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  • That's not enough support to be able to handle the gun control question. The supreme court is the real key. In theory it should be possible to pass sane gun control laws but over the years the supreme court has bent itself into pretzels trying to interpret any random yahoo with an AR-15 as being a "well-regulated militia."

  • Yup. There are dumps of Reddit's entire archive of comments and posts available via torrent, I suspect the only reason Reddit's getting paid for that stuff right now is that it's a legal ass-covering that's comparatively cheap. Anyone who's a little daring could use it to train an LLM and if they prep the data well enough it'd be hard to even notice.

  • Well, I hope my answer clarifies it. You can't prevent LLMs from being trained on your public posts.

  • If they were GDPR-compliant before, I don't see how they've changed to not be GDPR-compliant now. They allow people to delete their accounts and their posts if they wish, which removes all identifying information from their system.

    Frankly, this looks like just a "I just hate Reddit! There's gotta be something I can hit them with!" flailing attempt to me.

  • I really don't see how it would be physically possible to do that and still allow the content to be publicly seen by other humans.

  • We're sick of closed walled-garden monoliths like Reddit! Let's move to an open federated protocol where anyone can participate and the APIs can't be locked down!

    ...wait, not like that!

    Yeah. This is what you signed up for when you joined the Fediverse, the ActivityPub protocol broadcasts your content to any other servers that ask for it. And just generally, that's how the Internet works. You're putting up a public billboard and expecting to be able to control who gets to look at it. That's not going to work. Even robots.txt is just a gentleman's agreement, it's not enforceable.

    If you really want to prevent AI from training on your content with any degree of certainty you're probably looking for a private forum of some kind that's run by someone you trust.

  • If the anti-human interests do poorly, humanity benefits. You lose your investment, but since humanity benefits that's still overall a good thing.

    If the anti-human interests do well, then your investment portfolio does well too so at least that's a bit of compensation for the fall of humanity.

  • You'd need to gut the car completely and rebuild it, it would be more work than starting from scratch.

  • I say invest in those working against humanity's interests. That way it's win/win - either humanity does well or your investment does well.

  • Can vouch for those, I got a set and they work great.

  • It's a stockpile that explicitly doesn't meet US military standards. It needs to be disposed of anyway.

  • From the article:

    The U.S. Army years ago determined that these DPICMs—produced in large quantities between the 1970s and 1990s—are unreliable and unsafe, as any particular submunition has up to a 14-percent chance of being a dud.

    The Army around 2017 declared a requirement for a new cluster shell with a one-percent dud rate. “Rounds now in the U.S. stockpile do not meet the Office of the Secretary of Defense's goal,” wrote Peter Burke, then the service’s top ammunition manager.

    Their shit is worth nothing. It's not even being manufactured any more.

  • Nah, a future president would give the weapons to Russia and the SCOTUS would rule "it's totally different this time somehow."

  • Social markers are usually not a conscious thing. Once it becomes part of the "this is the way a proper person behaves" ruleset it gets internalized.

  • I'm an opponent of the death penalty in general, but I've always felt that if a state is going to execute someone anyway and I can't stop that then at least they should be using inert gas asphyxiation. Because only a drooling moron could possibly mess that up and cause the process to be painful somehow.

    Alabama once again manages to impress.

  • I've lost track, is AI a good thing today or a bad thing?

  • For reasons I no longer remember, about 14 years ago I stumbled across The Endless Forest. I poked around on the web page a bit, decided it was interesting but not interesting enough to actually install, and moved on. A short while later I saw something on Reddit that I felt like posting a comment on, and so I created an account and this was the first username that popped to mind.

    Quite some time later I got into modding a game called Minetest, and a very common element in its API is the "facedir" of a node - short for facing direction. I had a lot of people assume I'd drawn my name from that, but it was sheer coincidence.

  • You go from zero to Hitler at the drop of a hat.