Depends on what you’re using.
With local models you use something called a “negative prompt” to exclude anything that you don’t want in the image.
Depends on what you’re using.
With local models you use something called a “negative prompt” to exclude anything that you don’t want in the image.
If you really want this to work, you would have to train/fine tune a model by feeding it a bunch of images that show that person’s handwriting.
if you’re just asking ChatGPT to do this for you then you’re doing it wrong.
I initially think this same thing every time I see someone mention MTG on here, glad I’m not the only one.
“Stealth” is a useful tool for visiting Reddit. It’s available on F-Droid. https://gitlab.com/cosmosapps/stealth
Otherwise using old.reddit with a browser has been a decent fallback.
This sounds more useful to apply to specific, small portions of the sand, rather than applying it to an entire coastline.
“We can use it to strengthen the seabed beneath sea walls, stabilize sand dunes and retain unstable soil slopes. We could also use it to strengthen protection structures, marine foundations and so many other things. There are many ways to apply this to protect coastal areas.”
Isn’t the whole point of something like End-to-End Encryption so that not even the company themselves can read your messages?
In that case it wouldn’t matter even if they did turn the info over.
Edit: I read more into the page you linked. Looks like those NSLs can’t even be used to request the contents either way:
Can the FBI obtain content—like e-mails or the content of phone calls—with an NSL?
Not legally. While each type of NSL allows the FBI to obtain a different type of information, that information is limited to records—such as “subscriber information and toll billing records information” from telephone companies.
Here’s an alternative link using ProxiTok:
https://proxitok.pabloferreiro.es/%40mrsmisanthrope2/video/7393882849096518943
Depends on the bank and what kind of notifications you want.
Some banks only allow certain types of notifications to occur through the app.
Notifications and Mobile Deposit are the 2 features from banking apps that I find compelling.
Instead of using Imgur, I’ve been uploading images to posts on Lemmy and then linking to those on Reddit with my comment.
Haven’t had any issues doing that.
The downside to this is, if the instance shuts down, those images won’t be available.
That must be it! I’m not seeing it that way through Voyager. Thanks!
Blocked who? Blocked what? The first account listed on there is still actively posting.
Hiding “/s” in a spoiler tag is a bit more satire friendly.
In some cases seeing it upfront gives away the fact that you’re not serious a little too quickly and doesn’t have the same “got ya” effect that some people want.
It’s not necessary by any means, but it can be fun to add that extra layer sometimes.
As far as what happens specifically on Lemmy, it looks something like this:
Found it: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=45CvTHmt_dI
This is why I prefer it when people specify what kind of “AI” they’re talking about rather than just saying “AI” as a buzzword. I definitely agree with Derbauer here… this is painful.
Hi! Yeah, probably a timing thing. I used a spoiler tag yesterday and a user mentioned that it didn’t work for them. Turns out it’s a known issue for Boost users, so that was fresh on my mind.
Some Lemmy applications don’t display it well (like Boost).
It works fine through a browser or Voyager.
Edit:typo
Great video, he breaks everything down really well…
I might have to start linking to this video rather than trying explain what AI is vs what AI isn’t to those who like to make general statements like “AI is a scam!”.
It’s not just tap water, it’s also the non-stick coating on a large number of pans (including Hex Clad which is one of the more expensive sets).
When you can get ticketed for speeding while your car is on the back of a tow truck:
https://www.the-sun.com/motors/11008328/photo-towing-van-speeding-ticket-evidence/
Or a red light traffic ticket when your car was stolen:
https://abc7chicago.com/chicago-red-light-ticket-camera-illinois-car-stolen-theft/11677595/
And the police/courts won’t help you because it’s a problem from the private company running the cameras… I think we can see where some sort of AI backed camera network is headed.
A bandaid to fix this might be to setup an easy way for someone to dispute the charge. For every day that it takes the company to review the dispute, they would need to pay back the accused the same amount that they are charging them (with a minimum of paying them back twice the amount of the fine).
Even then, I’d rather cameras not be used in this way at all.