You'd also get hypothermia, since your body wouldn't be able to retain enough heat to stay warm.
There's a reason why small animals tend to be round and fluffy.
You'd also get hypothermia, since your body wouldn't be able to retain enough heat to stay warm.
There's a reason why small animals tend to be round and fluffy.
Weird choice for Meta, given that, as the article also points out, the website formerly known as Twitter got into a whole bucket of trouble when it allowed people to do that before, because it ended up being misused in no time flat.
It would be one thing if it was users editing their own profile pictures, but allowing anyone to edit the profile picture of anyone who hasn't opted out is just asking for trouble.
Then again when I hear stats like the average item of clothing is worn 7 times, maybe I am not really the target of this
I would be curious if this gets skewed by things like formalwear that someone might have had for just the one event, or don't wear very often. Or if the survey question was ambiguous.
7 times total seems very low. 7 times before a wash seems a bit more reasonable.
It's also arguably the only thing propping up the American economy right now. They don't have anything to bail with, if the AI bubbles goes on fire. Their economy may well come tumbling down in short order.
The AI companies filing reports as required, but seemingly doing the bare minimum, and not providing enough data for the reports to be actionable might come close.
It rather implies that this happens all the time, but the companies just don't care very much about it, except for where they absolutely must.
Even then, Reddit seems to be trying its darndest to reduce that, and the moderation was very variable to start with.
At the very least, the website has become much worse in recent years, thanks to the influx of LLM-powered bots, and the winding down of interfaces that a lot of third-party moderation tools used. Those tools really only existed because the inbuilt tooling was quite lacking.
Currently, Reddit has locked their old.Reddit interface behind a login wall, and are looking to potentially shut down their RSS feeds (and likely that interface as well). A fair few moderation bots and tools make use of both those things.
Which basically meant that the site was hit with the double-whammy of mods needing those anti-bot tools more than ever, and Reddit Co. trying to shut down external access that those tools needed, so as to keep mods on their own tools.
Would it even be possible to ethically research such a thing in the first place? You certainly can't just throw a battery of drugs and therapy at humans.
Plus, research into altering sexuality to that degree verges into quite uncomfortable territory. It doesn't take a great leap of the imagination to think that such research could easily be misused for things like conversion therapy.
Geez, if only there were alternatives to ai generated csam, like therapy and medication??
Would medication even help in this case? We don't really have medication that can affect sexuality in that fine-grained a way.
Maybe the idea was that he could end his life, without risking crashing the plane? Why he chose this method specifically will, unfortunately, never be answered.
I'm confused. Why does he need to endorse an election candidate? He's an actor/wrestler, not a politician.
It's not as though he's any smarter or more informed than the average person is in that regard.
Odd headline, since the quoted interview bits don't actually say anything to do with wanting more spin-offs. But it shouldn't be that surprising. Who doesn't want to earn more money?
If there are spin-offs, it should be something new, rather than being tied to the past. Trek suffers a bit from nostalgia, and being over-reliant on it is one of the franchise's biggest weaknesses.
There's really good show material just looking at and dealing with the Federation's bias towards organic humanoids, for example. We see it pop up repeatedly across multiple shows, where Starfleet/the Federation are perfectly happy allowing/doing things for non-humanoid/non-organic species that they would never have allowed if they weren't.
Repurposing the EMH MK. I units for dilithium mining, compelling Maddox to use the information he learned about Data to create an explicitly lobotomised version to use as a workforce, or ordering Picard to deploy a memetic virus designed to kill all the Borg, for example. The Federation would never have done that to its humans, and the closest match would be more like something the Dominion would do. But since none of them are organic humanoids, all is okay.