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Yeah, posts & comments can’t work in this way because each instance will have different ID numbers for their federated copy. I’m not even sure how to begin approaching this issue.
Yeah, posts & comments can’t work in this way because each instance will have different ID numbers for their federated copy. I’m not even sure how to begin approaching this issue.
Jesus:
temperatures surged to more than 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit) in Dhaka. Other cities such as Rangpur recorded a high of 41 degrees Celsius – the highest there since 1958.
Global warming is absolutely crushing certain countries. There’s going to be a lot of dead elderly and young children before all that is over.
I don’t think it’s likely to have a UI element, devs are slammed enough as it is and there aren’t enough new contributors stepping up (I’m trying, I really am, I just don’t know Rust, Psql or Typescript enough).
Much better for there to be a community ruling about it which Beehaw members & contributors abide by
It’s not allowed in a lot of instances because the moderation is absolutely exhausting and sometimes NSFL material.
The only limiting factor here is admins + moderators of an instance willing to put themselves through that.
1-man instances proven more superior to see through impersonation :P
Maybe? Could take a bit for user changes to federate out
I still see you as Juniper
So, there’s a fundamental issue here. A lot of the systems that Amanda is talking about aren’t actually AI.
Chat-GPT, contrary to the blogosphere, is not actually AI. It does not have the capability for thought. It doesn’t have the capacity to understand truth or fiction as concepts, let alone tell them apart.
Chat-GPT and similar systems are probabilistic language models. Essentially, I start it off with sentences (a list of tokens, if you want to get technical). Then it responds by essentially looking at the training data it’s been supplied with and picking out the sequence of tokens that most likely is the answer the user is expecting, given the input. Notice that bolded text? The user is expecting. Not anything else. These language models are trained to spit out what users expect, nothing more, nothing less. If a user doesn’t like the response, they give a thumbs down and the model recalibrates, introducing more noise and randomness into the result.
These language models are actually really great at reducing manual labor at certain tasks (writing cover letters, delivering predictable essays, I’ve personally used Chat-GPT for Shadowrun world-building) but they need to have a knowledgeable person using them because they absolutely will not reliably say true things. They will say whatever their training data says is the most likely thing the user is asking for.
Legitimately almost made my spill my beer xD
Yeah, AAA titles have been absolute trash in recent years. I’ve just been on indie games and a total simp for Paradox Interactive (sorry, I love grand strategy games) for quite a while now.
I put up a PSA up about this in the Lemmy community, but this is how you link instance agnostically:
[Text](/c/vegan@lemmy.ml)
?
EDIT: W
Well, gave it a shot. We’ll see what happens :)
EDIT: Seems to be performing about average, comparing it to other posts on the community. Ok, point retracted. Just need more people putting stuff in from outside the US. Maybe I’m just still stuck in the Reddit “News means US news” mindset and need to break out of it.
Hi all, I know I’m not from Beehaw, but I do subscribe to a lot of your communities as I like your moderation.
Any chance of a World News community? The current News community is very US-centric, and it’d be nice to have a more international spot to put news.
I hear you man. I went from active contributor to mostly lurking on Reddit, and it wasn’t even a conscious choice. Gradually, everything became very mechanistic. I knew what the top few comments would be before going to the comments. The churn became cyclic in nature.
After just a few days here, it was actually a little disconcerting how antagonistic and hostile people there are in the comments section. That’s just how people communicate, on a hair-trigger from flamewar.
I recognize your username, I saw what you wrote about SQL scaling. Can you imagine recognizing a username in a major subreddit in the reddit of today?
The dichotomy between the big communities which people subscribe to from all over Lemmy and the small meta/announcement/server issue communities for each individual instance is gonna be interesting to see develop as the userbase increases. Kinda like the difference between seeing people from your street everyday, then many more less familiar people in the city center.
I would subscribe to that in a heartbeat.