I checked the report, but it seems at no point it seems to clarify what they consider “bot traffic”. Is it measured in api calls, page views, or bytes? Generally the term traffic is meant as raw data transported, but in that context those numbers make no sense.
For example, one of the biggest traffic consumers in the Internet is video streaming. There’s no way in hell that half, or even a tenth, of that data is fake - it would simply cost too much to waste it on bots. Both for the bot owners as well as the streaming providers.
This level of vagueness and lack of transparency (what do the numbers mean, and where do they come from) does not fill me with confidence on this report.
Craig Doty II, a Tesla owner, narrowly avoided a collision after his vehicle, in Full Self-Driving (FSD) mode, allegedly steered towards an oncoming train....
Counterpoint: we don’t get much articles about human drivers crashing, because we’re so used to it. That doesn’t make it a good metric to consider their safety.
Edit: Having said that, this wasn’t even an article. Just an unsourced headline with a photo. One should strongly consider the possibility of a selection bias at work here.
Nah, there’s tons of features that slack has over irc. To start with inline media (images, audio, video), but most importantly lots of out of the box external integrations and webhooks.
Slack […] will never identify any of our customers or individuals as the source of any of these improvements to any third party, other than to Slack’s affiliates or sub-processors.
I think creating a lora for your character would help in that case. Not really easy to do as of yet, but technically possible, so it’s mostly a ux problem.
I’m not a lawyer. But isn’t the reason they had to go to reddit to get permission is because users hand over over ownership to reddit the moment you post. And since there’s no such clause on Lemmy, they’d have to ask the actual authors of the comments for permission instead?
Mind you, I understand there’s no technical limitation that prevents bots from harvesting the data, I’m talking about the legality. After all, public does not equate public domain.
deleted_by_moderator
Are you chatting with a pro-Israeli AI-powered superbot? (www.aljazeera.com)
Amazon plans to give Alexa an AI overhaul — and a monthly subscription price (www.cnbc.com)
Self-Driving Tesla Nearly Hits Oncoming Train, Raises New Concern On Car's Safety (lemmy.zip)
Craig Doty II, a Tesla owner, narrowly avoided a collision after his vehicle, in Full Self-Driving (FSD) mode, allegedly steered towards an oncoming train....
Should I start worrying about my job? (www.theverge.com)
NVIDIA 555 Beta Linux Graphics Driver Released with Explicit Sync Support (9to5linux.com)
Scarlett Johansson denied OpenAI the right to use her voice. They used it anyway. (boingboing.net)
How do you make Linux more popular? (www.youtube.com)
OpenAI says Sky voice in ChatGPT will be paused after concerns it sounds too much like Scarlett Johansson (www.tomsguide.com)
deleted_by_author
New Teslas might lose Steam (www.theverge.com)
deleted_by_moderator
Sony Music opts out of AI training for its entire catalog (arstechnica.com)
Slack is now using all content, including DMs, to train LLMs (mastodon.sdf.org)
cross-posted from: lemmy.ml/post/15741608...
DeviantArt’s Downfall Is Devastating, Depressing, and Dumb (slate.com)
OpenAI strikes Reddit deal to train its AI on your posts (www.theverge.com)