

is this news?
is this news?
VC funding destroys everything it touches.
This attitude has worked so well for allowing the current crop of tech billionaires to grow and cement their influence over the entire world. If people would just stop using their platforms when they hear the CEO’s batshit views then they would be nobodies.
User signed up 18 days ago.
The code in the repo is just the initial commit and was committed 10 minutes before this post.
If I needed an “anti-forensic and secure” messenger, I certainly wouldn’t use this.
Secretary of State for Science, Innovation and Technology since July 2024
also
By the age of 25, he was accepted on his third attempt to become a student at the University of Sussex, where he gained a degree in geography, international development, and environmental studies, and later a doctorate in community development.
🤡
“Many of the participants expressed a strong commitment to equal treatment and fairness. They showed particular sensitivity to situations they perceived as unjust or discriminatory. This extended to issues specifically concerning men.”
No shit.
It comes after rising violence against women and girls (VAWG) in England and Wales. Data published by the National Police Chiefs’ Council in July 2024 found that about 3,000 VAWG offences a day were recorded by the police in 2022-23, an increase of 37% since 2018, with one in every 12 women a victim each year.
Separate expert studies have found some evidence that the language of the manosphere can escalate into physical violence. A submission to parliament by a group of UK academics cited cases in which incels had gone on to commit offline acts of violence, including Elliot Rodger in Isla Vista, California, in 2014 and Jake Davison in Plymouth, England, in 2021.
The Ofcom study involved 38 men, and more misogynistic men may have declined to take part. Some potential recruits refused to take part, considering the government-appointed regulator to be part of the “mainstream”. Perhaps the most impressionable group, boys under 16, were also not included.
Oh so this study is completely worthless then.
How would you describe the experience?
Users voting on whether a segment is good or bad. I always give a thumbs up to the segments that were well-defined and a thumbs-down to segments that cut off half a sentence unnecessarily etc.
Most people will tell you that it’s been made obsolete now since (1) it doesn’t use behavioural analysis to detect trackers anymore, it just uses a pre-defined list of trackers to block (2) browsers (especially firefox) now have built-in tracker blocking (3) ublock origin blocks trackers by default anyway.
I don’t think it hurts to still use it, just as a belt and braces approach, but I suppose it’s possible it makes your browser fingerprint more unique.
I’m going to disagree, but I hope you don’t take it personally. I think it’s really important that we tune our slop detectors so I’m interested in discussing these things when we disagree about whether an image is AI. Maybe I’m still wrong.
You’re right that there is something uncanny about this photo, but the thing is that it’s a stock image which means it’s a composed photo, not a natural scene.
The hue and saturation are high because it was post-processed to make it stand out in a brochure or ad. The colors of the hats and jackets are balanced across the image because the photographer composed the image this way to make it look aesthetically pleasing.
I’m not sure whether the pallets defy physics because I’ve never worked in a warehouse, but I think it’s normal to stack pallets with a forklift like that, or maybe this is just a staged setup used for the purpose of this photo.
But really my reasoning is a posteriori because I already did a reverse image search and found another stock photo of the same people.
All of the details in the second image look identical, and if you’ve ever tried to get an AI image generator to make a variation on an image you’ll know how difficult it is to achieve that. Usually some major features will inexplicably change between variations of an image.
If you look at other photos in that stock collection, there are a lot that are obviously AI generated (like this one, and they have this text in the description:
Generated with AI
Editorial use must not be misleading or deceptive.
But the stock photo used in this article doesn’t have that disclaimer on it, so I’m erring on the side of this being a composed, but real photo. The reason (IMO) that it evokes the same slop vibes, is that a huge number of the images that these gen-AI models are trained on are stock photos, so they have a tendency to produce these types of images that look like composed photos rather than natural scenes.
Agreed, but you’re talking about the one that’s in this article? https://images.theconversation.com/files/671658/original/file-20250602-68-lst15v.jpg
It looks legit to me. What gives it away to you?
No user should notice. If it acts differently then that’s a regression.
An American man Friday?
I put on my robe and wizard hat
It’s water-resistant.
thanks, unlucky Rich
remember Jabber?