Why did Iran kill dozens of civilians in retaliation? They have launched missiles and drones into virtually every country they neighbor, knowing they are only going to hit residential areas. Why would they do that? Why do dozens and dozens of Arab civilians have to die from Iranian drone strikes?
Why is one side morally culpable when they kill people but the killings on the other side are always explained away or minimized?
What about Iran's supplying drones to be used against civilians in Kyiv? How many innocent Ukrainians have died from Shahed drones that both Iran and Russia know are being used entirely for terror strikes against civilians? Where is your flippant post that points out that Putin's attempt to 'free the people of Ukraine' by years of strikes intentionally against civilians using Iranian drones is ridiculous?
Perhaps you are only interested in talking about innocent people dying if it furthers your political goals, and you would like to look the other way when it does not?
It's amazing how much it's possible to foment arguments against something if you are very well funded and a regulation will cost your industry a lot of money.
Age verification is a good thing. Giving children unrestricted access to hardcore pornography is bad for them. Whatever arguments you want to make, fundamentally this is true.
Age verification is fundamentally harmful and is an attack on user privacy. Age verification is being heavily lobbied for by tech companies that are hoping to get rich off of violating your privacy.
Anonymous age verification is fundamentally impossible. It is especially a bad idea for adult content, as a person's perfectly legal sexual beliefs and fantasies can permanently destroy their lives if that information got out. Parental controls are the only ethical, secure, and privacy protecting way forward here.
You are begging the question. If age verification is required, it's not 'perfectly legal' to access weird porn without going through age verification.
There is no right, or even a debate about whether there should be a right, to consume digital streams of other people engaging in sexual acts in total anonymity without proving age. In fact being able to do this at all is something that didn't exist until about 25 years ago, before that you had to drive down to a video store and rent a DVD or tape. At that video store you would have to show an ID to get an account, and there would be a permanent record at the store of what you have rented.
I get that people want to watch people engage in acts that they themselves find embarrassing and shameful. I don't agree that this is healthy, but if it's legal then I have no standing to complain much. However, it's not legal to provide videos of hardcore sex to children, which you are insisting is necessary to allow adults to consume videos of hardcore sex acts in perfect anonymity, which wasn't even a thing that was possible until very recently. Your argument is just stupid and absurd on its face.
I have. 3 is fine, 3.1 is good. But they are terribly slow. Quality is fine but the the only thing they have going for them is flash pricing. Their response performance sucks.
Well they work in that the color temperature of the light in my house is much cooler during the day than at night, and it's nice to match it so it doesn't look jarring.
I think at the current state of the art, LLM tools can help you build things very quickly, but they can't help you build something you yourself are incapable of building, at least not in a sustained way. They need hand holding and correction constantly.
I don't think that's true, I've seen examples to the contrary. Here for example a recent article [1] from a non programmer building a tool. The article is long so I pasted the relevant part below. My thoughts go more in the direction, the article author built something that is complicated for non technical people, but in essence simple -- he says it so himself "copy paste". What if what the OP here is building is something novel and Claude doesn't know how to build it?
Relevant excerpt:
I spent a bit of time last month building a site to solve a problem I’ve always found super-annoying about the legislative process. It’s hard to read Federal bills because they don’t map to the underlying code. Anyone who has worked in Congress knows what I mean, you get a bill that says “change this word from ‘may’ to ‘shall’ in section XYZ of Federal law.” To understand what it does, and find possible loopholes they are trying to sneak in, you have to go to that underlying Federal law and look at where it says “may” and then put “shall” in there and read it. It’s basically like a manual version of copy and pasting, except much more complicated and with lawyers trying to trick you.
So I wrote an app that lets you upload legislation, and it automatically shows you how it changes Federal law. There are commercial versions of this software, and some states do it for their proposed legislation. But I haven’t seen anything on the Federal level that is free, so I built it. (The code is here.) It’s not very good. It’ll probably break a lot. There’s no “throat to choke” if you use it and it’s wrong. And my guess is that Anthropic or Gemini ultimately will be able to do this function itself eventually. But the point is that if I can build something like this in my spare time and deploy it without any training at all, then it’s just not that hard for an organization with some capital to get rid of some of its business software tools.
I mean you can just do this with claude code or opencode. I suggest opencode and gemini pro since it has a nice big context window. If you are trying to do something like this on the website version of the models just forget it, stop using those, they are like toys compared to the CLI tools.
Step 1: have it sum up every issue and pr in like 100 words. You can have it do it using subagents working on subsets of the tickets so it doesn't take forever.
Step 1a: concatenate all the summary files to one big file.
Step 2: have it check pairs that seem duplicate from the summary. You may have to force it to read the entire file, for whatever reason models are trained to try to avoid just reading stuff into their context and will try grep and writing scripts and whatever else.
Step 3: repeat the above until it stops finding dupes.
I think this will probably take about 4 hours? 2 hours to get the process working and 2 hours of looping it.
If you don't think the above will work well please just move along, don't bother arguing with me because I've done tasks like this over and over and it works great.
Ways to get better results in general:
- Start by having it write a script to dump all the relevant information you will need up front. It's much faster at reading files than trying to do mcp calls. It's also less likely to pretend to read files and just assume it didn't find anything. (happens more than you think)
- Break the problem down into clear steps for the model, don't just give it a vague project. Just paste the steps above and it should work fine.
- Check what it is doing. Don't assume that because it says it read a file it actually read it, it will very often read the first 1000 bytes, then not read any of the rest of it, then just assume it read everything. In fact ChatGPT will complain that the input is truncated when it is the one that chose to only read the first part.
I asked Copilot (work) to do this with a sheet and the summary it gave each time was so generic I couldn't tell one ticket from another. Feeding it tickets individually was fine, but in a spreadsheet it just seemed to forget.
Would be interested to learn how we can get true foreach loops.
But it's so unreasonably slow. It lacks basic features like syntax highlighting on ``` blocks. It's basically become a super expensive and painful to use while Discord continues to be a joy.
And the 'start a thread' nazis are just too much to bear. Prediction: they will add subthreads within 3 years.
Social issues can't be solved by technical means. Just slightly incentivised in some direction (like discord's "this is the third reply, would you like a thread instead?")
But for the resource usage, ripcord https://cancel.fm/ripcord/ already proved you can have a capable client which is super light and fast if you care. This was made by a single person and in many ways is better than the official client.
This isn't how you use online chat. Somehow people did fine with IRC for decades without threads. I'm sorry you can't manage your own information flow or configure your own client and have to embarrass yourself to make other people to organize it for you.
What else should I do for you? There are hundreds unique snowflakes that think their message is what I should see - I don’t. Stop littering in a public space and behave like a grownup.
Again, your ability to consume information you find useful is not my job to manage. Be a grownup and a professional, figure it out. Or constantly whine at people and be unbearable. Totally up to you.
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