It's wild seeing Washington Court House (yes that's the actual town name) in a general news byline. It's such a small and insignificant town.
Weird
There's probably a German word for this feeling
It's wild seeing Washington Court House (yes that's the actual town name) in a general news byline. It's such a small and insignificant town.
Weird
There's probably a German word for this feeling
Admiral Cloudberg did an amazing write-up of this event. She can be found by that handle on Reddit and Medium. I'm pretty sure that article is on Medium by now.
Mentour has a good video on it too, but I'd recommend the Admiral's write-up first
I would watch this episode of Black Adder
Clearly, based on your responses, you don't think AI/LLMs are universally bad. And anyone who is that easily swayed by what is essentially a clever shitpost likely also thinks the earth is flat and birds aren't real.
You know. Morons.
I appreciate it <3
I'm sure there are entire books full of laws that they broke
Ehhh, I've seen too many "this violates decorum and tradition but not any actual laws" since 2016 to have confidence in laws and morals intersecting in a meaningful way
If cats looked like frogs we'd realize what nasty, cruel little bastards they are. Style. That's what people remember.
Edit: FYI this is from Terry Pratchett's Lords and Ladies, the same book that OP paraphrased
Senpai remembered me :3
I figured it was someone like that.
I seem to remember something similar about not registering as a foreign agent in 2016 & 2020. Funny how that keeps happening around the Trump campaign 🤔
Kinda curious. What is the illegal part? I'm aware that political actors are required to make certain declarations about money, and I would guess that's a part of this. That being said, there's all kinds of foreign influence on US politics, including financial. So I just wonder what's laws were broken in this case
lol