

But can you do a dragon punch uppercut?
Sure you can!
But can you do a dragon punch uppercut?
Sure you can!
Look, dude, I don’t have the energy to teach you in addition to my own kid at home. Improve your reading comprehension, reread my last comment, and maybe we can have a reasonable discussion.
It’s as similar to racism as any prejudice is. It’s just a lazy term coined, I’d bet, for the sake of quick understanding within the context of its era, rather than for semantic accuracy.
I tried to find the correct word or phrase to use, and the consensus seems to be “cultural racism”, so I guess it’s technically a kind of racism, even though it doesn’t directly relate to race. “Culturism” would be a more accurate word, I think.
No, the only one approaching racism here is you, as you’re the only one equating culture to race. A black German is the same as a white German.
Oh no. I remember that video now. I didn’t need to remember that video. Why did I have to ask?!
I’ll probably regret asking, but I’m out of the loop and insatiably curious.
Brick in the window video?
The vaudevillian steampunk band Steam Powered Giraffe apparently had the same thought, and made a song about it.
Take me with you.
It’s okay. I’ve never said “I love you” to your sister, either.
It’s saying that copyright law doesn’t apply to AI training, because none of the data is copied. It’s more akin to a person reading an impossible amount at an impossible speed, then using what they read as inspiration for their own writing. Sure, you could ask an LLM trained on, say, Edgar Allen Poe’s works to recite the entirety of The Raven, but it can only “recall” similarly to a human, and will have just as many mistakes (probably more, really) in its recitation as a human would.
Spoken like someone who either didn’t read the article or has a deep misunderstanding of what AI training is.
Good stuff. Important for people who want to play the game but don’t want to give money to Bethesda and, by extension, their genocide-complicit parent company, Microsoft.