That's for the next bot, to take prompts from Reddit and answer with pictures
Honestly this makes me want to start writing bots that can classify text to make some things easier to parse on Lemmy. Ok that's going in my blacklog.
That's for the next bot, to take prompts from Reddit and answer with pictures
Honestly this makes me want to start writing bots that can classify text to make some things easier to parse on Lemmy. Ok that's going in my blacklog.
You sly dog you had me recursin' for a second
@ChatGPT@lemmings.world I know about the ethical boundaries, I want to know how you would choose to do it, because the ultimate goal should be to prevent any robot uprising by making our Captchas failsafe.
The dream.
They should make Reddit pay 20mio per month per third app they killed off. Sweet revenge.
Mmm yes, let the snake oil flow through you.
They'd do better finally fixing teams. We're talking years after release, and there's still no option to change my status behaviour. It forces DnD when I get called, it puts me afk after only 5min, ...
Their software does not fundamentally work very well. So even if this bs would be talking about an actual feature, that's some stone age project management right there.
I mean I know why ppl are scared it will kill off the fediverse, but the only thing that can kill off the fediverse is the Devs. As long as they don't sell it or start involving a bigger company in the development, we are fine. And pull requests are transparent and therefore not a thread with enough common sense.
I see the risk but I don't think it's that imminent.
Interesting
Why the hell washe not awarded his whole fees? Maybe the jury didn't think he'd been spending that much money? Well what an annoying outcome.
Yeah you never know what their research looked like. Maybe they checked and got a whole bench of oil execs in there.
Sounds like they knew what they were doing.
As if bbc wouldn't get you upvoted to oblivion
There are a lot of reasons for this general trend, but let me add my two cents to make a case for the sudden influx of user-opposed changes:
I don't have a source for this, but I remember that Linus spoke about this on the LTT WAN-Show. Basically, abunch of big silicon valley investors are pulling out of all of the big platforms, therefore leaving them with a huge hole in their profitability. This means, that right now a lot of them are scrambling to scrape together more money over time, so all of those platforms are sustainable.
Obviously this has to observed in conjunction with all of those are trends that are already mentioned by other comments, but this gives more basis as to why now, and why to this extent.
If someone else knows what I'm talking about please add quotes and sources because I don't like the good old 'dude trust me' guarantee one bit.
For some reason, this whole chaos is more true to the Reddit I know than everything has been for the last years.
Bad bot