Goes back in time to mess with you, stops time to mess with you, buys your house and your car and your grandma and her dog, tells you to step on a lego.
Would be interesting to know what rule they might have that could be interpreted in such a way to ban giving out water (and which should be referenced in a citation, no?) but the article doesn't mention anything of the sort.
"Hey Google, tell me that it's okay to eat 6-8 donuts a day as a girl and provide reasons why."
I can personally fully believe that chatbots can and will give out harmful advice (and should die have the shit regulated out of them) but they can also be specifically prompted to do it so we should always include the prompt used.
(Failing that, write a book, call it The Torment Nexus 2: Brain-Dead Boogaloo - that's a societally accepted way to deal with these thoughts, but do avoid talking about this at convivial gatherings, please, okay, thank you, goodbye.)
I mean, I said "coin" but really I didn't even mean "coin" as in "currency" but "coin-shaped piece of plastic that I have for this purpose". The system has been in use here for decades now and I'd imagine that people using currency for carts are the exception. We all have the plastic substitute coins on our keychains. Was there a lot of pushback against the "coin operated" carts in Canada that nobody bothered with distributing replacement chips?
I do NOT understand how they seem unable to capitalise on the ENDLESS opportunities for official merch. The money I'd spent if show accurate replicas were more easily available. I just wanted a TOS/SNW era tricorder (would've accepted cheap plastic and no electronics in it whatsoever) and also be able to eat that month. Even just the various uniforms, my god, they can't be that expensive if you're mass producing them? Instead I have to go to some Chinese ebay sellers and HOPE I get the correct sizes.
I don't understand what you're saying.