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2 yr. ago

  • And in addition to them backfeeding into the grid , they bypass all the fuses and GFCI protections your house might have and effectively require the use of a suicide cord. That part of a plug should never be providing power, only using it.

  • "It's part of the history of the field of artificial intelligence that every time somebody figured out how to make a computer do something—play good checkers, solve simple but relatively informal problems—there was a chorus of critics to say, 'that's not thinking'"
    -Pamela McCorduck

    "AI is whatever hasn't been done yet."
    - Larry Tesler

    That's the curse of the AI Effect.
    Nothing will ever be "an actual AI" until we cross the barrier to an actual human-like general artificial intelligence like Cortana from Halo, and even then people will claim it isn't actually intelligent.

  • Kinda depends a bit on how and why the war ends, doesn't it? Because it's also possible that it does so only once/because Russia stops being a threat.
    Unless it "ends" just so we can get Ukraine War 2 Electric Boogaloo in a few years when they decide otherwise.

    Or with the Crimea thing and all, would that be The Ukraine War: Revolutions already?

  • Which is a nice change, usually every alternative starts up exactly because the worst of the worst got banned from the original and had to migrate to somewhere else, and then it's an uphill battle for anyone else to make use of that platform.

    *cough* Lemmy *cough*.

  • Are there even any payment processors they can use for that? I remember it being an issue when the sanctions hit.

  • They are based on the comments the creator has left before instead of being a generic output from an LLM based on the message it is replying. So they are your comments, but with AI "enhancements", instead of it just suggesting you directly copy-paste some old comment. But at the end of it obviously they are AI generated, that's how the tech works.

  • Huh, apparently yeah, Ryzen processors should have it. I'm guessing it's disabled by default then. ...or my bios being from 2019 might also have something to do with it :p

  • Anything without a TPM 2.0 module on the motherboard. For example the Lenovo T470 from 2017 doesn't have it. There are zero other reasons why it, and countless systems around that age and even older, couldn't run Win 11.
    And anything made before October 2014 definitely doesn't have one, as that is when TPM 2.0 was released in the first place.

    [EDIT] Also my gaming PC from 2020 doesn't currently support Windows 11, because the Asus Prime X570-P motherboard from 2019 doesn't have one either - it just has a header I could buy (~$20) and slot one in. Scratch that, apparently it does have fTPM support (with a newer bios?).

  • If the government spills this persons blood on the street, what do you get? The only thing that happens is that the punishment for fraud is now death.

    For this single case in an isolated vacuum, sure.

    Outside that you'd get no more fraud, and no more future fraud victims, because the punishment for it wouldn't be worth the risk for anyone to try.
    Like I said, if the punishment for a parking violation was death, every single driver would make damn sure they would never, ever get one. Apply that for every "deliberate" crime and you end up with a society with essentially zero crime.
    Also a lot fewer people alive, but zero crime.

    Where the line goes is completely up to the justice system, how badly they want to prevent that type of crime, as it goes with every crime and punishment.

  • How does putting someone in jail or having them pay a fine to the government help "make the victims whole" any more than the death sentence would? If that was the point of the justice system, we would only have payments of wealth or services from criminals to victims and nothing else. In fact, I can think of quite a few crimes where the victims would love nothing more than the permission get to kill the criminal themselves in the most painful way possible.

    The number one priority of a justice system is to prevent crimes from happening in the first place - a task it has to constantly balance with freedom and human rights as the ultimate solution is to get rid of all criminals - and the more it wants to prevent a certain type of crime, the harsher the punishment for it should be. But as I said, usually the death penalty is used for crimes done by people who aren't thinking about the consequences.

    If you use it as the threat for financial crime, soon you will have no more victims of financial crime, as the criminals are all either dead or too afraid to do it.

    Should it be used, for that or in the first place, that's a completely different argument all together.

  • It doesn't act as a deterrent due to the crimes it's used as a punishment for - no punishment stops a mentally Ill serial killer, someone in mindless rage acting on impulse, or someone who is certain they will never get caught. The studies all agree with that.

    But if you would get sentences to life in prison or death from a parking violation or not paying your taxes, there would be zero people doing them as both are conscious actions, and definitely not worth the risk.

  • True. But it shouldn't be. At all.

    Bottling, shipping and stocking hundreds and hundreds of bottles of soft drinks that are 98% just water on the store shelf costs a hell of a lot more than putting a hundredth of the amount of syrup in a small bag and selling that. A sachet of sugar-free cola syrup would be smaller than a McDonald's ketchup pouch, and cost a few cents.

  • The Deck triggers don't have a physical switch at the end, but Steam Input does have soft pull and full pull mappings as well as settings to change when and how they activate.

  • So Musk wants to take it to court that no accounts on X can be run by a team, only the person who made them, and they can't be transferred.

    I wonder who owns @/POTUS then, some random whitehouse intern from almost two decades ago? What about @/Tesla and @/SpaceX, has he received written permission for them :) ?

  • Not quite the same, but Finland will put you in jail for six months if you refuse your mandatory military/civilian service. Though technically speaking you are just doing your civilian service by sitting in jail instead at that point.

    To avoid that you need to have a valid medical condition that prohibits you from serving. Being too obese is one of them.

  • There have been at least five major mass extinction events in the history of this planet. What will be after us in the future won't look like it does right now, but right now doesn't look anything like it did before any of those five events either.
    As the saying goes, life finds a way. We just won't be around to witness it.

  • General Artificial Intelligence doesn't exist - we don't have HAL9000 or Terminator or Cortana yet.

    But up to that point, and almost certainly even past it, the AI effect means the more sophisticated AI things become, the more people think "well </insert ai thing/> isn't actually intelligent or an AI".
    As Larry Tesler says: "AI is whatever hasn't been done yet."

  • "Too many Europeans might have frozen to death during the winters so we'd rather not, but by now it's their fault if they haven't prepaired. Also buy our gas."

    Up until this point, Washington refrained from sanctions in order to maintain gas flows between Russia and remaining European customers.

    the US has held off to preserve stability in Europe's gas supply. But trade dynamics have shifted since Moscow's 2022 invasion of Ukraine — that year, the US shipped more natural gas to Europe than Russia did for the first time.

  • It wasn't a fine, it was compensation to the victim for the pain and medical costs she was caused, which don't exactly change depending on how rich the perpetrator is. If Elon Musk kicks you in the shin and breaks it, it hurts and costs just as much as if it was done by a homeless person.

    He should have also gotten a hefty fine and jail time as a punishment for the crime he committed though, but this was a civil case, not a criminal one for some - probably Irish - reason.