Embarrassing, considering how un-creative and original GPT-4 is. It’s an actual struggle to get ChatGPT to think outside of the box. Claude 2 on the other hand is much better at it.
But this goes to show how unimaginative the general population is if this truly is the case.
Apparently they don’t learn.
I’ve read Seymour Hersh’s Pulitzer Prize-winning report “How America Took Out The Nord Stream Pipeline”. I stopped reading that “vatnik soup” when it dismissed them for reporting on the US blowing up the Nord Stream. The US government’s weak attempt at misdirection with the Chinese weather balloon only reinforces Hersh’s report. Anyone who doesn’t take Hersh’s report seriously is not credible. Moreover, the fact that Clayton Morris reported it while the rest of the media focused on the balloon only makes me think he’s more credible than most of the media.
You could say the same about any other news source you dislike. You are just comparing it with news sources you already know get funded by the West without any basis.
Attacking the source is just lazy. Learn how to disagree.
name-calling. Those attacks are just lazy. Learn how to disagree.
ad hominem. Attacking the source is just lazy. Learn how to disagree.
Try to argue correctly:
Alacritty, Tmux, Zsh, Syncthing, Stremio, Fopnu
The problem is that the more I use a program, the more flaws I find. So, there are a couple I use a lot, but I can’t say they are my favorites because of those flaws that I only notice after using them extensively.
I wish there was a website for finding Linux software with popularity, ratings, categories, recommendations and trending software. Similar to https://pkgstats.archlinux.de or https://www.linux-apps.com
This is similar to an idea I had some time ago but it was too difficult for me to implement. I’m happy to see a similar program being develop. Though using Jellyfin, Sonarr, Radarr, seems too difficult for the average user, with so many interconnected programs. I wish there was a simpler alternative.
My idea was:
A program that combines the features of Mediarepo and Fopnu, connected to a metadata database like MusicBrainz. The integration with a metadata database would enable users to automatically curate their file collections and contribute to the database by curating files that haven’t been curated yet. This would allow for efficient organization and easy searching of files based on their metadata. Users would also have the ability to create collections and download entire collections instead of searching for individual files.
I’m not telling you to believe what he says. RT shouldn’t be trusted and neither should BBC, CNN, and other US propaganda outlets. The only way to learn the truth is looking at both perspectives and using critical thinking.
Here is primarily where Mr. Norton is sourcing everything from if you are all interested.
Some other interesting notes:
https://tass.com/world/1658013 This outlet claims that ‘The poll was conducted among highly educated male citizens, 62% of whom were residents of the capital.’
On reddit, the article received a few comments about how Africans dont want democracy and then was deleted on /r/worldnews.
That’s essentially what I’ve found on this specific topic.
Nice insight. Go back to watching government approved propaganda.
Many think Rumble is an untrustworthy source. I like the fact that it refuses to limit free speech.
Rumble says it won’t move its policy goalposts to appease France’s censorship demands
Any examples? I think you are just making an assumption.
My ideas change over time, so I guess all information may shift my position.
Doesn’t it tell you something that people get banned just for reporting the news? I don’t see anything wrong with the video and yet YouTube doesn’t allow their content.
Oh ok, when you told me to find other sources I got on the defensive. I like to make my own decisions. And others should do the same, instead of trusting me or whoever tries to convince them of anything.
The context window is still too short for any story. They just forget about old messages and only remember the newest context.