

Their policy to not be evil.
Avatar from Dicebear.
Their policy to not be evil.
The content was great. The furry art between every paragraph was completely inoffensive and sometimes cute.
Using a picture of your (I assume) furry avatar presenting their ass in my general direction as the header/thumbnail almost made me not click.
It’s not even a furry thing.
It’s a you-look-so-unserious-right-now thing.
Went to the comments to follow up on that URL and had a lesson in the history of unfortunate website names.
This seems like a dumb benchmark.
ClockBench evaluates whether models can read analog clocks - a task that is trivial for humans, but current frontier models struggle with.
What do you mean trivial? Most humans I know can’t read the most basic white-background-big-black-numbers clocks.
Someone rigged the jury to get 90% on this:
There’s a difference between
“A pedophile committed a crime in my house (but I had nothing to do with it).”
and
“Gee, the pedophiles seem to think my house is a great place to do crime, because they keep doing it, but that’s none of my business.”
I imagine it’s because Second Life was never popular with children.
As bad as mostly-adult spaces can be, the worst kinds of humans seem to skitter around children’s spaces.
Once upon a time, I set up my phone so I didn’t need to look at it: it was basically e-ink and audiobooks.
Then I started adding games and learning apps back (I don’t remember why), and now I feel like I’m not going back until e-ink reaches parity with smartphones (refresh rate, cell coverage, near-current OS).
Apple is one of the few companies whose cult I think could rival MAGA.
Tim Cook gets no brownie points from me for sucking up to 40-whatever-number-he-is.