Yeah, of course it is…
I posted about this exact thing over and over late last year. Always to tepid response from all but a few others that understand that in the US, privacy is a relic of the old world.
Glad at least Mother Jones got the memo.
There’s a ton of papers on Google Scholar that still include phases like “Let’s delve into…” That show otnwas used not to translate, but for the research itself.
And someone did replicate this, and ChatGPT 4o, o1, Claude and Grok all came up with the same formula for an “easy” way to calculate tariffs.
Not hide. They want to return the developed world to literal medieval-style surfdom economics. It’s total egotistical delusion.
OK, well let’s see how it plays out in 20 years and see where things go.
100% agree. These along with induction charging roads are what puts EVs over the line in terms of average distance per charge.
Sodium is also far easier to get, no mines involved. This might be closer to the era of 89¢ gas.
Well, it makes me double check my knowledge, which helps me learn to some degree, but it’s not what I’m trying to make happen.
I like to use GPT to create practice tests for certification tests. Even if I give it very specific guidance to double check what it thinks is a correct answer, it will gladly tell me I got questions wrong and I will have to ask it to triple check the right answer, which is what I actually answered.
The problem is it’s all or nothing. You must foil IP address, fingerprint, and cookies - all three at once.
Mullvad browser might make your fingerprint look similar to other users, but it’s not common is the problem. Test it with the EFF Cover your tracks site.
Ah, just the privacy nightmare we need.