@Cerberus I was kind of kidding. I'm afraid you missed that. I guess vote like the men can have two meanings. The one you used have the same rights of vote and this other one follow what the men believe is the right choice. So vote their own way would for example mean 'vote a less bellicose way' or something.
@Cerberus First you let them vote, then you let them drive, ten years later they'll all be dyeing their hair blue and identifying as cats. And in Springfield, people'll eat them. /s
Edward Harold Hagen (born June 1, 1962) is an American biological anthropologist and professor in the Department of Anthropology at Washington State University Vancouver, where he has taught since 2007. His research has focused on evolutionary explanations for mental health phenomena and substance use. He has studied the Yanomamo people of Venezuela, West African Pygmies, and the Aka people of the Congo Basin.
== References ==
== External links ==
Faculty page
Edward Hagen publications indexed by Google Scholar
@jlliagre Perhaps some could vote in the Diet that way too.
> Under the abbesses Henriette Christine of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel and Elisabeth Ernestine of Saxe-Meiningen there began a new golden age of the abbey. The abbesses promoted arts and sciences.
Sophia I (September 975 – 30 January 1039), a member of the royal Ottonian dynasty, was Abbess of Gandersheim from 1002, and from 1011 also Abbess of Essen. The daughter of Emperor Otto II and his consort Theophanu, she was an important kingmaker in medieval Germany.
== Early life ==
According to the chronicles by Thietmar of Merseburg, Sophia was born to Emperor Otto II and Theophanu. She may have been the first surviving daughter, born in 975, though other sources indicate that her sister Adelaide, born 977, was in fact the eldest. Sophia is first documented in a 979 deed of donation, when her...
> Experts say the same rumours and false allegations about widespread fraud that inspired the riot at the US Capitol on 6 January 2021 are resurfacing in advance of this year's election
@Robusto Nothing wrong from travle here. It didn't state these two countries were wrong (that would be red: significant detour) but just 'pretty good' (orange: close but doesn't get you closer.)
The law is more lenient towards those with no bad intent, eg manslaughter vs premeditated murder.
But still manslaughter isn't so great either.
"typically of poor or no quality"? -no- quality? wouldn't that just be blank space?
"An easy tool is to focus on words like “the,” “it,” or “is,” which will sometimes appear more often than is necessary, as generative AI is likelier to use common words instead of bigger and more descriptive words." ...
um
maybe.
But I'm not so sure about it.
The usual way to figure out if a document is 'out of distribution' (ie not like the others) is to use TF-IDF... words in the document that are rare elsewhere tell you the doc is special.
And if 'special' means AI generated, then Delve Tapestry Vibrant Landscape Realm Embark Are all high TF-IDF for ChatGPT documents.
(other LLMs like Claude or Gemini may have different high TF-IDF words because trained on different docs and different word-vectorizer and different RLHF (post training fix up by humans))
Most of those special words have been documented to have come from the vocabulary choices by the RLHF trainers, who happen to be a lot from Nigeria, and had a particular educated way of writing responses (not always the natural expected manner).
The individual clips in video sequence each look... like the usual clips I see in videos on youtube...I always wonder where they came from (beause the production company that produced it (or teenager in their basement) did -not- preduce each one just cut and pasted from somewhere else).
I'm no expert on vision genAI but have heard some of the things to look for (like symmetry and number of teeth, hair wisps, number of fingers on hands. BUt those may be 'fixed' in current models.
@Robusto Right. What each clip is seems to have little to do with what is being said at the moment, but sure, would be mostly appropriate for that narrative
(there was one short clip of a woman berating someone like she was complaining about their office work - very ... random and not appropriate for the whole)
1) if the individual video clips were created by some genAI, they are all superimpressive. I can't look at them and say yeah that's generated definitely (or even probably).
2) the selection of clips though ... seems -way- too chaotic to be done by a human. chaos my term for not random noise like static but somewhat relevant but also some randomness (inconsistently inconsistent).
@Robusto The youtube feed choices are AI driven with some randomness popped in (also some very intentional upping of possibilities of things that would never otherwise get traction).
@Robusto Small parts of defense departments IT areas that are doing cyberwarfare.
That sounds extremely superstitious, but there's evidence the Russians are doing it.
And I presume the US is doing it. (and other major players (Europe, China, India))
@Robusto Probably not that. Maybe some teenager from Kazakstan (my term for someone super tech brilliant and with a lot of time on there hands and just wants to press some buttons) was trying out some new tech they've been working on.
I was just giving examples of places using genAI and what there ends might be. YOur linked video is probably not a state actor (unless maybe they're super clever and are trying to test things out on something innocuous)
This example is really testing my paranoid abilities... I don't usually do that.
I usually can't be bothered... my mind stops at "Why would someone bother/take the energy to do that?"
I mean I'm sure there are bad nefarious maleficent people out there, but I just want to take a nap.
@Vikas every time there is a switch from standard time to daylight savings (and also a lesser effect the other direction)
from which follows my suggestion that we only every move the clocks back.
I just realized, in the sense of became aware of the awareness, that pretty much most everything I write is an attempt at being ridiculous.
Whether it is true or not.
Like if there is some true thing that isn't ridiculous, I don't feel compelled to repeat it.
Like I couldn't give a rat's ass about people who claim the Earth goes around the Sun, when it is obvious that the Earth and Sun both revolve around their common barycenter.
Which totally ignores interplanetary effects.
I kinda like the spirograph-like epicycles in the Ptolmaic model.
@Robusto Cuz they refuse to say democrats are responsible for hurricanes? (Which, I must add, is something that too many people actually believe. It was a meme recently)
The whole state of the election is depressing to me. Several friends of mine said they would leave the US if Trump won, and they might just do it. I wish I could say they're overreacting but it's hard to convince even myself of that
@Laurel Yeah. I actually investigated several "outs" like that when Trump won the first time. I decided there was nothing that would would be good enough for my wife and me. For one thing, my wife is rubbish at languages. For another, neither of us likes bugs (good-bye, Central America, or most tropics). And we're in our peak healthcare-facing years.
I'm not saying it couldn't worsen to that point, but for the moment I am really, really hoping for a Dem victory this year. Like never before.
@Robusto I've also at least thought about leaving (at least this cycle), but I really don't want to. And at the very least, staying in the US means that your vote stays in the US, and hopefully that means something
I feel like a lot of the reassurance I'm able to give myself rn is just "at least it couldn't be that bad for me" which is hardly reassuring at all, especially when Project 2025 would really screw over a lot of people both close to me and not.
@Mitch the "link" search keyword would return pages that linked to the named page. And as with any search result Google tells you how many at the top of the page.
@alphabet It's a fun idea to think about but no appreciable population movement would be made. People in general (the world over) just don't have the means to move to another country. People will stay and grumble.
@Laurel Takes money, planning, language skills, actual skills (that are wanted by the new country) if you're serious about taking on a new citizenship.
Or be OK with an unskilled immigrant job (cleaning, driving, etc)
I always imagined when the revolution comes and somehow I couldn't wangle being on the winning side, that the vocation I could very easily slip into would be...
night watchman.
of course with CC tvs
none of that walking around the premises crap
@alphabet they're super tolerant up north because...
@alphabet You know I live in a swing state, so there's no such relief for me. I'm not sure how much protection I'll get from state laws in the event more things go wrong federally either
In fact, I feel like I live in a swing area in general (suburbia) since it feels like it's a coin flip what side you're seeing a sign from (the urban and rural areas are more democrat and republican respectively). It does not feel great
@Cerberus I mean we're not go know for sure about the US for a few days, but if they go one way, all sorts of world wide shit will be pushed in a bad direction almost immediately, and the EU and the UK will have to worry about that first.
But you're talking to someone who gets up at 3 or 4 in the morning every day, which now has become 4 or 5 in the morning. I'm heliocentric so I never change anything in my own schedule.
@Robusto Metering out one's days from a heliocentric reference frame is as natural and humane as doing so from an horological reference frame is unnatural and inhumane.
@alphabet That's true, and sometimes I think I should've done more. Maybe I'll at least try to make sure my parents are both voting democratic (some more distant relatives of mine definitely aren't, not unless they've thrown out the Trump bobble heads recently)
@MetaEd I was actually recently in Austin, and the only big downside there is that you're surrounded by the rest of Texas. (My friend calls Austin the blueberry in the cherry pie)
@alphabet I guess I should cut myself a break because I've already driven myself insane once in the last rolling 30 day period, and that was unrelated to the election. It would have been a lot out of me to do more
@Cerberus Less temperate, less regular. Periods of drought followed by torrential rains. There were only some of the latter around the Mediterranean before, but now we have much more frequent floods in the northern half of France. Fourty years ago, it rained a little drizzle for days in Paris area, nowadays, rain falls by the buckets in a few hours.
Even the small town where I live has experienced in October two floodings in 10 days apart.
Otherwise I personally probably won't be affected much. Probably. But he'll screw over a lot of people elsewhere and we'll have to deal with another four years of the news media hanging on his every word to make clickbait headlines.
@Laurel I think he's probably sincere (for once) in saying that he doesn't care much about Project 2025. He doesn't like people telling him what to do--or really anything produced by people who aren't his handpicked loyalists.
@Laurel Even if she wins by whisker, you still had half the country voting for us to to switch to an authoritarian system instead of a democracy. Longer term, that one is the greater problem needing solving.
Unless it was called "Project MAGA" and written by Stephen Miller and someone with ties to the Proud Boys, who had run every word by him before publishing. Then he'd care.
@alphabet That's true, but he definitely shares a lot of values with them. And loose cannon Trump is a thing to fear regardless of what anyone else is doing
@tchrist Yeah, I think about this every time I pass by the giant TRUMP signs just outside my neighborhood. I wonder what policies of his they could agree with so much as to justify such a display
@Cerberus Becoming less temperate than it used to be, so with a weather more similar to the Spanish one, although that one also evolves in the same direction (hotter, more extreme events).
@Mitch but the more interesting problem is that I'd have to use the equations of time and generate a huge, HUGE timezone file that leaps daily instead of seasonally.
okay the simple case is handled -- I was able to add a timezone to Linux that shows the mean solar time for my house. 12:00 will not deviate by more than about a quarter of an hour from actual solar noon.