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President Donald Trump addressing Project 2025 shortly after his inauguration on January 20th, 2025: pic.twitter.com/vvvTmlWEQJ
— Prison Mitch (@MidnightMitch) November 7, 2024
- BimothyX2 : Fart butt
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First, for the background, an AI company called Etched made a platform called Decart, and used it to create a model called Oasis. As you could see in the link, it allows you to play a very limited version of minecraft similar to previously made AI-generated Doom gameplay: no gameplay is actually simulated, but a new frame is made based on previous frames and the player's inputs.
A clickbait minecraft youtuber made a video about this, bring it to the attention of the internet's smartest comment section, and the video itself contains misinformation, such as a section at 6:40 where the youtuber claims that scraping YouTube videos violates copyright law. The video also displays a general lack of knowledge about how this model works, showing that the creator did very little research other than likely seeing someone else post about it and immediately clicking the link, an example of this lack of knowledge is every time the creator thinks AI not having object permanence is a serious glitch when the point of this model is to store the lowest amount of frames possible and still have a playable game.
Obviously, the comments brought the 2-digit iq trend-followers to pretend to be AI ethics experts, but their lack of prior knowledge is extremely obvious:
The above screenshots are examples of users suddenly becoming massive fans of Microsoft and copyright law. Also: "Those AI JERKS!!!!!"
, he wasn't even involved in this
Either one of the developers of this model, or someone impersonating him (account created Nov 2, 2024) argues with some r-slur, notice the discrepancy in tone.
Actually, giving midwits access to the internet was disastrous, unlike the peace and prosperity introduced by the invention of nuclear weapons
Above are 2 examples of the classic privacy hypocrite: This type of user constantly fear mongers about "datamining", targeted ads, and their data being used to train AI models, but often loves platforms like groomercord, YouTube, or even Facebook, which do much worse than nearly any AI model has done with user's data, and also usually is the type of person to think that you're more likely to be hacked by clicking on a link than from downloading a file (in the minecraft community, examples of this include players who react with utter surprise that they got "ratted" by a mod they downloaded (usually pvp mods because pve players are too smart for this), but are afraid to play on the same server as people who use hacked clients because they think that that, of all things, will actually damage their computer). Also, I noticed that the second one uses a name that's usually used by /pol/tards with happy merchant profile pictures, but has a regular cat profile picture. Do you think that that user is an antisemite?
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Given at least a quarter of UK adults have had an affair, it stands to reason that cheaters come in all shapes and sizes.
According to new research however, there are a number of features that unfaithful people share --- and middle-aged bald men are among the most likely to stray.
In a study by MrQ, Brits who've been cheated on were quizzed about their disloyal partner's looks, with cutting-edge AI technology then recreating what the 'typical' adulterer looks like.
Over a third of men admitted to cheating on a partner at least once before compared to 24% of women, which tallies with divorce statistics showing women are 33% more likely to file for divorce due to adultery than men are.
People aged 45 to 54 play away most, with more than one in three in this age group having done so, while autumn is peak time for infidelity, going up 22% as the weather gets cooler.
As for the stereotypical male cheater, findings put him in his 40s, with blue-grey eyes, small lips, short facial and neck hair and little to no head hair. Topping off the look is a larger nose and visible frown lines.
In contrast, the stereotypical woman who cheats is said to be dark-haired and in her early 50s, with a small nose and a medium-sized pout.
And across the board, those who did the dirty were described as sporting a slim build and having 'staring eyes'.
Researchers highlight that these images are based on statistical analysis and 'won't apply to all individuals,' as 'people's behaviour is defined by their decisions and actions, not what they look like.'
Loyalty is an important factor for Brits though, as two-fifths of respondents who'd been betrayed split up with their partner straight away after finding out (although an astonishing one in 50 people went on to marry them anyway).
As well as physical traits, there are also trends revealing the locations where cheating is rife.
Manchester emerged as the affair capital of the UK, with 43% of Mancunians having had at least one, followed by Sheffield at 39% and Cardiff at 34%.
Meanwhile, Edinburgh is home to the most faithful residents, with more than half (55%) claiming to have never cheated on any of their partners or been cheated on themselves.
And if you're planning on two-timing someone from Bristol or Glasgow, you shouldn't expect your relationships to last if caught, as these cities have the least tolerance for unfaithful lovers.
The survey found that 64% of Bristolians and 60% of Glaswegians dumped their partner as soon as they found out, which correlates with lower rates of cheating in both.
The UK's affair capitals (% of residents who admitted to cheating)
1. Manchester (43%)
2. Sheffield (39%)
3. Cardiff (34%)
4. Leeds (32%)
5. Norwich (30%)
The UK's most faithful cities (% of residents who have never cheated or been cheated on)
Edinburgh (55%)
Nottingham (48%)
Liverpool (44%)
Birmingham (44%)
Newcastle (42%)
- whyareyou : legitimately freaky shit fr no cap