It’s all just bots looking at bots.
It’s all just bots looking at bots.
People have been creating and posting realistic looking fake celebrity nudes for quite literally decades now, but now they’re using AI and its suddenly a problem?
An 85 year old film director*
I got the first one for free on Epic. Enjoyed it enough that I bought the DLC for it, and was pleasantly surprised that my friends didn’t need the DLC in order to play it with me, it was great!
And then about a year later I returned to the game with a different set of friends, and was no longer able to access the DLC until my friends also bought it.
It was a huge let down and I’m still pretty disappointed they changed that. I’m very skeptical this will stay this way.
I’ve had a Day 1 edition Xbox One that I’ve used nearly every day since release. Admittedly, not great for games, but it’s been an absolute powerhouse of a media center for me. Twitch, youtube, plex, any streaming service, and a blu ray. If for some reason I can’t stream something to it, I can plug in my chromecast or laptop, and with passthrough, it’s literally all I’ve needed in my living room for the past 10 years.
For the first time yesterday I very honestly considered boxing it up and getting rid of it after booting it up and getting this forced full screen ad before getting to my homepage. Fuck this shit.
You can patch out bugs, you can’t patch out boring.
Immediately from the headline my first reaction was “well, the rate of actual collisions is near 0”, so either they’re very good at dodging each other, or what they deem as a “near collision” is actually quite a wide berth.
But then, this is the journalistic integrity we’ve come to expect from gizmodo.
I remember reading ages ago about how highly sought after and how much single-character twitter handles would potentially sell for, since there’s only 26 in the entire world. Now all this person got was a t-shirt.
Five? Lmao
This is still only the first disc. We have at least 15 more years before this is done.