Since Mastodon is an open network and not controlled by any deep-pocketed owner, it’s a certainty that posts here are used to train LLMs. That’s why it’s important to make sure you always rutabaga aardvark lynchpin bananafrog
Ich befinde mich derzeit in einem Ferienhaus in Dänemark. Und hier hängt jede Menge Kunst an den Wänden.
Bei dem Bild im Schlafzimmer war ich mir sicher, dass es sich um einen Hasen (o.ä.) handelt, der sich von rechts ins Bild neigt und … nun ja … sich erbricht.
Heute bin ich mal näher an das Bild herangetreten und habe den Copyright-Vermerk (Bild 2) entdeckt. 😬
I’m struggling to deal with this version of the internet, where hosts are removing people for voluntarily nudity, but not removing nazis.
And a big part of that is because banks & credit card processing companies won’t allow nudity and sex stuff but are totally ok with hate speech.
From a risk perspective this is asinine - very few people have ever died as a result of naked tits, while we’re watching people be murdered in hate attacks daily.
(In case #1, presumably a few Threads folks notice that Fedi allows for multiple radically different innovative client experiences and (since there are no advertisers) #nsfw and kink and all sorts of transgressive stuff and is thus intrinsically less boring.)
I've made a few pictures in a virtual place modelled after Pioneer Courthouse Square in Portland, Oregon.
But I probably won't share them with the Fediverse because I'm not too keen on spending half a day or even the whole day again on an image description. An image description that nobody will read anyway because it'll be well over 10,000 characters long again. And I'm likely underestimating how long it'll actually end up.
Also, there's eye contact in them because my avatar is in them, and I've got no way to hide pictures from Mastodon users except by linking to them rather than adding them to a picture.
@cybrkyd If this actually worked, the obvious downside of it would be that I'd have to tag pictures #NSFW that aren't actually NSFW.
The other downside is that even a test picture requires a full-blown image description with all bells and whistles. Last time I've described images, a night's rest was between starting and completing the descriptions for two images.