

If you can’t see the difference between a centrist party and a far-right fascist one, then I hold no hope for your political literacy going forward.
If you can’t see the difference between a centrist party and a far-right fascist one, then I hold no hope for your political literacy going forward.
They are also doing that too.
I’ve contributed to labeling and scoring some of the Common Voice data before. Definitely a fun little thing to do when you have some free time.
I was also pretty happy when I saw Open Assistant making a fully public, consensually contributed to database for text models, but they unfortunately shut down, and in the end there was only really enough data to fine-tune models rather than creating one from scratch.
Voice Swap was not trained on any data that wasn’t “ethically gained.”
Read the bottom of their FAQ that lists the exact databases in question.
The couple of datasets they used on top of all the data they directly pay artists to consensually provide have permissive licenses that only require attribution for use, and gathered their information directly from a group of willing, consenting participants.
They are quite literally the exception to the rule of companies claiming they’re ethical, then using non-ethically sourced data as a base for their models.
It’s a person who runs a database of game UI’s being contacted by people who want to train AI models on all of the data en masse.
It depends on the person in my experience.
For instance, I’ll often use a question format, but usually because I’m looking for similar results from a forum, in which I’d expect to find a post with a similar question as the title. This sometimes produces better results than just plain old keywords.
Other times though, I’m just throwing keywords out and adding ""
to select the ones I require be included.
But I do know some people who only ever ask in question format no matter the actual query. (e.g. “What is 2+2” instead of just typing “2+2” and getting the calculator dialogue, like you said in your post too.)
Practically every single FOSS application I use is highly useful to me, and of course, free, so I’ll just list them all here.
Edit: And Umbrel (on Raspberry Pi) if you want to host things more easily. Basically just a much more hands-off, user-friendly docker for people who don’t want to tinker as much.
Edit 2: Non-FOSS, but Obsidian is the best note taking app I’ve ever used. Great selection of community-made plugins (which are FOSS) for additional functionality, and all notes are in standard cross-software-compatible Markdown. No locked-in proprietary formats.
And yet one of them does significantly more to ruin the planet than the other.
If you want the highest possible chance of changing the world for the better, you want a party in power that is the least bad of the options available to you. That doesn’t mean that party is good in itself, but it’s certainly the best chance you’ll get.
If you want to save the climate, for instance, the party that’s open to developing more clean energy, even if they still support fossil fuels in some capacity, is better than the one actively dismantling climate regulations, halting clean energy development, and increasing our fossil fuel production to an even higher rate.
Nobody likes this duopoly, but when you live under one, you have to pick the side that will do the least harm in order to implement your own goals to reduce harm further.
This doesn’t mean the Democrats are inherently good, but they’re certainly going to give you a better shot at improving the world than the neo-Nazis will.
Sure, I’ve now got nothing left to say.