

The websites have different (more) safeguards than the APIs do, so bots will operate on different rules.


The websites have different (more) safeguards than the APIs do, so bots will operate on different rules.


Wow, I’m surprised you were able to make meat eating even more evil than it already was.


I kinda disagree with the first one. Plenty of places which do not support humans are beautiful. And I don’t like the implication that to be beautiful, you must be hostile with hidden kindness underneath. I don’t know if that’s how Antoine meant it, though.


For prime numbers, since they’re quite difficult to calculate and there’s not that many of them, that’s what’s most common.


Ah, I misunderstood. I conflated “Americans” (lawmakers) and “Americans” (everyone else).


The laws specified by the EU allow for future technological developments and the advancement of the standard without having to re-write the laws. The law itself includes a mandatory technical review, and allows for new standards to be integrated, and outdated standards to be dropped.


The EU commision did not decide on USB-C in a vacuum. It looked on already existing stanards and talked to many large electronics manufacturers in order to come to a proposal for USB-C as a universal standard. You are right to point out the role that both Intel and Apple played (Along HP, Microsoft and the USB-IF) in the development of the standard, but you’re missing the forest for the trees, since it was the EU making it a *universal * standard within it’s boarders that means we all use the same standard.


The reason we should thank the EU is because of this rule. While I cannot guarantee this rule is responsible, the fact that it’s mandated means it’s significantly more economically viable to use the same connector across all regions (including America), and so this rule is the primary factor in the standardization of charging cables.
To be fair, programming is basically the art of making the computer do as much as possible with as little typing as possible.


I think this is not helpful, since both are “mixing colour”. I think a more apt analogy would be “shining multiple lights” vs “stacking colour filters”.


To be clear, the accusation is that the mod team is Zionist, and that they consistently moderate all anti-Zionist content.
It’s a Zionist bar not just because there’s a few Zionists, but because the bar owner keeps kicking out the people who cause a ruckus with the Zionists.




Have your tried? Asking someone when there’s nothing visually wrong with you is a pretty good way to cause conflict.


Even if we do this, paternity tests are not guaranteed correct. This has the possibility to cause so much unneeded drama.


It’s not really even errors. It is well-suited for what it was designed. It produced pretty good text. It’s just that we’re using it for stuff it’s not suited for. Like digging a hole with a spoon, then complaining your hands hurt.


The government already knows all our ages, right? They issue our IDs after all. Have the government provide a “yes, this person is over 18” service. There are ways of providing signed files/tokens which don’t contain personal information.
If the government wants to write a law, then I think it’s reasonable they’re also responsible to help with a solution.


Oh. Yeah. I completely missed that. My bad.


Fair, but nuanced rules are difficult to enforce, and somewhat open to interpretation. This leads to people trying to skirt the rules and also good faith posts which break the rules which leads to conflict also.
I think it’s better to keep things as simple as possible, as long as the rule is good enough.


It’s a question posed to LLMs, so I thought the distance was chosen basically arbitrarily. Besides, it’s not an unrealistic distance. Lots of houses don’t have a driveway, and cars are parked along the street instead, for example.
I think you forgot how many absolutely trash games were being made.