I don’t think so. I just made a screenshot of one random convo he’s having about this, but there’s loads more in a similar fashion.
And all of his other posts besides this one seem legit on the surface.
So it would be pretty weird if he randomly has a very bad take, and then just claims “Lol this was a troll post, gotcha!”… That’s pretty much the 4chan defense when you get called out - “Haha guys, I’m actually not r-worded, I’m just trolling!”
I don’t think it’s satire, this guy is actively defending this on Linkedin: https://i.imgur.com/SlJPG85.png
What we have is machine learning, just an algorithm that takes input and gives you output. It can’t act on its own.
Isn’t that basically what “real learning” is as well? Basically you’re born as a baby, and you take input, and eventually you can replicate it, and eventually you can “talk” for example?
But in the training data something was off, suddenly your AI is racist and gives every black person a lesser amount.
Same here, how is that different from “real learning”? You’re born into a racist family, in a racist village where everyone is racist. What is the end-result; you’re probably somewhat racist due to racist input - until you might unlearn that, if you’re exposed to other data that proves your racist ideas were wrong
If a human brain is basically a big learning computer, why wouldn’t AI eventually reach singularity and emulate a brain and beyond? All the examples you mentioned of what it can’t do, is just stuff it can’t do yet
[From the github comment]
The issue I see with the RFC is not wanting to allow users to add tags to ease the burden on moderators. This comes from a lack of users with privileges, so moderators are overworked and need to rely on bots.
If the tags are just kinda “plain old hashtags” - and not something cool like I mentioned in the previous post 😉 -
Possibly you could have a look at how Gazelle handles tags, where it’s just a voting system. For example, this is “Kanye West” https://i.imgur.com/adTe4t8.png - then tags are no longer a boolean yes/no system, but a user-voted system. And then it’s no longer a moderation concern to have to correct tags, and you don’t need “User privileges” to manage the tags either.
It’s just a pretty chaotic system though - you might still want moderators to remove bad tags and/or ban users from creating tags if they’re always adding nonsense.
Could be some point based system like Stackoverflow - users with n points can vote on existing tags, users with n+ points can add their own new tags
I don’t know if there’s a “definitive guide” - it’s not that complicated to get a torrent client up and running. What kind of content are you looking for? Movies, Series, Music, Games, Books…?
Best is probably to try to get access to a decent private tracker, and an “easy” one - one with a bonus point system for seeding and uptime - that makes it much easier to keep a good ratio with a NAS, if you’re just permanently seeding everything you download, you’ll get points and “rise the ranks” of that tracker.
Once you’re a high enough rank on that tracker, you’ll get access to their “Invite Forums” where other private trackers advertise and give out invites to their trackers
What software/OS are you running on your NAS? If you’re running some goofy software on a private tracker your client might not be whitelisted.
Besides that - this NAS is attached to your home network I assume? Is it behind a router? Are the ports you’re using for torrenting port-forwarded?
What tracker are you testing this on? A bunch of trackers will have a “Connectivity check” that will tell you whether or not your client is connectable
Suggestions for being able to recreate your own websites:
- Own local backup
- Copy from Wayback - https://web.archive.org/
YIKES… This shows the importance of keeping backups in a different cloud, or on-premise or something - and not trust one provider with your entire company / website
Sounds like someone is not familiar with Terryology… https://youtu.be/ENSq1lw__AU?t=356