One of the things you're missing is the same techniques are applicable to multimodality. They've already released a multimodal model: https://seekingalpha.com/news/4398945-deepseek-releases-open-source-ai-multimodal-model-janus-pro-7b
Mmm, China perfidiously stealing the hard-earned talent of Western engineers? I know just the solution! They should build an anti-communist self-defence wall:
We no longer wanted to stand by passively and see how doctors, engineers, and skilled workers were induced by refined methods unworthy of the dignity of man to give up their secure existence in the GDR and work in West Germany or West Berlin. These and other manipulations cost the GDR annual losses amounting to 3.5 thousand million marks.
Some fine historical irony. Of course, given the way the university system works in places like the US, there's not even a good argument that this imposes costs on the public, who trains personnel only for them to leave and benefit some other state.
Maybe this is what Trump's wall is for.
At least there seems to be some change in messaging that indicates peace may be nearer.
I'm concerned that people are already eager to bury the fediverse and unwilling to consider what would be lost. The solutions I keep hearing in this space all seem to hinge on making the place less equal, more of a broadcast medium, and less accessible to unconnected individuals and small groups.
How does an instance get into one of these archipelagos if they use allowlists?
Same thing with reply policies. I can see the reason why people want them, but a major advantage on the fedi is the sense that there is little difference between posters. I think a lot of this would just recreate structures of power and influence, just without doing so formally--after all the nature of scale-free networks is large inequality.
what do I think the history is? A record of the sites I visited.
What do I think the history isn't? A correlated record of which advertisements I've been exposed to, and which conversions I've made, that gets sent to people who are not me.
Pretty relevant distinction. One thing is me tracking myself, another thing is this tracking being sent to others, no matter how purportedly trustworthy.
It's hard when I don't get told about it and find by chance.
There's an entire political party built around it and you think people can't talk about it openly?
The way I look at this is I have a reasonable understanding of rust. I'm not an expert but I can more or less do whatever computation I need to do, use crates, and so on. But with async it's like learning another language. Somewhat of an exaggeration, but it's not just what code you need to write, but also being able to read the error messages from the compiler, understanding the patterns and so on. So yes, it's probably fine, but it does take work.
Certainly this smells worse and worse. It makes no sense to claim that:
- The cable is false.
- But leaking it breaches official secrets laws.
- And its content is irrelevant anyway.
Full marks for a triply contradictory stance.
There's a surprising amount of that, not to mention... not sure whether to go into it but...
Seanchan stuff
Those collars that can control people who channel are also used in a very kinky way.
That said, there's also a few times when there's the same stuff on men by women, and, I think, on women by men. But since the Aiel wise ones and Aes Sedai alike are societies of women, well, there's a lot of that going on.
Clearly this particular suit by this particular person is iffy. However, I don't think this framing is very good: the fact Wikimedia is headquartered elsewhere shouldn't make it immune from being sued where an affected party lives.
Also, this part of the article seems a bit contradictory:
Just because someone doesn’t like what’s written about them doesn’t give them the right to unmask contributors. And if the plaintiff still believes he’s been wronged by these contributors, he can definitely sue them personally for libel (or whatever). What he has no right to demand is that a third party unmask users simply because it’s the easiest target to hit.
Ok, but how does he sue them personally without knowing who they are? It's fine to say this shouldn't be regarded as libel (I agree, it's a factual point, should be covered by exceptio veritatis or whatever) but I think it's a bit dishonest to say you can't hit Wikimedia, go after the individual users; but also, Wikimedia shouldn't be forced to reveal them.
Much better if the court would consider this information as being accurate and in the public interest.
Of course the GDPR cuts two ways here, because political information is an especially protected category, with certain exceptions (notorious information). So I'm not sure how the information on this person's affiliation to the far right was obtained and so on.
Get your DeepSeek3 and r1 weights before it's illegal!