I’ve seen the follow-around thing a couple times. Rare because we’re small. Become big, and it becomes a bigger problem
People can follow from a Mastodon instance and drop troll comments on all your posts
What it has going for it is a nuclear block; when you block somebody, their trollish response no longer shows up in the feed of your followers, and your post no longer shows up in feed of their followers. This basically kills trolling as as sport.
The fact that on Mastodon & Lemmy “block” means “I can’t see their posts, but they can still summon followers to harass” makes them much less attractive as a platform.
Yes — also non-native speakers of a language tend to follow similar word choice patterns as LLMs, which creates a whole set of false positives on detection.
“filter out” is an arms race, and watermarking has very real limitations when it comes to textual content.
It doesn’t take people on the internet saying it though; just an association with people saying something and the name, which happens to people who write news articles about something.
The bots are not reliable summarizes like that. They often can’t tell the difference between the author and the subject of a piece of writing.
All of them. I can post other sites just fine; it’s only washingtonpost.com and wapo.st links that are blocked.
Or from your ISP. The Washington Post ran an article about that today, but links to them get blocked by some sort of filter on lemmy.world
I don’t think that’s tractable.
The scams are designed as alzheimers screening tools. Teaching will help some people, but not that many.
Depending on tree species, most of the carbon can be above-ground. This is really common in the tropics
Depends on how close they can be made in watt-hours per kilo. They might be good enough for vehicles once the technology comes into reasonably widespread use, while avoiding a lot of the issues with trying to acquire sufficient lithium.
Sounds like it.
The answer likely varies by model. Check.
Yes, but it’s a system that is designed to sync with the frequency of whatever other electricity is out there, and it shuts of if the main shuts off. Almost all rooftop systems without a battery in the US are set up the same way.
Still, it’s important to check that things you think are disconnected do not have current flowing through them. And this makes it more important.
At some point, that car won’t be cost-effective to repair, and you’ll want to replace it. Be a lot better to have strong privacy legislation in place when that happens.
4.2 is tiny; other platforms are getting hundreds of thousands per day.
It’s small enough that the Mastodon use stats show it as noise.