[-] rumimevlevi@lemmings.world 3 points 6 hours ago

Should be the opposite, people who want to collapse comment with lot of downvotes should activate it

[-] rumimevlevi@lemmings.world 2 points 12 hours ago

The article do not mention what you claim

[-] rumimevlevi@lemmings.world 4 points 12 hours ago

How recognizing palestine as a state mean not enabling a genocide?

The genocide is enabled by not stopping providing arms or components used for manifacturing weapons to israel and not doing iran and russia level of sanctions

[-] rumimevlevi@lemmings.world 3 points 12 hours ago

Governments represent their countries it should be obvious when i say the west i mean western countries not western countries populations

[-] rumimevlevi@lemmings.world 5 points 13 hours ago

When a comment is collapsed , people tend to skip the comment. Hiding stuffs is censorship

[-] rumimevlevi@lemmings.world 9 points 15 hours ago

Their is no point of recognizing palestine if you are going to keep siding with Israel

[-] rumimevlevi@lemmings.world 5 points 15 hours ago

When terrorists do more to support an occupied country than most of the west pretending to be for human rights for everybody and arab countries does

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[-] rumimevlevi@lemmings.world 19 points 17 hours ago* (last edited 17 hours ago)

There is no point of recognizing a Palestinian state when you refuse to stop selling arms to Israel

Salem Barahmeh of Uncivilized you tube channel explain it really well https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v8Suyxaj26s

[-] rumimevlevi@lemmings.world 9 points 18 hours ago

Fake democracy

[-] rumimevlevi@lemmings.world 7 points 18 hours ago

It suck that they implements karma and collapsing downvoted comments. Two censorship methods

[-] rumimevlevi@lemmings.world 9 points 19 hours ago

It's been decades that the usa been supporting unconditionally israel, hiding all their war crimes so nothing is surprising

[-] rumimevlevi@lemmings.world 13 points 20 hours ago

Tbis is sarcasm right? Nothing surprising

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ca/post/45504350

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cross-posted from: https://metawire.eu/post/136167

Israel says it signed defense contracts worth nearly $15 billion last year, surpassing its all-time record

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cross-posted from: https://rss.ponder.cat/post/197387

Google is pausing the rollout of its AI-powered “Ask Photos” feature within Google Photos, which has been slowly expanding since last fall. “Ask Photos isn’t where it needs to be,” wrote Jamie Aspinall, a product manager for Google Photos, in a post on X responding to criticism, citing three factors: latency, quality, and user experience.

The experimental feature is powered by Google’s “most capable” Gemini AI models. Specifically, it’s a specialized version of its Gemini models that are “only used for Ask Photos,” according to Google.

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Aspinall said Google had paused the feature’s rollout “at very small numbers while we address these issues,” and that in about two weeks, the team would ship a better version “that brings back the speed and recall of the original search.

At the same time, Google also announced Tuesday that keyword search in Photos is getting better, allowing you to use quotes to find exact text matches within “filenames, camera models, captions, or text within photos,” or search without quotes to include visual matches too.

Google announced the feature last May at I/O 2024, and positioned it as a way to query your Photos app for common-sense questions that another human would typically have to help with — i.e., asking about which themes you’ve chosen in the past for a child’s birthday party, or which national parks you’ve visited.

“Gemini’s multimodal capabilities can help understand exactly what’s happening in each photo and can even read text in the image if required,” the company wrote in the announcement. “Ask Photos then crafts a helpful response and picks which photos and videos to return.”

It’s not the first time Google has paused the rollout of an AI-powered feature, as it competes in a quickly intensifying AI arms race against other tech giants and startups alike.

Last May, within weeks of debuting “AI Overview” in Google Search, Google paused the feature after nonsensical and inaccurate answers went viral on social media, with no way to opt out of usage. Two high-profile examples: The feature called Barack Obama the first Muslim president of the United States, and recommended users put glue on pizza to keep the cheese on.

And last February, Google rolled out Gemini’s image-generation tool with a good deal of fanfare, then paused the feature that same month after users reported historical inaccuracies, such as an AI-generated image depicting the U.S. Founding Fathers as people of color.


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submitted 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago) by rumimevlevi@lemmings.world to c/world@lemmy.world

Too late, you are a war criminal just like Genocide Joe

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rumimevlevi

joined 1 month ago