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A Dungeon & Daddies reference is not what I expected to see today either.
A Dungeon & Daddies reference is not what I expected to see today either.
The real question is could we ever really trust photographs before AI? Image manipulation has been a thing long before the digital camera and Photoshop. What makes these images we see actually real? Cameras have been miscapturing image data for as long as they have existed. Do the light levels in a photo match what was actually there according to the human eye? Usually not. What makes a photo real?
It is the only thing I can associate with Wayland and Nvidia. What other possibilities can there be?
But but I swear by ZFS… Am I??? No… Impossible.
That would conflict with the proposed law. They want to be able to write what they want, not see what already exists.
History has taught us restricting access to knowledge never goes well. It will piss some people off, sure. Enough to make a difference? Can’t say, most people are indifferent. As long as they get AN answer, that’s all they care about. Not necessarily the correct one.
Fines I would assume. Lawsuits even.
Yes, but that kinda defeats the point of an open knowledge library for all. This is a problem that should be fixed with legislation and not artificial blocking. We shouldn’t punish the unfortunate for being stuck with the stupid.
I have been waiting for the results of project silica for awhile. The fact there are potential alternatives is very exciting to hear. The hoard is not getting any smaller.
You clearly have never met a data hoarder before then. Some people just store things for the heck of it and if it happens to be relevant years down the line, they have you covered.
Perhaps google will make one at some point too. They already have the big version.
The irony that we have to go to google for a privacy focused phone with graphene os is not lost on me. It still is strange.
I have to do this command often at work and I can never remember the letters perfectly. This is actually useful, thanks!