felt to me like her experience was being presented as outside the bounds of what can be measured by science.
I somehow missed that the sitcom idea was anything serious. I'd be surprised if it ever makes it to the finish line, but with Tawny involved that's a promising sign it won't be crap!
I would have probably assumed it was intentionally messing up Ronald D Moore's name and not investigated any further. I love that you know someone on the LDS writer's team was like "We need the name of a funny guy, what was that comedian hologram in TNG??"
I have had similar thoughts, I think the answer ultimately lies in active mods that can really get to know a community and it's users and identify when users are pushing a narrative even if they can't confirm if they are a bot or not.
Also as @dessalines@lemmy.ml pointed out, user registrations. On startrek.website we have a question that is easy for a star trek fan to answer but not easy for a bot (although getting back to your concern, chatGPT probably would have no problem)