

Absolutely! If you haven’t watched it yet, Dark Days is also harrowing, if not as much as The Act of Killing.


Absolutely! If you haven’t watched it yet, Dark Days is also harrowing, if not as much as The Act of Killing.


Thanks for these. Will add them to my list.


I love documentaries. There are so many amazing ones and I regret that they don’t get as much attention as the biggest fiction films, even though I love those too.
Here are two documentaries that immediately spring to mind because they made a big impression on me:


If people can code better, faster, cheaper, safer (more secure) that will surely apply to open source as well.
I’m not European, but I understand that there’s an old European (German?) saying that basically goes: “If I had wheels, I’d be a trolley.” I understand that it’s been pretty well-established that AI coding tools routinely underperform compare to humans in terms of “better” and “safer”, which indirectly would also lead to it failing at “cheaper” too.
On top of that, there is another major issue with using AI for open-source code: copyright. First, you don’t know if the code that you’re adding through AI may be copying license-incompatible code verbatim. Because everyone has access to open-source code, it would be trivial for anyone to search and find copyright-infringing code to attack projects with. Second, the code that AI produces is also not-copyrightable, so that is another line of attack that this would make open-source projects vulnerable to. These could be used in combination as a one-two punch combination to knock out an open-source project.
I think that using AI-generated code in open-source projects is a uniquely ill-advised idea.


America’s right has been pretty relentlessly trying to get people out of pensions and into 401Ks for decades
Not just pensions. They’ve also been trying to get rid of Social Security in favor of private retirement accounts invested in the stock market for decades now.


Dear CEOs: devour feculence.


The irony of an EDM DJ hating on LGBTQ+ and POC. What the hell?


Awesome, thank you @ROllerozxa@sopuli.xyz for those details and @Ephera@lemmy.ml for the tag!


I’ve heard of that too. They also have a mobile app, so you can do it directly from your phone.


The best I can think of off hand is to look at the mobile apps that are designed to interact with traditional forums, because they will have directories of all the ones that are integrated with them. For example, Tapatalk and Fora Communities. You should be able to find thousands of forums categorized in those apps? I’ve never used these apps myself, but have heard of them.


I get that reference. Holy shit!


That’s cool, thank you for telling the background!


No problem, thanks!


Thanks again!


No worries, I’ll check it out, thanks!


Thanks! What did they do?


Cool, thank you!
Added to my watchlist, thanks!