That “company” is the key part of the scam here. Your father will be asked to invest money in it for various reasons. Whether they’ll go for the “it’s a great deal” or “help me Obi Wan” angle is dependent on the mark.
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VoodooMischief@lemmy.cato
Canada@lemmy.ca•Gun violence soars in Canada as illegal weapons from the US flow in • FRANCE 24 EnglishEnglish
11·il y a 21 joursNothing wrong with the methods. If anything they are not harsh enough.
VoodooMischief@lemmy.cato
Canada@lemmy.ca•Gun violence soars in Canada as illegal weapons from the US flow in • FRANCE 24 EnglishEnglish
42·il y a 21 joursIt’s always funny seeing how stories like this get the gun nuts out of the woodwork to start complaining about local gun control. The problem will always be twofold. Local guns need to be controlled, and the traffic of contraband needs to be controlled. The end result we want is to avoid becoming a gun infested shithole like the US. NRA talking points can go take a hike off a cliff.
VoodooMischief@lemmy.cato
News@lemmy.world•The Supreme Court Will Decide Whether ICE Can Hold People Indefinitely. We Should All Be Worried.English
27·il y a 22 joursI don’t even know why they bother pretending they have laws anymore. No one on the outside buys their bullshit and their loyal zombie hordes will bend over for any reason. It’s just a silly larp now.
VoodooMischief@lemmy.cato
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•Do LLMs "have" the "abillity" to be told they are wrong or incorrect and be able to contest that?English
2·il y a 23 joursIntentionality is the key difference. You can eventually tell a Chinese room’s nature by giving it new variables that it hasn’t encountered before. New problems lead to algorithmic breakdown.
That said, there’s deeper conversations you can have about what consciousness truly is, of course. My personal view is that it requires a level of complexity that we are still very far away from architecturally, and a level of scalability that we may not even be able to support ecologically. This thought experiment is mainly to show you what the inner workings of a computerized process can look like, and works to provide a demystified perspective.
VoodooMischief@lemmy.cato
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•Do LLMs "have" the "abillity" to be told they are wrong or incorrect and be able to contest that?English
11·il y a 23 joursA concept that I think is really helpful for interpreting what an LLM does is the concept of a “Chinese room”. The idea is someone slips a piece of paper containing a message in Chinese under the door and inside that room is someone that doesn’t know Chinese following a set of rules for converting characters and numerals into a response based off their syntax. Afterwards the person in the room creates a response and slips it back out under the door. At no point does the person in the room understand the Chinese in the input or in the output, but the person standing outside of the room might believe there is a Chinese speaker inside of the room. This is the same idea with computerized outputs like LLMs. They only provide the illusion of intentionality and don’t actually have an understanding of inputs or their outputs.
VoodooMischief@lemmy.cato
Buy European@feddit.uk•[French] One in two French people would be willing to pay more for a domestically controlled alternative. 83% of French people want to reduce their dependence on American providers.English
4·il y a 23 joursAnd the added economic benefits of having in-house services are basically a return on investment that balance out any higher initial costs. It’s a no brainer.
VoodooMischief@lemmy.cato
Technology@lemmy.world•Study says AI in schools may be doing more harm than goodEnglish
72·il y a 23 joursThe way I see it, AI is just another log on the fire, although it is indeed a big log. The use of laptops and the prevalence of smartphones all damaged kids’ attention spans, then came the advent of short form content which further degraded their ability to stay focused and now we have AI slop summarizing what we see with our own eyes and taking agency away from their very brains. Somewhere along the line we convinced ourselves that more tech is good for education, and I think that needs to be rethought. We need to get kids back to reading and writing the old school way. There’s neuropsychological benefits to it that you just don’t get from typing or scrolling on computers. And this problem exists even outside of the classroom or kids. It’s a problem with all generations. I’m noticing just as much mental decline in older populations as younger ones.
VoodooMischief@lemmy.cato
Canada@lemmy.ca•Police say young people being recruited to carry out GTA shootings using encrypted messaging servicesEnglish
2·il y a 29 joursStupid is as stupid does.
VoodooMischief@lemmy.cato
Canada@lemmy.ca•Bell, Telus under under fire for charging fees that 'appear' to violate new rulesEnglish
3·il y a 29 joursRomania and other places in European have unlimited data for under $10/month. Meanwhile here in Canada an unlimited plan is over $100/month. God forbid you have a non-unlimited plan (which is still more expensive than an unlimited plan in EU btw) and you have a cap on your data, because with the way the internet is these days the amount of bloatware on every website will kill your data allocation in a week, and then you’re left with overage charges that double your monthly fees. You either get screwed now or get screwed later. Those are your choices when it comes to telecom companies in Canada.
When the umbilical chord is cut.
VoodooMischief@lemmy.cato
Technology@lemmy.world•Solar generates more energy than coal in US for 1st timeEnglish
31·il y a 30 joursThis is an often misquoted fact. The study that compared coal and nuclear was only studying air pollutants, and obviously the steam stacks from nuclear reactors don’t have as much radionuclide pollutants as coal. However, the study did not look at other sources like wastewater - which is where most radionuclide pollution from nuclear reactors comes from (along with other sources like spent fuel, casings, and moderator rods).
VoodooMischief@lemmy.cato
Canada@lemmy.ca•Pro-separation billboard still up after removal deadline from Alberta town passesEnglish
20·il y a 1 moisSeems to me the Township admin should be going after the private owner of the billboard sign that’s currently leasing the digital display to Morgan. Weird how this private entity has been kept anonymous in the reporting.
VoodooMischief@lemmy.cato
Technology@lemmy.world•Stanford scientists regrow lost cartilage and reverse arthritis in major breakthroughEnglish
1·il y a 1 moisWell I would argue beta decay is an aging-like property inherent in atoms. Granted, the half-lives are pretty long, but a limit still technically exists in that respect.
VoodooMischief@lemmy.cato
Canada@lemmy.ca•Just how many days do provincial politicians spend legislating? We did the mathEnglish
3·il y a 1 mois~$200K annual salary btw
VoodooMischief@lemmy.cato
World News@lemmy.world•US destroys Iran reservoirs, leaving thousands without water in searing heatEnglish
5·il y a 1 moisHey this happened in Spec Ops the Line
VoodooMischief@lemmy.cato
Canada@lemmy.ca•Indigenous leadership is key to Canada's climate and energy transition, new research suggestsEnglish
31·il y a 1 moisNDP’s Wab Kinew as PM would be an amazing thing for the country. He seems like exactly what we’d need after Carney.
VoodooMischief@lemmy.cato
Canada@lemmy.ca•Carney confirms Trump-delayed Gordie Howe bridge will open this weekEnglish
2·il y a 1 moisYour lack of arguments is louder than your sarcasm.
VoodooMischief@lemmy.cato
Canada@lemmy.ca•Carney confirms Trump-delayed Gordie Howe bridge will open this weekEnglish
51·il y a 1 moisIt’s a bridge owned by Canada that undercuts a US billionaire owned bridge. It’s a win in my book. And you know what’s worse for the environment? Continuing to feed a warmongering economy down south.


Long overdue and much needed across the country to stop the destruction of our ecosystem. Ecuador, Bolivia, India, and Panama did something similar a few years back by giving nature wide sweeping legal rights. It sets a a good legal framework to push back on corporate exploitation. That said, it’s still a long way away from actively being able to stop the force of our economic objectives and definitely needs a society that’s ready to uphold them in order to succeed.
This is a good article around Bolivia’s laws that offered some apt observations on how this won’t be enough (even though I fully support it): https://revista.drclas.harvard.edu/bolivias-mother-earth-laws-is-the-ecocentric-legislation-misleading/
“The Mother Earth laws sadly have become statutory devices to legalize the exploitation of natural resources in Bolivia, instead of protecting Mother Earth. By promoting extractive activities in order to achieve the Living Well objective, on one side, and the defense of Mother Earth, on the other, these laws end up being highly contradictory, making environmental protection a secondary objective, which is contingent to the government’s prevailing economic interests. In reality these laws did not translate into any improvement in environmental policies in Bolivia and they only served to bolster the deceptive image of the Bolivian government as an international pioneer in environmental protection.
It is not enough to pass laws with abstract Indigenous visions and apparent non-capitalistic concepts if they are not coupled with concrete practices, real actions and enforceability mechanisms. These laws will never be effective if there are no new public policies to change the current non-sustainable production pattern, shifting away from extractive practices that go against Mother Earth’s survival. As long as there is this fundamental dissonance between these laws’ provisions, other legal provisions and specially the Bolivian government’s practices, there is little hope for any improvements in future environmental and animal protection efforts based on there Mother Earth Laws.”