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Joined
12 mo. ago

  • This is the second day recently that I missed, so there'll be two tomorrow and two the day after to make up for it. I'm just really distractible; sorry.

  • A comment that says "I know not the first thing about how machine learning works but I want to make an indignant statement about it anyway."

  • Also of note:

    • No drugs were found.
    • It's so dangerous because if drugs are there and a bag tears, an OD can be rapid and fatal. Harris additionally objected to the search, and thus it would've been unethical unto itself.
    • Harris had a history of drug violations, but the cops' only "evidence" something was wrong was 1) the SUV pulled up to a house they were staking out (what they presumed to be a drug house), 2) they claimed they saw a "white item at the entrance of his anus", 3) an officer purported to feel drugs near Harris' groin, and 4) a CT scan showed an object in the bowels but could not determine if it was foreign (again, Harris had no drugs).
    • You absolutely do not have to perform a cavity search; you can just wait for the object to come out naturally through a bowel movement.
    • Harris was seemingly held for two days (detained August 10, president of the hospital allegedly threatened the police chief to comply the night of August 12, Harris "shortly after" was issued a court summons and released).
    • Harris was charged with obstruction and tampering and is awaiting trial even though no drugs were ever found.

    ACAB.

  • That map is some real dataisugly shit. So many problems. The key is:

    • Historical (light red); Current (Red); Active and Passed (dark red); Passed (Black)

    Problem 1) "Historical" is such a weird way to presumably mean "previously introduced and failed". It's both weird unto itself and because the other way of reading it would be that "this state historically used to have RtR but not anymore".

    Problem 2) The decrease in brightness seems to indicate a trend toward "betterness", even though a light red to black scale almost always connotes something bad (e.g. a deadly virus).

    Problem 3) The same decrease in brightness is problematic because it doesn't even follow itself: "Active and Passed" is lighter than just "Passed", even though "Active and Passed" is clearly stronger than just "Passed".

    Problem 4) You don't need to call it "Active and Passed". If it's active, then no fucking shit it's passed. One legend item has three words instead of one for just no reason.

    Problem 5) The "Active and Passed" jurisdictions have white diagonal lines despite the key not having these. Presumably this is to contrast it with the color of "Current", but like, you chose this color scheme??

    Problem 6) The legend (from brightest to least bright) goes 3, 2, 1, 4. This is because for some reason, they decided to place the legend items in alphabetical order.

    Too bad Datawrapper isn't FOSS so you'd have the right to repair whatever it did to this poor data.

  • The Lisa and Claudette scene is 45 days long. Scenes 1, 2, and 3 (Johnny walking into the house, Johnny and Lisa in bed, and Johnny getting out of bed, respectively) totaled to 44 days. So you're correct, and we still have 5 days to go.

  • Oh okay, everything about you (from the propagandistic posting patterns to running heavy defense of Monk who you should know nothing about as < 2-week-old accounts to your long, copy-pasted, Gish galloping comments to the abject nonsense you spew to your general writing style) tells me you and barrygoldwater are just ban evasion alts of Monk. In that case, piss off.

    How did you see "MUCH worse now than back then" when your account is 11 days old? Riddle me that.

  • LLMs in general don't "interpret" anything; I don't get how or why people think this.

  • No, no, you're misunderstanding: every single number you see in Philip's comment was 1) a post and 2) in /c/politics. You can go look for yourself as I suggested. For instance, when Philip's comment says "2024-10-19: 6" that means (and you can go verify using the means I described on desktop) that Monk posted 6 times to /c/politics that day. That excludes comments.

  • Actually, no, this isn't correct. Go to Page 4 of Monk's post history, and you'll see that indeed all of those numbers are posts to /c/politics. @PhilipTheBucket@ponder.cat was correct here; I was checking the wrong month.

  • EDIT: @PhilipTheBucket@ponder.cat is right that Monk substantially ramped up their post count in the month of October, being typically 6+ per day. I was mistaken about point 1 for that month, although I stand by that other months like September, they were about 3 per day.

    I'll note that I consistently called out Monk to the point that multiple comments of mine lambasting them got deleted (the mods were just being fair and enforcing the rules consistently; hats off).

    However, there are some points you've failed to take into account:

    1. (Most important) Monk posted to /c/politics at most about three times per day. This is realistically the bare minimum amount you'd want as a cap on posts per day. You can go back and check this for yourself; the overwhelming majority of their posts were on communities they created and moderated. Checking the month of September, the exception I saw to this was September 8th, where they posted four. This rule would have done absolutely nothing to deter their propaganda campaign.
    2. As your own comment notes, making alts is a trivial matter, especially assuming you're more subtle about the angle you're pushing than Monk was. That I was aware of Monk for months but knew and heard nothing about these purported alts is, to me, evidence of that.
    3. Every single post by Monk was heavily downvoted because everyone knew what they were doing.
    4. The main problem with Monk was their comments, wherein they would engage in essentially copy-pasting Gish gallop responses. The moderators knew banning Monk would've made the community healthier because of this exact behavior but refused to take action.
    5. Even if the problem had been the quantity of the posts to /c/politics (it wasn't), the moderators would've been able to use their discretion to ban Monk instead of a blanket ban on frequent posts.

    TL;DR: Monk's problem on /c/politics had nothing to do with and could not have been stopped by such a rule proposed in the OP.

  • I have yet to see any frequent posters pushing misinformation.

    I have yet to see any frequent posters discouraging participation.

    I have yet to see any frequent posters pushing quantity over quality.

    To me, it seems like this post is addressing what's currently a non-issue. That is, this feels like someone's pet peeve about frequent posters dressed up as something beneficial using a list of non-applicable pros.

    Meanwhile, news communities are posted to so infrequently on Lemmy that literal bots exist to fill the gaps. I would much prefer a human than a bot indiscriminately hammering the community with news (absent any evidence whatsoever that this would improve human engagement, when realistically, any humans who'd want to participate could do so at any time but haven't).

  • So this "article" is just a regurgitation of a press release by the company making them. Cool. Cool, cool, cool.

  • Would you like somebody to introduce you to broccoli? There's a lot of ways to enjoy it, and it's much more than just a boring "health food" (while simultaneously providing the benefits of a boring "health food").

  • I'm really sorry, but "Stacey Champagne" sounds like the stage name of a porn star. 💀

  • This is just one of multiple bangs for the Internet Archive, and probably more intuitive and quick ones include:

    • !ia for the Internet Archive generally
    • !wbm for the Wayback Machine
  • Obviously the newest Intel is the 13th generation

    Erm

  • Why read an actual article written by humans when you can turn it into more generative AI garbage instead? 🙄