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𩵠avery cochrane đŠľ

Janaina Medeiros

#extradirty
KIROKAZE

Andulka
Jules of Nature
we're not kids anymore.

Kiana Khansmith
Three Goblin Art

pixel skylines
Aqua Utopiaď˝ćľˇăŽĺşă§č¨ćśăç´Ąă

shark vs the universe

oozey mess

romaâ
trying on a metaphor
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
Show & Tell
PUT YOUR BEARD IN MY MOUTH
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seen from CĂ´te dâIvoire
@wheredoesthegoodgo

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vozinha you are so loved..
There's an attitude I've been seeing more and more of where having any kind of artistic opinion that isn't praise is seen as some kind of faux pas designed to yuck people's yum or whatever, and while I understand the kneejerk response behind it I do have to wonder like. How sustainable do you think it is to foster an environment where even the most casual criticism is met with hoards of defensive with Whoa Mama Mia Cunt Let People Enjoy Things style comments
OK so yes feedback is necessary specifically in art but I have seen people just be full on mean or unnecessarily harsh. There's creative criticism and then there's just being a dick for the sake of it.
Okay. And I'm saying people are allowed to, when they want to, on their blogs, be a dick about things for the sake of it if they feel like doing it. I'm wildly skeptical of the idea that constructive critique is the only kind of feedback one is "allowed" to make in their own siloed corner of the internet, or that insistence on this will somehow create a healthier space for expressing opinions.
Once again. I can understand the kneejerk impulse here, I do. It sucks to imagine, say, a creator scrolling online coming across some needlessly vitriolic post about something they worked on. But anyone is allowed to go "That's dickish" and move on, or people can engage with "I think this is oversimplified blah blah" if they want to but at the end of the day it isn't some kind of crime against the hobby or a fandom or even a singular person if someone just shoots off "This sucked I wasted my night" in their own accounts.
Like. A lot of people are trending towards thinking I'm talking about the importance of constructive criticism and like, sure, I think that is probably a more interesting avenue of analyzing something's flaws, but once again if you're not like, addressing an artist or interested in doing a deep dive that doesn't mean you're Not Allowed to be flippant or quick to judge. It's kind of startling how many times I've seen someone be like, "I can't stand this album" on their blogs, untagged, had that shit shared, only for it to come across someone's feed and for them to respond with "Why? What's wrong with it? People are allowed to like it, why are you being so negative, why are you tearing people down for no reason, this isn't even real critique," as though the intention in the first place ever was or ought to have been substantive critique in the first place.
It's difficult to articulate my feelings on this, but I do increasingly feel that the insistence upon there being a correct form of disliking something that precludes the possibility of making anyone feel insecure or hurt because they like it is significantly more stultifying than an atmosphere where people can shoot off "Fuck this" and be blocked or ignored for it

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dragonfruit iskierka
Sky | prints
I hear that
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
đšđđđ˘ đˇ, đˇđżđˇđş, đđđ đłđđđđđđ đžđ đľđđđđŁ đşđđđđ, đˇđżđˇđş-đˇđżđ¸đš
[ID: July 1. Too tired. END ID]

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âWhy donât you use aiâ idk man beyond the obvious environmental and âthis machine causes psychosis and encourages people to kill themselvesâ thing I think asking the equivalent of a solid D student who is also a pathological liar if they can answer my question/do the work for me seems pretty fucking stupid
When you meet Edward Elric he gives off the impression that he's the short-tempered hot-headed "violence is the answer to all life's questions" kind of protagonist, and it's in fact incredible character craft that he's actually the character who ends the series with a negative-3 kill count.
people killed: 0
direct orders of "you really really need to kill this guy" ignored: 1
ongoing murders being committed by Ed's own friends/colleagues that Ed got in the way of to specifically stop that murder from happening: 2
God's worst soldier Edward Elric. Showed up as the youngest member of the Amestrian army, took millions of dollars from them, never followed a single order, helped dismantle their fascist regime, left with a lower kill count than he arrived with, then fucked off to go be a house-husband. Character of all time.
HACKSÂ 5.08 | The Cube
Handing the Google executive currently chained in my basement a piece of paper that reads "Shall I end your torture?" with one checkbox that reads "No" and another that reads "Maybe later."

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My job had a training on AI and I was surprised how honest it was about AIâs limitations and problems, and we spent our activity time finding errors and issues with responses made by AI. But it did beg the question, why would I use this
The trainer was like, think of AI as an intern, student worker, or new coworker! They can do tasks for you, but be sure to carefully check their work.
We just established that this ânew coworkerâ is racist, sexist, and canât do math - why would I ask for their help??
The thing is, thereâs a deep cultural assumption of the importance a category of ânew on the job and bad at itâ that is based around aspects of those sorts of positions that just simply should not apply to AI⌠and AI hypemen have gotten very good at exploiting that cultural assumption. No one actually keeps around âstudent workers who suck at the jobâ because those interns are helpful. You keep them around because there is a learning curve, and if you want the reward of having experienced employees, you must submit to the mortifying ordeal of herding newbs.
An AI tool cannot learn on the job. It simply canât. Expecting it to is like expecting that your car, once you put enough miles on it, might spontaneously decide to convert itself to a model with four wheel drive and regenerative braking. Itâs an intern that will never get better. Itâs a new coworker that will always be ânewâ. You can âhelp itâ to come to the correct answers, but it will never learn from that help, because training a model and using a model are two different things.
The only reason that new hires who canât do the job correctly arenât deadweight is that theyâre an investment. AI tools that you have to babysit arenât an investment; theyâre a subscription service to virtual deadweight.