It’s not about an honest belief that someone will identify as trans to commit a crime, it’s about the advantage of identifying as a victim in order to push an agenda.
It’s not about an honest belief that someone will identify as trans to commit a crime, it’s about the advantage of identifying as a victim in order to push an agenda.
To stop the part from sliding off, not the whole pedal.
Put a fastener through the thing, preventing it from moving?
I mean, an IPO is a pretty reasonable point to allow insiders to trade. You’ve just published a huge amount of information about the company, so the insider advantage is at a relative low. It’s somewhat common for blackout periods to exist prior to things like earnings announcements, but after the announcement is usually when trading is permitted.
The hell is going on with this article, is this bot-written? The top-line reads that the CCDH are the ones running the analysis. But the very next line reads “Streaming Platform YouTube said they analysed over 12,000 videos across 96 channels using an AI model crafted specifically to be able to distinguish between reasonable scepticism and false information.” So it kinda sounds like this should be titled “YouTube study investigates changes in climate denial rhetoric, finds deniers are succeeding at skirting older protections.” and then go on to explain that the new model inherently identifies this problematic content.
Listen, I’m not a big fan of Google, but as written this is just a shitty hit piece arguing in favor of an activist group that seems to be calling on YouTube to do the thing they’ve just said they already did. Unless the claim is that YouTube just went “Huh, weird. Guess we’ll keep making money on it anyways!” and there’s proof of that, this feels pretty deliberately misleading.
Because protecting user privacy is not a priority.
No one would ever say millibits, because a bit is the smallest meaningful datapoint. It’s a non-existent term, and a very pointless pedantic hill to try to build so that you can die on it
What differences do you see when you use Vulcan? And what’s the deal with triple buffering?
Just got a Mac last week, and was able to set up file sharing with my PC in less than 5 minutes last night. In fact, it was way easier than getting the sharing working with my Surface, which refuses to acknowledge my desktop’s existence.
I don’t generally encourage buying a Mac, I’m not at all convinced it’s worth the price premium. I’m only commenting insofar as I have context.