Got it. Transphobia and racism are the same as memes about eating pineapple pizza. Might as well make a joke about how your pronouns are Real/Awesome and all the other stupid bullshit.
Well, at least this indicates that removing that text was not an accident or an oversight. And it is good to know where lemmy.world's admins actually stand.
Fucking clown shoes...
The difference is that if a TOS needs to be changed to support shitty behavior, it changes. That is often a canary in the coal mine as it were and people STILL cite google removing "Do no evil" and so forth. Same with the Unity debacle where a few people noticed things had been rewritten... and nobody listened until it became a massive kerfluffle.
Because yes. Admins can do (and see) whatever they want. Welcome to message boards. And I do think having a written TOS is a good step forward (even if this TOS is probably objectively bad for a lot of reasons). It provides a contract of sorts.
But also: I would very much say that NOT providing provisions for discrimination based on ethnicity/sexuality/gender/religion/whatever is a pretty big red flag almost to the level of "I don't see color". Because yes, it is not in and of itself support for bigotry (even if many will view it as such). It is an indication of not understanding the problems that others are facing and not realizing how important it is to call that out.
Like, there is a reason that "Wheaton's Rule" is not actually something you can run a community on. And this has been demonstrated time and time again over the decades.
A lot of it boils down to the idea behind what a translation actually means.
One school of thought is that you do word for word translations. So you get very strange sentence structures and direct translations of idioms. Think the idea of (apologies to the French, it has been over a decade since I tried to write or speak any of it) "Il est drole" being translated to "He is to be funny" rather than "He is funny".
The other school of thought is that you care about the meaning of the text and not the word for word translation. So that involves a LOT of updating/adapting idioms but also names. Among the weeb crowd, people lose their god damned minds any time a character has their name changed. But you get into a mess where "Hikari" is not meant to be an "exotic" name and is really being used closer to "Fred".
I remember way back in high school we specifically read a version of Beowulf to demonstrate this. It involved the "original" Old English, a direct translation that is somehow even harder to parse, and then a version written in modern english.
And that is the basic idea. It doesn't matter if Basic is English, Chinese, Russian, or (most likely) a hybrid of them all: What matters is that the reader/viewer understands what is going on and can appreciate the references.
Another example that usually comes up is how the movie A Knight's Tale is one of the most "historically accurate" adaptations ever. Because yes, we have crowds of peasants singing Queen songs and Nike swishes on armor. But... that is a lot closer to what tournaments and jousting were than people playing equally inaccurate classical music. And I've made similar arguments for the god awful Romeo+Juliet where Luigi and Leo wield "sword 9mm" pistols.
It doesn't actually make sense given the setting.
The Belters were subjugated, but not isolated. This is shown with a lot of the "security forces" largely being Earth/Mars based but also just general trade. Much like with the very large physiological differences (mostly in the books and season 1 of the show), ~100 years (since the Epstein Drive was invented 129 years before the protomolecule and it looks like Ganymede largely required it to be "colonized") just isn't really enough for that kind of divergence.
The "oriental fetishism" of Firefly/Serenity is a lot more likely with mostly being a hybrid of different languages based on who the original colonists were... and that was a much larger period of time with even more isolation which is just funny.
Also, this ignores regular communication and media sharing between The Belt and The Inner Planets. Like, there have been some interesting studies that point out how pervasive "california english" is becoming because of "hollywood" (which films everything in Toronto). So even the Belters who more or less live in a mine their entire life would likely still watch documentaries from Oliver Queen's baby mama and whoever Mars's equivalent of Kim Kardashian is.
This is a pretty meh article but a different one I was reading also mentioned what sounds like a new government (security plan?) will be put in place. Which will inevitably be pro-israel.
So... the remnant of Gaza will likely be purely on paper.
Pretty much. Writing vague nonsense without even using vetted examples as a basis. And then spending more time trolling people than addressing concerns. And this follows on mysteriously wiping out entire mod teams because of a decision that a dark grey area is "illegal" (rather than just "a good way to get sued") while actively not addressing the mods openly discussion said wipings. Or the flip flopping on whether to allow the piracy communities because apparently cranky users beat potential indentured servitude to nintendo.
Gonna be honest. I did not expect to re-live the 00s message board cycle in 2023. And probably need to start looking for a new home instance since we can already see the chuds coming out of the woodwork because they feel empowered.
... just in case we really ARE back in the 00s. Cliffy B. Cliffy B. Cliffy B.
Nobody is saying transphobia specifically needs to be called out*.
It is more just actually calling out discrimination. I ANAL (and am not a lawyer) but general catch alls like "No discrimination based on the grounds of gender, sexuality, ethnicity, nationality, age, or religion". Transphobia comes under a mix of gender and sexuality.
But also: When you are dealing with a TOS, you get a lawyer involved (which is another clear issue with this but...) rather than going by what some dude on the internet vaguely recalls of some documentation they read a few months back.
*: Although, there is an argument that hatred toward the trans community has reached the point that it is worth a call out
"I'm not insulting you specifically. I am just saying that I think all jewish people are secretly space aliens who eat children" and so forth. It is not bullying because it is not specifically targeting a user. There is no violation of privacy and they held short of talking about what they want to do to that ethnic group. And "harassment" is incredibly nebulous
In a good faith interaction: Common sense prevails and that is flagged under the spirit of the rule (even if I am not sure if I agree that IS against the spirit of it). But you specify stuff like this to remove any ambiguity. Largely for the same reasons you have a TOS/COC to begin with. Wheaton's Rule was "sufficient" for small message boards back before any of us really cared about bigotry. But even that was largely replaced with real rules the moment the user count broke the hundred mark.
But also? The world is a really shitty place where the best you can generally hope for is that social media is only kind of racist and hateful (oh reddit) rather than being run by literal white supremacists. Text about discrimination goes a long way toward saying "Hey, we are at least trying".
So is the thinking that a catch all 5.0.1 sufficient? Or will there be restoration of specific rules against discrimination based on ethnicity, religion, sexuality, etc.
"Just trust me bro" is never a good model.
Because maybe the current admins are all great people who will do right. But we don't know if all future admins will be. And if we get a "rules lawyer" coming down on a complaint that some community is being horrifically racist as "Well, it isn't against the rules..."
But also? The world is an increasingly shitty place. Twitter is run by a straight up white supremacist. Having this kind of verbiage goes a long way toward indicating if a place can even possibly be a "safe space" as it were.
But also: If the idea is that we should just trust the admins: Why have any rules at all?
While I generally agree (and that applies to almost all "an LLM can't do that" discussions):
Head counts are not going to remain the same. Well, it might in writing, but there is a reason the WGA went on strike.
If you can apply effective filters/transforms to a base texture, you can now do the same work that would have taken you weeks in a day or two. If you aren't "wasting time" writing unit tests or making utility functions, you no longer need junior developers to punt the Charlie Work to. And so forth.
In some fields? Being able to do more with less means you do a LOT more.
But, generally speaking, that means you need fewer people and you pay fewer people.
This is one of many many reasons that we need to have been exploring UBI decades ago. Because we are increasingly going to see a decrease in employment as technology is more and more able to "get the job done". And unlike with farm work and factory work... there isn't really anything on the horizon for all the "creative" workers to do.
Just because the OP's blurb really ignores almost the entire story in favor of some weird dog whistling:
Information about the engagements was still being processed, Ryder said. "We cannot say for certain what these missiles and drones were targeting but they were launched from Yemen heading north along the Red Sea potentially to targets in Israel.
So (allegedly?) Iranian backed terrorists in Yemen likely fired missiles toward Israel. US destroyer intercepted.
You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means.
I know this is mostly posturing at this point but:
"AI" has been in big budget games for decades. Hell, the big deal with Oblivion was that they had magic technology to procedurally place trees according to various heuristics. And I think that also added a resource management system to NPCs so that we could DB Apple them?
Same with coding and art and sound and so forth.
- All that cool magic wand and fancy ass filter shit in photoshop? Those are increasingly "AI" tools that will analyze the image and extrapolate what should or should not be "behind" something and so forth.
- Coding? if you AREN'T using a tool to generate stubs and even tests at this point then you are wasting your own time.
- Audio? Again, the same "AI" filters already exist. Same with tools to detect pauses or to split up dialogue and so forth.
The reality is just using it effectively. Oblivion was boring as hell because the entire overworld was empty and lifeless. Same with BOTW. Whereas Ubi, for all their actual gameplay flaws, are spectacular at adding POIs and "events" in strategic locations so that you find something while you are hiking across a forest to get to an objective.
Same with art and even CGI. You aren't going to get a good outcome if you ask dall-e to make your art for you. But you are going to get good results if you start with a solid base and then procedurally add rust or spatter to it. You aren't going to get a good result if you have your actors on a studio lit stage talking to nothing (Hi Prequel Trilogy). You are if you add lighting relative to the scene (The Volume) and use placeholders they can act off of.
And... same with writing. Ask ChatGPT to write your screenplay? It is going to be bad. Use the proper prompts to get the "voice" of a character right or to generate some background dialogue that you won't even correctly hear because the mics are focused on Meg Ryan faking an orgasm? Suddenly you have a better "product" than everyone else who just tells extras to wing it or putty around. Same with having a Black Scottish Chick sound like she isn't written by some white dude.
Do you have a link to the EU requiring consent to detect ad blocking?
Most of what I can find is from the late 2010s but specifically says that consent is not required for adblock detection. https://adguard.com/en/blog/eu-defines-its-stance-on-ad-blockers.html
https://iabeurope.eu/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/20160516-IABEU_Guidance_AdBlockerDetection.pdf
But also: I assume consent can be obtained with a mandatory TOS update.
The answer is pretty obvious, but I have seen a lot of folk on lemmy (and elsewhere) who think this is a good solution. Might be worth coming down on it:
Copy full text of article into an LLM and ask it to rewrite that article "to be more understandable". There is the bot that automatically does that for every article (and mostly just increases the misinformation and what not...), but I have seen more than a few people suggest doing that for the text portion of a post.
Looked at that. Seems like it would have worked back back when ?single=1
didn't break all images. But since the guides are broken up into multiple pages, the automated scraping tends to lose its mind because it will try to get the entire site. Rather than a subset of pages.
Thanks though
It isn't good, but it also isn't necessarily "bad",
The entire region is getting destabilized. So if anyone can leave, they should. It is when we start evacuating the embassies that things are REALLY bad.
Like, to put it in context: I used to work a job where I was required to inform the US government when I went on international travel. I still remember having to explain to one of my interns that the downright terrifying message about being on high alert when going to the UK was the "official" way of saying "Trump is going to be in country and people will probably politely protest. Don't join them"
A few years back, CBS sold CNET (CNET, Gamespot, GameFAQs, Giant Bomb, and probably one or two others) to Red Ventures who then sold basically everything but CNET proper to Fandom. If people aren't aware of what Fandom is, just go to basically any video game wiki and see how many pop ups you need to close just to see some misinformation.
Anywho, Fandom have a decent record of killing every property they buy in the interest of monetization. And they can do that because they buy EVERYTHING. And as of a few days ago, one of the long standing admins at GameFAQs announced they were stepping down. Which... suggests Fandom realized they own GameFAQs and are likely about to start gutting it to add as many ads and autoplay twitch pages as possible.
This predates the pandemic.
I have been on both sides of things. I have had to deal with the literally hundreds of applicants that are completely fake CVs or so underqualified that I would be better off grabbing a random kid at a high school job fair.
And the reality is that if I have had to sift through hundreds of bullshit CVs, I am not going to be giving anyone "a chance". Unless you specifically meet every single requirement AND look amazing on paper, you are in the bin because I already wasted hours of my life doing due diligence on the assholes.
I hate everything about workaday. I hate that it incorrectly parses my CV in new and exciting ways every time AND means I need a new account for every company, if not every opening. But I also understand what happens if you ACTUALLY make it as simple as filling out a template once.
And while the article is complete bullshit (gotta love the mysterious loophole of OPT as though it is some secret...), I do agree with the outcome. If you are a "skilled" worker going into a comparatively niche field, favor the openings that aren't using workaday. My best interviews have been from using the automated linkedin application system that basically just sends an email. Hell, that is where my current job is from. But that is also because these were jobs in specific subsets of fields and not entry level positions or openings at Google.
If you’re applying, you probably want the job
In the sense that you would like a paycheck? Sure
In the sense that you are remotely qualified for the position or meet any of the requirements? Not necessarily. And I don't mean "This entry level position needs twenty years of experience". I mean "Understands that python is a language"
And a lot of those obnoxious timeouts and headaches are related to minimizing the "just apply for everything" impact on an applicant pool.