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180700780
comment
byargStyopa
2026 @10:34AM
(#65958972)
Attached to: Unable To Stop AI, SAG-AFTRA Mulls a Studio Tax On Digital Performers
Their argument boils down to "well if it's a synthetic actor, we represent them too, so we are entitled to $".
No, no you aren't.
By that logic, if I draw a stick figure, I "owe" someone some $. If I sell it, I owe them some of that.
To be fair, congress has already laid the ground for this, with the idea that if I draw a big stick figure sexing a little stick figure, that (to some in Congress) is borderline kiddy porn.
180666564
comment
byargStyopa
2026 @02:57PM
(#65952946)
Attached to: Doomsday Clock Ticks To 85 Seconds Before Midnight, Its Closest Ever
I'd wager 3/4 millennials and 90% genz couldn't tell you whether the Cuban crisis was before or after WW2, so I'd consider your question moot.
180664952
comment
byargStyopa
2026 @09:11AM
(#65952090)
Attached to: China Hacked Downing Street Phones For Years
Did they finally actually approve it? AFAIK the sale was approved (which was CRAZY dumb) but since then the UK has come to their senses and basically used local-city-council nonsense to stall any approvals needed. Or?
180661150
comment
byargStyopa
2026 @04:18PM
(#65950890)
Attached to: California Becomes First State To Join WHO Disease Network After US Exit
An objective early warning network? I'd fully agree.
Paying the lion's share to "trust an early warning network that has shown it is entirely subject to control by a clearly inimical power" is indeed one of those 'more stupid things'.
They spent the covid years literally covering for China, parroting and promoting their theories and actively shilling propaganda.
(Along with the Biden admin, but I would concede that the US gov't was complicit in the game to cover their own investment in gain-of-function research, not specifically to help China.)
180654014
comment
byargStyopa
2026 @10:51AM
(#65947958)
Attached to: NASA Confident, But Some Critics Wonder if Its Orion Spacecraft is Safe to Fly
Did NASA accept o ring leakage?
My understanding was that the o ring performance (failure) surprised engineers, and was determined to be a result of the exceptional (cold) launch conditions.... Or?
To be clear, the fact the o rings even existed was a result of congressional pork barrelling in the first place. The booster construction was originally designed to be one piece but by contracting it to some favored inland congressional district, it needed to be in 2 parts to fit rail transport.
180649658
comment
byargStyopa
4, 2026 @08:33AM
(#65946414)
Attached to: California Becomes First State To Join WHO Disease Network After US Exit
Has this happened?
No?
Are you imagining something just for the sake of arguing against it?
Yes.
That is a strawman.
180647684
comment
byargStyopa
2026 @09:32PM
(#65945816)
Attached to: California Becomes First State To Join WHO Disease Network After US Exit
The WHO showed its value (or lack thereof) kowtowing HARD to Xi and China during the COVID outbreak, cheerfully parroting whatever narrative China wanted to promulgate.
This is even more ironic in the light that the US pays a grossly disproportional share of WHOs budget both in assessed and "voluntary" contributions - MULTIPLES of what China pays.
Sure, I think there should be a world health organization, but why should the US pay the lion's share?
It's funny how at the end of the day, all these organizations ... the US seems to paying the bulk of the tab.
https://www.statista.com/stati...
Historical note: it made PERFECT sense that the US was the overwhelmingly dominant funder of all these sorts of organizations in 1946. Even in 1960, the rest of the world was still rebuilding while we enjoyed the massive economic advantage left us after WW2.
If you noticed: it's NOT "just after WW2" any more.
The US borrows 20-25% of every year's budget against the future, meaning every dollar we pay WHO, every dollar we use to fund the UN, 20-25% is being paid by a loan against future economic performance. That's asinine and needs to change, full stop.
I don't LIKE how Trump has done the things he's done but at the core, in many ways he's not wrong.
Personally, I think the fact that BILL GATES pays 50% more than EUROPE should be humiliating for that particular putative "world power". (To be clear, Germany - separately I believe - pays almost as much as "Europe", lol).
180639906
comment
byargStyopa
2, 2026 @03:10PM
(#65942564)
Attached to: The Rise and Fall of the American Monoculture
"Anyone describing me in a way that is entirely accurate but makes me sad" I will declare it an epithet and them stupid-heads for making me uncomfortable.
Is that about right, Corky Sherwood? Going to go home and bite your pillow in rage?
180639902
comment
byargStyopa
2, 2026 @03:08PM
(#65942560)
Attached to: 'Stealing Isn't Innovation': Hundreds of Creatives Warn Against an AI Slop Future
Bullshit x 1000.
If I see a painting in a book or a museum, and think, "cool, I could do my own take on that" the artist doesn't get one red cent.
"But" you say, "The museum or the book paid the author for that art".
They likely did.
But whether one argues that
a) the creator was already fully paid already and they get nothing more for later views, or
b) that their payment is backward-rationalized across all the potential viewers in the future (meaning what they're paid per-view asymptotically approaches zero ANYWAY), or
c) that - by posting their creation online where a LLM can get to it - they're VOLUNTARILY conceding free access to their work by human or electronic eyeballs, the distinction in this case being irrelevant ...at the end of the day, no, the author is NOT getting (in a real sense) anything (more) from me taking a look. Which ends up just like an LLM parsing it.
180638182
comment
byargStyopa
2, 2026 @10:12AM
(#65941902)
Attached to: Dumbphone Owners Have Lost Their Minds
Oh no!
Some AC doesn't like meh posts!
Please someone get me some smelling salts, I think I'm getting the VAPORS.
180638170
comment
byargStyopa
2, 2026 @10:11AM
(#65941898)
Attached to: The Rise and Fall of the American Monoculture
What's wrong with using a perfectly descriptive and - aside from the people pretending they suddenly don't know what it means - widely understood label that accurately describes the worldview of ones' opponents, to describe those opponents?
If I say "Starfleet Academy is loaded with woke bullshit" that literally, accurately, and precisely describes all the hilariously bad directorial, narrative, casting/character design, and dialogue choices that make it hilariously awful.
If you were to use 'libertarian white male' as an epithet, to you that may be an epithet, to me I'm fine with that description even if it's factually inaccurate to some degree.
It's an adjective/adverb. Feels like it's the accuracy you're complaining about, not the epithet. That or your marshmallow emotional sensitivity.
180637906
comment
byargStyopa
2, 2026 @09:17AM
(#65941760)
Attached to: Comic-Con Bans AI Art After Artist Pushback
Ultimately, all this will do is delay things a (now pretty tiny) bit until AI is indistinguishable from human art.
That's not far off. I agree it sucks but technological inflection points are like that. I think AI being shoehorned into every fucking thing is absurd, and am happy that businesses are maybe starting to recognize it at this stage for the snake-oil it is.
But the reality is that art - and apparently music - are now the low hanging fruit.
Let's be clear, I don't believe in some sort of intangible divine human aura that infuses person-created art. It's not magic.
AI builds and adapts its algorithm in the same way humans do - by absorbing others and copying, making permutations either in concept or execution that makes it "new" art and not just a copy. Humans (supposedly) do it with intent, AI by random iteration: in the end-product, the route to get there DOESN'T really matter.
And in both visual arts and music, the last 50y have seen artists widely adopt digital tools to simplify their creative work. Well, it turns out that these tools ALSO almost entirely enable AI - would we have any real threat from AI graphics if things still had to be drawn/painted with physical media? Would we have spotify AI playlists if current artists hadn't badly-blurred the line on the "creative" nature of sampling? Or if the music industry hadn't so reduced 'pop music' to (imo) a banal, repetitive, predictable near-algorithm in the first place, that AI couldn't easily co-opt that same algorithm to ape human artists?
Sure, "ban" AI art the same way digital photography contests "ban" edited pieces. You'll have as much success.
180637820
comment
byargStyopa
2, 2026 @09:01AM
(#65941704)
Attached to: Apple Developing AI Wearable Pin
It's not an AI wearable pin.
AI can't wear anything.
It is a WEARABLE AI pin.
https://dictionary.cambridge.o...
180637810
comment
byargStyopa
2, 2026 @08:58AM
(#65941694)
Attached to: Half of Fossil Fuel Carbon Emissions In 2024 Came From 32 Companies
As long as we're mobilizing resources to fix concentrated problem causers, shall we also dispense with the performative virtue-signal nonsense re banning plastic straws and drink-stirrers in the relatively well-behaved EU and North America to instead focus our efforts on the actual sources?
Per google-summary
"It's not just the often memed 8 rivers, but a relatively small number of rivers, primarily in Asia, are responsible for a huge percentage (around 80-95%) of river-borne plastic pollution entering the oceans"
180623798
comment
byargStyopa
2026 @03:19PM
(#65938006)
Attached to: The Fastest Human Spaceflight Mission In History Crawls Closer To Liftoff
"Than necessary" is really carrying a lot of weight here.
What the generation who'd just lived through WORLD WAR II (and potentially, I) considered 'acceptable risk' and what today's "don't get on your bike without a helmet, knee pads, elbow pads, eye protection, and SPF100 sunscreen baby!" generation does probably were a fair ways apart.
I will wager a great deal that China's stance on risk is much, much closer to Apollo's than to Artemis'.
As the SAS puts it "Who dares, wins"
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