lvxferre
@lvxferre@mander.xyz
The catarrhine who invented a perpetual motion machine, by dreaming at night and devouring its own dreams through the day.
- Comment on The EU moves to kill infinite scrolling 9 hours ago:
IIRC Dessalines (Lemmy and Jerboa frontend dev) once said to regret adding infinite scrolling, and the only reason he didn’t remove the feature is because people would rage. So odds are Jerboa will be one of the first to comply.
And… frankly? As much as I criticise Lemmy devs, I think Dessalines is right in this one.
- Comment on OpenAI retired its most seductive chatbot – leaving users angry and grieving: ‘I can’t live like this’ 13 hours ago:
That’s watt they say!
- Comment on OpenAI retired its most seductive chatbot – leaving users angry and grieving: ‘I can’t live like this’ 15 hours ago:
Remember what Voltaire said about the HRE? Not Holy, not Roman, or an empire? So. OpenAI is the same.
- Comment on OpenAI retired its most seductive chatbot – leaving users angry and grieving: ‘I can’t live like this’ 15 hours ago:
Ah, assumers ruining social media, as usual…
If I got this right the crowd assumed/lied/bullshitted that 1) you knew why 4o is being retired, and 2) you were trying to defend it, regardless of being a potential source of harm. (They’re also assuming GPT-5 will be considerably better in this regard. I have my doubts).
- Comment on Color? What's that? 5 days ago:
In addition to all of that, since your comment is spot on:
When people claim some variety is more conservative than another variety, they tend to cherry pick a lot. It’s easy, for example, to look at rhoticity and claim “American English” is more conservative, or to look at the cot/caught merge and claim British English is more conservative. But neither claim is accurate or meaningful; and when you try to look at the big picture, you notice changes everywhere.
To complicate it further, neither “British English” nor “American English” refer to any actual variety. Those are only umbrella terms; they boil down to “English, arbitrarily restricted to people who live in the territory controlled by that specific government”. And the actual varieties that they speak might keep or change completely different features.
- Comment on Anon on Mussolini 5 days ago:
Merdolini & friends hanging together ______________________ ‖ ‖ ‖ ‖ ‖ |º\⟨º⟩⟨º\ ⟨º⟩ |º|
- Comment on Color? What's that? 5 days ago:
Backstory of the spelling of that word:
Latin colōrem (accusative of color) gets inherited by Old French as color /ko’lor/.
Somewhere down the line Old French shifted /o/ to /u/. I believe this shift affected at first stressed vowels, or that the distinction between unstressed /o/ and /u/ was already not a big deal; so there was more pressure to respell the last (stressed) vowel than the first (unstressed) one. So the word gets spelled color, colour, colur.
Anglo-Norman inherited this mess, spelling it mostly as colur. Then Middle English borrows the word, as /ku.'lu:r/~/'ku.lur/. It’s oxytone in AN, but English has a tendency to shift the stress to the first vowel, creating the second pronunciation. Spelling as usual for those times is a mess:
- colur - spelled like in Anglo-Norman.
- color - swap the ⟨u⟩ with cosmetic ⟨o⟩. Scribes hated spelling ⟨u⟩ in certain situations, where it would lead to too many vertical lines in a row; that’s why you also got come, love, people instead of cume, luve, peuple.
- colour - mirroring an Old French spelling that was more common up south, around Paris.
- coloure - that ⟨e⟩ was likely never pronounced, I think it was there to force reading the previous vowel as long
- coler - probably from some /'ku.lur/ pronunciation already reducing the vowel to */'ku.lər/
- kolour - ⟨c⟩~⟨k⟩ mixing was somewhat common then. And no, KDE did not exist back then, they did no lobby to spell the word with a K for the sake of a program that would only appear centuries later (Kolourpaint).
Eventually as English spelling gets standardised, the word settles down as colour.
Then around 1800, Noah Webster treats this word as if it was directly borrowed from Latin. Since in Latin it’s color, he clipped the -u. And his dictionary was popular in USA, recreating the mess, even after it was already fixed.
- Comment on snek tree 6 days ago:
- Comment on "may" 6 days ago:
*Caution* the sexy girl in my avatar may have fire.
- Comment on it's true 6 days ago:
Aren’t the named tribes a subset of native Americans, so it can be true without the original statement being false?
The original statement implies the technique was widespread across Native American groups. It’s almost certainly false for the ones here in South America; there’s a lot on terrace farming and slash-and-burn, but AFAIK nothing that resembles the companion system of the three sisters. (I wonder if it’s due to the prominence of subterranean crops. Taters, yucca, sweet potatoes.)
The Haudenosaunee/Iroquois and the Cherokee/Tsalagi being related hints me it was something they developed.
- Comment on it's true 6 days ago:
While “Iroquoian” is still used as a technical linguistic category
I’m guessing this won’t last for long, given some people already call the language family “Ogwehoweh” instead of “Iroquoian”. Example here.
- Comment on it's true 6 days ago:
Don’t speak please
How am I going to phrase requests then?
sudo make me a sandwichstyle? - Comment on Projeto de Lei 398/XVII/1 - O que acham? 1 week ago:
Ah! Ok. Nesse caso, sim. Não haveria o problema da perda de privacidade. // Não havia “dark patterns” para ninguém. É isso?
Exato! Evita-se o problema e a necessidade de resolvê-lo.
Estou a ver é grande dificuldade em convencer as redes a aceitarem isso…
Concordo. A oposição viria principalmente das redes grandes e comerciais; redes pequenas geralmente são mantidas e programadas por gente mais consciente, e não beneficiam-se tanto de táticas abusivas.
- Comment on Projeto de Lei 398/XVII/1 - O que acham? 1 week ago:
Não acho que deva haver restrição etária. Tampouco verificação do usuário. Acho que é a forma errada de lidar com este problema.
A forma certa, na minha opinião, é proibir certas características das redes sociais. Como as listadas pelo texto da PL: autoplay, infinite scroll, notificações compulsivas, loot boxes, etc.
Ou seja. O ônus de verificação simplesmente não existiria; nem para as redes grandes, nem para as pequenas. Haveria um ônus diferente, de mudar seus sistemas para não incluir características viciantes. Este segundo ônus afetaria muito mais redes grandes e comerciais do que redes pequenas e sem fins lucrativos.
- Comment on Projeto de Lei 398/XVII/1 - O que acham? 1 week ago:
Não sou português, então falo aqui como observador externo.
Todos os problemas psicológicos e sociais mencionados no PL afetam adultos também; talvez menos, mas não de forma negligível. Então, se o objetivo do PL fosse realmente coibir dano, criaria restrições contra características danosas das mídias sociais. O ônus das leis sendo propostas estaria nestas redes, e não no usuário.
Em outras palavras, o PL proibiria o que define no artigo 4º, alínea h (design aditivo); que Meta e similares mudem seus sistemas. Mas, ao invés de fazer isto, cria uma barreira etária onde o usuário ou fica proibido de usar a rede, ou deve provar que pode.
Aliás, como o usuário provará que tem mais do que 16 anos, sem erodir o anonimato online? Anonimato é essencial para proteger tanto a privacidade como a expressão livre de todos.
- Comment on Poor Jeremy 2 weeks ago:
Most terrestrial snails are hermaphrodites, so it’s more like they can only mate with their own sex. But it’s a bit more complicated than that; they typically produce sperm earlier than they produce egg cells, to discourage self-fertilisation, so you could argue they start male and end female.
- Comment on Denominator, go Mercator 2 weeks ago:
This map is clipping a good chunk of the Southern Hemisphere. When you include it, you also notice the same distortion:
Note how it looks like Antarctica (14*10⁶km²) is 1/4 of the globe, even if it’s actually smaller than South America (18*10⁶km²).
- Comment on Anon creates a religion 4 weeks ago:
The continuity between Roman/Latin paganism and Christianity in special is rather evident for me: the fate of the dead, the idea of sacrifice, the mystery cults and all that “your god is to the East!”…
- Comment on Generation Wars 5 weeks ago:
Nah, that’s the cartoonist, it’s TheJaredComix for a reason )))
- Comment on 🐍 🐦 🪹 5 weeks ago:
B[r]azilian here. We do use “ué”.
I am aware “ué” is also commonly used here, as the “also” in my comment shows. And my point still stands, this stuff is likely from Angola, given the genus in question is African.
Ficou claro agora?
- Comment on Generation Wars 5 weeks ago:
James, listen to him!
- Comment on 🐍 🐦 🪹 5 weeks ago:
Nah, likely Angolan. Angolan Portuguese speakers sometimes also use “ué”, and the genus in question is African.
- Comment on Metal Exclusionary Radical Astronomy 5 weeks ago:
To add to that: that gender you’re talking about is actually two distinct concepts, one social and another grammatical/linguistic. The later is more like a traditional way to refer to noun classes, when they also split humans based on social gender.
Sadly my go-to example for that doesn’t work in English, because of the lack of grammatical gender.
- Comment on Beer is for GIRLS 5 weeks ago:
Liking beer or not is a matter of personal tastes. However, if the beer tastes like “watered down unsweetened cocoa”, then it’s probably poor quality beer. Good beer should taste different from everything, even other beers.
Dreadbeef recommended IPA; if you’re into bitter flavours, I also recommend it. There’s also sweet stouts if you like sweeter ones. (Juuust in case you’re here from LatAm, note mass produced pilsener are typically really bland and meh. A lot of people like it this way, that’s fine, but it would explain why you think it’s watered down cocoa.)
- Comment on Internet picture of a monkey 5 weeks ago:
If she is/was alive, what if she was the one vibe coding the AI? Then you’d get Ai Ai AI AI Ai Ai.
…this is quickly becoming buffalo⁸ tiers of silly.
- Comment on Internet picture of a monkey 5 weeks ago:
You’re hired!
- Comment on Internet picture of a monkey 1 month ago:
You know what, I got a brilliant idea:
See, the chimp in my avatar is called Ai Ai. Was? I don’t know if she’s still alive; last news I could find about her are from 2005, when she stopped smoking. Anyway, wat if I had artificial intelligence to create a bunch of her pictures, and sold them as NFT? The “AI Ai Ai collection”, or Ai³ for short. I wouldn’t do this to scam a bunch of suckers, noooooo; I’d do it because you can get rich, if you “invest” into my collection: buy an Ai³ NFT now, for just 100 euros. Then resell it for a thousand euros, for mad profitz!!!
[…I’m obviously joking. C’mon, this summer is easily getting past 30°C, in a city where it used to snow once in a blue moon. I definitively don’t want to feed the global warming further with dumb crap like this.]
- Comment on Snitches get switches 1 month ago:
The nomenclature is really messy across countries and even sub-country entities. The Portuguese language Wikipedia even highlights the mess:
Nomenclature diversity across countries. // Some surveys estimate protected areas in different countries and regions are called by at least a hundred names, and not uncommonly countries have their own categories of protected spaces, roughly similar to the protected space concept defined by the IUCN.
From that I guess the restrictions associated with those spaces also change, and in some you aren’t supposed to remove local fauna and/or flora.
- Comment on Breed back better, or whatever Biden said 1 month ago:
What makes me lose my sleep:
Trees are extremely iconic and we see a lot of similarities between them, but they’re mostly due to convergent evolution. Plants have been growing that stalk independently over and over and over. Crustaceans become crab-like, mammals become ant eaters, and plants become trees. *carcinisation intensifies*
- Comment on AI-generated content in Wikipedia - a tale of caution 1 month ago:
I’m still reading the machine generated transcript of the video. But to keep it short:
The author was messing with ISBNs (international standard book numbers), and noticed invalid ones fell into three categories.
- Typos and similar.
- Publishers assigning an invalid ISBN to the book, because they didn’t get how ISBNs work.
- References "hallucinated"¹ by ChatGPT, that do not match any actual ISBN.
He then uses this to highlight that Wikipedia is already infested by bullshit from large “language” models², and this creates a bunch of vicious cycles that go against the spirit of Wikipedia of reliability, factuality, etc.
Then, if I got this right, he lays out four hypotheses (“theories”) on why people do this³:
- People who ignore the limitations of those models
- People seeking external help to contribute with Wikipedia
- People using chatbots to circumvent frustrating parts of doing something
- People with an agenda.
Notes (all from my/Lvxferre’s part; none of those is said by the author himself)
- “Hallucination”: misleading label used to refer to output that has been generated the exact same way as the rest of the output, but when interpreted by humans it leads to bullshit.
- I have a rant about calling those models “language” models, but to keep it short: I think “large token models” would be more accurate.
- In my opinion, the author is going the wrong way here. Disregard intentions, focus on effect — don’t assume good faith, don’t assume any faith at all, remove dead weight users who are doing shit against the spirit of the project.