Surely you read the article?
"The requirement from the start was byte-for-byte identical output from both pipelines. "
The bytecode from C++ is identical to the Rust output.
Surely you read the article?
"The requirement from the start was byte-for-byte identical output from both pipelines. "
The bytecode from C++ is identical to the Rust output.
I think they use a lot of heuristics.
To test I made a new VM with fresh browser, running with a VPN and I still got banned, although it took slightly longer (maybe a few days).
It's possible though my VPN was used on my old account at some point though. But still.
I was the same. There was one sub I won't name where I made a comment against a celebrity (nothing bad, just making fun of her) and got banned.
I usually delete my Reddit accounts after a year just because I'm wary of how much info you can accidentally reveal about yourself.
Well, I'd made a new account and accidentally posted on the same sub which immediately got me a permanent ban for evasion.
My fault, but no real loss. For the last few years I rarely contribute and just use Reddit for info.
I don't think you should be able to make claims like this without hard proof.
Do you have any information about this?
Edit: So I found out where you read that, and that article is wayyy over thinking that comment.
I think the Twitter comment could be taken multiple ways and it would be fair to give them the benefit of the doubt.