I wasn't doing the whole "self host thing", and just running things as needed, but I still got to a point where I questioned why I needed those for. I basically could do things faster by just manually searching on qBit's external gui attached to Jackett's trackers. The extra *arr step just made it more fiddly to setup, and gave me less control on the output.
Depending on the context they might be right. Like, the internet of the mid and late 2010's was pretty much better than today and we'll never go back to that peak.
There's people who see the world all lowering birth rates and predicting a heavily geriatric global population in 50 years time, and who are already starting the "live life, suicide by 60" death cult mentality. The water wars would just kill even more young people, so I'm afraid this death cult thing is going to be more fact than fiction.
This is actually very accurate. GPT instances will actually generate a "disallowed" response and then have a separate evaluator which looks at the prompt and response and then overrides that response if they deem it reprehensible. (There's also a bunch of pre-prompts as well)
This is why you can sometimes see Bing start to generate a response and then cut himself off and replace it all with the typical "no can do boss".
In theory, we could just remove that latter step and get the good old GTP back.
Took me a while to realize what you meant by that list of games. I thought I was on the piracy community so I was thinking "why would I want to pirate any of those???"
Nah, they don't need to stop this at all. This basically lets people pirate games all they want so long as the devs don't intentionally throw in a game breaking bug on the review version.
This has been the case in Asia for 7 years or more now. Every single photo of a person on a China-bought phone has had a filter you couldn't turn off.