this movie is about to be good as fuck
will byers stan first human second
Sweet Seals For You, Always
🩵 avery cochrane 🩵

The Bowery Presents

if i look back, i am lost
Lint Roller? I Barely Know Her
Noah Kahan
sheepfilms
Monterey Bay Aquarium
ojovivo
macklin celebrini has autism
wallacepolsom

#extradirty
One Nice Bug Per Day

tannertan36
Keni

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣
🪼

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@icyandthefrostbites
this movie is about to be good as fuck

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ARTSHIELD
Putting out another resource for people if their PC is too old to glaze or do their work on mobile platforms
Protect your art from AI.
Artshield works by digitally watermarking your art into tricking AI scrapers into thinking its also AI and thus excluding it from the pool of sampled images. Granted it's methods are not as potent as nightshade or glaze, but its browser based and fast so you can have at least some protection on your art rather than none.
Example of an un-guarded picture
Same image put through Artshield.
See any differences? no? Thats because unlike glaze or nightshade the process is a lot more simplistic and changes the art in more subtle ways, while that makes the protection a bit thinner the artifacting is much less noticeable. but dont worry, its there!
as you can see theres blurring and artifacting on anything an AI might look for, such as lines, changes in color, and background patterns. While its not much out of JPEG compression, its more than posting your work without any protection due to PC limitations.
It sucks as artists we have to jump through such hoops to make sure our livelihoods aren't stolen but there is hope that tools are being made to keep us safe, showing there are those that still stand with us against the fight on AI.
Read that description of how it works carefully. Follow the link.
One of the ongoing frustrations of the AI discourse is the constant misinformation about how and why the tech works.
The blurring and artifacting is a side-effect of Artshield running your image through Stable Diffusion to implant a Stable Diffusion watermark onto your image. The idea is that your image will be recognized as AI and thus skipped by most scrapers that are on the lookout for that.
So, realistic expectations if you're using this software:
It utilizes Stable Diffiusion to do its thing. So once again we see that the issue of infringement is on output, not input.
This only protects against scraping done by groups concerned about AI in the dataset. The majority of those groups have already done their scraping. The chicken is already in the nugget.
This will not impact anyone wanting to make a custom LORA or a style prompting system.
Any AI art detector that looks for a Stable Diffusion watermark will indicate that your work is AI afterward because that's what this software does.
Essentially, all the reasons Glaze and Nightshade would be ineffective even if they worked as advertised are still here, only the effect is subtle enough that the presumption will be 'AI gen' rather than 'glazed pic' when something looking for that SD watermark pings on your work.
You can use it if you like, but you should be aware of the actual mechanics involved first.
Edited for tone, as the watermarking is merely understated, not omitted, in the original post.
You’re not depressed. You just need $250,000 in your bank account.
Reblog to materialize $250,000 in prev's bank account
Update! Not sure if I should just do line art or if I should color it
i don't remember if jay told others that he's adopted (i mean he told them in skybound but time got reversed and all those things actually didn't happen so like him telling other ninja he's adopted also got reversed??? you get me right???) so i got this idea for a short comic
well i'm pretty sure he could just say he's adopted behind the scenes or smth but ANYWAYS
actually i'd be not surprised if kai fr forgot this fact
ALSO I'M BACK YIPPIE I AM FINALLY FREE AND CAN DRAW *confetti*
i wasn't much active here, just answered comments but DAMN OVER 60 FOLLOWERS??? i cannot believe so many people decided to follow me i started posting art here when, only a few weeks ago???? waahhhh THANK YOU SO MUCH GUYS!!!! 😭😭😭i'll try my best to post more cool art for yall!!!!! thank you thank you thank you again!!!

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Everyone is fighting a tough battle so reblog to give previous a sword 🗡️
Sora and Mei! Another very quick drawing I did last night! I figured they'd just send each other cute cat and dog pictures back and forth xD IDK just something silly, and a chance for me to draw Sora! Enjoy!
the most toxic workplace in all of china
what does turkish delight taste like and is it worth the events that occurred in chronicle of narnia: the lion the witch and the wardrobe
So the first thing you must understand is that there are two basic types of Turkish delight. The first kind is what most people are familiar with, which are these gelatinous cubes covered in powdered sugar. They are, by most metrics, an acquired taste:
This is usually the stuff people try and say, “Yeah, I don’t get it, Edmund.” But if you go to a good Turkish confectioner (or just any of the bazillion stores that sell it in the Istanbul markets) you’ll see a second kind of Turkish delight, in a rolled shape:
This is the good stuff. The sell-your-soul-and-your-family stuff. It’s nutty and chewy and creamy and comes in all sorts of flavors, and I highly recommend it to anyone. (Especially hazelnut. It’s not a traditional flavor but I’m convinced the White Witch dipped into the future to get some for Edmund, it is that delicious.)
The second thing you need to understand is that the turkish delight was laced with mind-control drugs.
The third thing you need to understand is Edmond was living under WWII sugar rationing
Four whole batches of cookie dough prepped for baking! Groceries have been purchased! Meals have been prepped! I
am going to fall asleep. This adult this is hard.
3 of the four cookies are done!
And baking is done! I can start cooking off and then start getting ready

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frohicky's va randomly suggesting zanehicky as his "favorite ship" sure why not.
Four whole batches of cookie dough prepped for baking! Groceries have been purchased! Meals have been prepped! I
am going to fall asleep. This adult this is hard.
3 of the four cookies are done!
Lesson 1: Cross-Racial Solidarity And Asians As The "Model Minority"
Yes, Asians Are Oppressed
It's shocking how eagerly people will make statements such as "Asians are basically white." Yet I can see why even another person of color might come to the conclusion. Relations between Asian Americans (or Asians of any society in the West) and other communities of color have always been strained. Black and Latino Americans are aware, and correctly, that many Asian American communities have a trait unique to communities of color: racial superiority. Native Americans are hardly acknowledged, if at all, by Asians. Most non-Asian communities of color experience systemic racial oppression far more severe and longer lasting than Asians in the West have endured.
But to see Asian communities solely from that perspective is antithetical to cross-racial solidarity for all people of color. In addition to the erasure of darker-skinned non-East Asians in this train of thought, and in addition to the fact that playing 'Oppression Olympics' has never benefited any categories of minorities, the fact remains that orientalism, or anti-Asian racism, cannot be a footnote in the history of American racism and white supremacy.
The predominant theme running through the history of Asian Americans from the very first arrivals-this is, obviously, 1830s to this day-is the Perpetual Foreigner Syndrome. This sense that we cannot possibly belong is exemplified by the internment of Japanese Americans, 120,000 individuals, two-thirds of them born in this nation and therefore citizens, that we could not be trusted, that blood will tell, that we truly would be actually loyal to the emperor of Japan or to some other sovereignty or that we could never assimilate, that we would not be Christian, could not speak English, could not truly join, did not understand democracy, were inscrutable, would not somehow wish for the same freedoms that others whose forbearers had come on the Mayflower wish for.
-- Frank H. Wu, UC Hastings College of the Law, 2016
Asian Americans, I would argue, are among the predominant cultures regarded as foreign, unknown outsiders. In a 2022 study, Asian Americans were the least likely to feel that they completely belong and are accepted in the United States (29%) compared to Black Americans (33%), Latino Americans (42%), and white Americans (61%). From the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 to the 1922 Supreme Court decision that Asian Americans were not naturalized citizens because they were not Caucasian to the surge in anti-Asian racism during the COVID-19 pandemic, the truth is that Yes. Asians are oppressed.
During World War II, 120,000 Japanese American citizens (citizens, not those on visa- citizens of this country) were uprooted and told to pack bags to internment camps for the simple crime of their ancestral origin, which alone certified their guilt in potentially being a spy. A portion of those interned (known as "Nisei" - second generation immigrant children) could not speak Japanese, and had never been to Japan. This was not done against German Americans, nor Italian Americans. They had to work unlike fellow white Americans to prove their nationality. The 442nd Regimental Combat Team composed of Japanese American Nisei remains the most decorated unit in American military history for their work in WWII Europe. But not Asia. Japanese American troops were not permitted to be sent to Asia.
Lead to the Model Minority
In 1966, a New York Times article by a white author thus lauded the hard work that prevented Japanese Americans from becoming a "problem minority". At the same time, the war on crime and criminalization of Black Americans was beginning. It was in this context that the "model minority" myth emerged, casting Asian Americans as hardworking and quiet, villainizing Black Americans. (It should be said that this does not justify the antiblackness in Asian American communities, only provides contextualization in a systemic lose-lose struggle between two communities fostered by whiteness, who continues to benefit in the end.)
Part of the reason API people avoid it is that they can see the way Blacks and Latinos are positioned… and they don’t want that, so they’ll do something different and hope for a different outcome… Those are the two big ones: a lot of pressure not to talk about it, and then a lot of pressure to disassociate from Blacks and Latinos.
-- Participant in a ChangeLab study about Asian Americans and race
Disclaimers.
Now that we're talking about #StopAsianHate, I see being both Black and Asian — the bridge between both of these communities and how similar they are. And sometimes I just get frustrated, because we're both not seeing each other's humanity and unifying as much as we should.
-- Johnathan Gibbs, Blasian activist
It is, however, crucial to remember that the 'model minority' stereotype in America very heavily focuses on East Asians, namely Chinese, Korean, and Japanese Americans. South and Southeast Asians, especially darker-skinned Asians, rarely feel a connect to the "model minority" stereotype. The demonization of dark skin and skin lightness hierarchy in Asia continues to reflect the effects of antiblackness even as an internalized system for Asians. Another notable element is mixed race Asian and Black American people (mixed race Asians of which many more lessons could be written on alone). As those who face both antiblackness and orientalism, their perspectives are especially important when considering cross-racial solidarity.
They're like, "Black Lives Matter and yes, this is happening to us too, but the root is white supremacy. But then you have this sector of the population... that are like, "Well, they don't understand that Black people have been going through this," and then they'll say, "Well, Asian people have gone through the Chinese Exclusion Act." But girl, slavery happened. Then you get into what everybody labels as the "oppression Olympics," and I don't do the oppression Olympics because there's no comparison. I say this as an Asian person, there is no comparison to what Black people have gone through in the United States of America since 1619.
-- Johnathan Gibbs
And the last disclaimer is that though I said we should not play 'Oppression Olympics', in a discussion like this it is vital to acknowledge that Black Americans have been facing significant amounts of systemic racism, and it is not reducing American orientalism to a footnote to say that.
So What's the Solution? Yuri Kochiyama, Malcolm X, and Cross-Racial Solidarity
Yet despite this shared struggle, divergent goals and interests “sets our two communities apart and pits us against each other. […] Racialized disinformation […] sustains white supremacy. It can also be weaponized to disrupt cross-racial solidarity among different communities and ultimately uphold the tenets of white supremacy power structures.
-- Phan, a research analyst with the Asian American Disinformation Table.
But I have spent all this time talking about how these communities are different, oppressed differently, put differently against each other, all while focusing on differences is still not the solution.
Black-Asian solidarity is not new: Frederick Douglass argued against the Chinese Exclusion Act, political activist Yuri Kochiyama was an ally and friend of Malcolm X, and Jesse Jackson stepped away from his presidential campaign in 1992 to protest the murder of Vincent Chin. Japanese Americans’ push for reparations for internment during World War II was modeled on the civil rights movement of the 60s and 70s.
-- Joseph Williams, The Long History of Black-Asian Solidarity, 2023
Japanese American human rights activist Yuri Kochiyama was the one by Malcom X's side cradling his head in her lap after he’d been fatally shot at Audubon Ballroom. She had directly contributed to the passing of the Civil Liberties Act of 1988, which guaranteed reparations for former internees of the Japanese American camps (including herself). But the majority of Kochiyama’s influence today stems from her work in cross-racial solidarity through grassroots activism.
She helped connect Asian American activism to the larger Civil Rights movement, and formed unity between diverse communities. Based in Harlem at the height of the movement, she worked directly alongside Black and Latino communities, and through her work, Kochiyama demonstrated to all that the fight for justice does not define those by their differences, but by their willingness to stand together.
The same exact playbook is being used against both Black and Asian communities. So if we don’t stick together, the playbook that wins against one of our communities will absolutely win against the other.
-- Phan
Four whole batches of cookie dough prepped for baking! Groceries have been purchased! Meals have been prepped! I
am going to fall asleep. This adult this is hard.
The best part about community is how they're all losers. Like every single one of them is a big fat loser and a failure

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the mexican football team has a 17 yrs old player and one of the funniest outcomes of this is that he cannot appear in any ad for gambling or drinking so he only appears in candy and milk advertisements. his first world cup and he's not even legally allowed to drive. his nickname is "morita" (little berry). he's three apples tall.
they couldn't put him in the beer campaign so he was represented by a bunch of berries
Saying "this has been a topic of extensive discussion, you're just 21" isn't a personal attack, you're just 21.