This curious worm uprooted itself from the sand like a carrot being pulled up by an invisible person, and rolled around in the current for a bit before starting to dig itself back in. You can see the sand grains slowly traveling over some mucous layer as it slowly reverses into the sand.
05.03.2026 23:21
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Framed in green
03.03.2026 22:56
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Exactly what I first thought of
03.03.2026 04:54
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An AI model is not a person or an employee. Not the same thing for the side receiving the request.
But from the user's side, writing an AI prompt is not much different than emailing an artist saying "I want this and this". The requester isn't the one creating the art in either case.
03.03.2026 00:36
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I've said often that generative AI is not like just another tool for creating art like photoshop or a word processor, because it's very much like something else instead: commissioning art. Except you ask a machine instead of an artist.
Makes sense that you can't copyright a REQUEST for art.
03.03.2026 00:21
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I don't miss his books. His were the first non-children's literature that I read, so he was important to my development as a reader, but the books were never satisfying. They created good intrigue, but the endings just fizzle out. I hold that Jurassic Park is just a good premise and nothing more
27.02.2026 23:17
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He wrote an entire novel (State of Fear) about how anthropogenic global warming is fake and is a front by eco-terrorists. He was invited to talk at GOP events as a supposed expert on global warming (and how it is fake)
27.02.2026 23:13
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I might still go back one day and read one or two of his books that have been in limbo on the back of my reading list for probably 15 years. I never actively made a choice to boycott, but his works just lost any urgency/priority for me when there is so much else to also read
27.02.2026 22:46
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Actually another one that I'm only reminded of because I saw that he just died: Dan Simmons. The Terror is probably my favorite horror novel. I forget details but I remember peeking into his forum and seeing him say that he thinks global warming is fake. People say he also got weirdly racist
27.02.2026 22:43
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I feel lucky that I started growing apart from the books from maybe Book 5? I did enjoy each book at the time that I read them cannot for the life of me remember almost anything that happened in books 5-7. Except that Sirius dies, Dumbledore dies, and then Snape dies (but don't remember how).
27.02.2026 11:06
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I think I'm lucky that not many artists I care about much turned out bad (that I know of). The singer from Rammstein being a sex pest (allegedly, anyway) was disappointing. Also John Cleese being pretty anti-trans was also disappointing
27.02.2026 11:00
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For hire: abattoir quality tester
Requirements: must be pig
24.02.2026 05:53
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I think it's not like any other 'growth phase' like Amazon or Uber or Google. LLMs cost so much to run and that can't be solved by reaching a wider user base or building infrastructure. Infrastructure here are consumables (GPUs) and have to be continuously rebuilt, and use is already widespread
24.02.2026 04:46
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Sounds like a genuine moron
24.02.2026 04:01
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Someone else once put it - LLMs can't actually answer questions, instead they stimulate what the answer to the question would kinda sound like. Which in this context is to say that they operate on the same principle as the writers for dubiously researched legal dramas
24.02.2026 03:47
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IDK, when the AI financial bubble bursts, will it make sense to anyone to keep these enormously expensive data centers operational? Improving the models have diminishing returns relative to the resource cost, and AI companies are deep in the red with no apparent plan how to turn a profit
24.02.2026 03:41
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This reminds me of when techbros said that nfts and self-executing 'smart contacts' will make lawyers obsolete. You still need a lawyer to draft your smart contract unless you want it to automatically and irreversibly do something illegal...? And you'll still sue when you're unhappy with what it did
24.02.2026 03:33
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Immediately thought of this video too
20.02.2026 07:30
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This is insane. They got, like, rule of law or some shit over there
19.02.2026 09:25
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My answer too. To me, the matter with Prometheus in a nutshell is this: It caters hard to the sense of wonder about the origin of life, but at the same time, its writers were so uninterested in the topic they bothered to learn nothing about it. Empty cargo cult version of wonder and intrigue
19.02.2026 09:21
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I know that song
18.02.2026 02:35
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A translucent nudibranch, a nomad of the sandy dunes
18.02.2026 00:18
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It will never stop being funny that jpegs are in fact the most fungible things that have ever been invented. The copyright of an image is a unique commodity, but usually isn't transferred with the NFTs at all.
17.02.2026 10:38
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Honestly, odds are you do understand nfts, but the people really into them didn't, and you kept waiting for there to be more to this when there wasn't. Like a plan so dumb that you expect the explanation to continue but the guy has finished talking, grinning at you with stupid triumph
17.02.2026 10:24
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Let's go
17.02.2026 10:12
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The SAVE act is one of the most cunning attempts at voter suppression I have ever seen. They know women are less likely to vote for the GOP, and they found a way to make most married women have to pay to vote.
17.02.2026 05:10
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Underwater snowfall. A bloom of what I think are radiolarians
16.02.2026 23:32
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Pygmy seahorses, blending into their world
15.02.2026 08:56
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