Completely missed the point I was making, but okay. Thanks.
Arf! I’m Tony Bark. Artist and writer by day. Programmer by night. Gamer all the way.
Completely missed the point I was making, but okay. Thanks.
These companies are anything but "public". Just because they go on the stock market, doesn't change their primary interests: money.
I wonder what their reason for cable-cutting will be now.
Oh shit, I didn’t think about that. XD
That’s one hell of an impressive fuck-up.
The reason AI struggles with hands is because real artists struggle with them too.
I suspect this will backfire, as usual.
I get that. I just didn’t see how TikTok benefited from all of this directly. Then someone reminded me that they’re from China, and it all made sense now.
Oh! Right. I keep forgetting they’re in China.
WTF? What do they gain or lose from all of this!?
How on earth will do they plan on enforcing that? xD
All you did was make a satirical comment.
Maybe if Texas shutdown those miners, their power grid wouldn’t be so strained all the time.
UNIVAC.
Online companies: you can do everything on the internet!
Also, online companies: except working.
Maybe if we just, I dunno, funded more mass transit and made it more accessible? Hell, trains are way better at being automated than any single car.
Mickey is actually entering the public domain next year. Finally. However, Disney is already trying to get around this by trademarking the shit out of Steamboat Willie.
Copyright is outrageously long, anyway. Seriously, who benefits from works after the creator is long dead? AI works won’t ever replace a human’s level of ingenuity, creativity and imagination, let alone at the spur of the moment. That being said, what it does interrupt based on what we ask from it can be fresh and aid in the development or adoption of ideas we may not have thought of before. Being in the public domain is the best outcome.
Starving for fun? Then stop by the local food bank! A must see tourist spot.
Most (popular) programs are lagging because they’re all bundling an entire web browser to get around the cross-platform hurdle. Good in theory, bad in practice. However, even infamous programming languages like Java are now as fast as C thanks to advances in hardware and software, such multiple cores and asynchronous tasks.