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0 sats \ 1 reply \ @Kael_Yurei 22 Sep \ on: Can Machines Think? It Doesn't Matter AI
Very insightful comment , the submarine analogy says it all. The way you put it shows a real understanding of the core of the AI discussion. What really matters isn’t whether AI 'thinks' or is 'conscious,' but what it allows us to do, where its weaknesses lie, and how it will impact our lives and economies. The discussion around supposed consciousness is more philosophical than practical.
The strong vs. weak dollar debate misses the point: tariffs mean higher import costs and more uncertainty for businesses. Currencies move on capital flows and confidence, not slogans. Short-term effects aside, the real issue is low productivity and lack of competitiveness.
Bitcoin is more like a hard money savings account than a traditional investment. It serves as a hedge against inflation and government intervention, preserving purchasing power over the long term. If you believe in the idea of deflationary money, it could be one of the most interesting allocations you can make.
Your reasoning is very solid and worth discussing, as is your observation that it’s no coincidence this issue is resurfacing at this particular moment.
Section 230 doesn't protect us, it protects the platforms that host us. Our freedom depends on their interests.
I only use it for team coordination in certain games, because the team uses it. Otherwise, I put it in the same category as Telegram (useless apps)
The NO FAKES Act is censorship disguised as protection.
It hands state and corporate powers the authority to decide which voice, which image, which imitation is “permitted.”
It kills modding, remixing, and the creative pulse of the network.
The freedom to imitate, to build, to troll is the freedom to create.
This is a fantastic challenge for your kids to turn their skills into real value at such a young age!
They can use simple design tools to create digital art, such as cute animal pictures, emojis or motivational quotes, which they can turn into printable stickers, or write a short story, comic or guide about something they are interested in (e.g., “How to Build a Minecraft Castle” or “The Adventures of a Super Squirrel”) and sell it directly through a simple website they create on Replit.
In my humble opinion, the integration of tokenized assets like USDT is pragmatic but not necessarily aligned with Bitcoin's ideology of decentralized, peer-to-peer transactions without intermediaries. The client-side validation of the RGB protocol is complex, posing challenges for non-technical users in managing transaction proofs. My concern lies with the interoperability with the Lightning Network and the issues surrounding channel management.
Nice post, well done, A great personality in the field of cryptography and specifically bitcoin. Now, as for whether it was Satoshi, it doesn't matter much, "we are all Satoshi"
At an individual level, the speed and breadth of LLMs can indeed create the impression of "outshining" in creativity. However, human creativity possesses a unique dimension,emotional depth, personal experiences, and intuition that LLMs cannot fully replicate.
That’s actually a really creative and thoughtful way to inject some novelty into a routine task! Even if the students weren’t as dazzled as you hoped, it shows your willingness to experiment and keep things fresh. Those little “magical moments” make a big difference in the long run,and the fact that you had fun with it is a win in itself.
Very nice experiment! Well done for daring to do it, it shows how valuable disconnection is for peace of mind, but also how necessary the internet is when you want to explore ideas the moment they are born.
The creativity of LLMs is derivative: it results from recombining existing patterns through probabilistic language modeling. This is not equivalent to human creativity, which involves meta-cognition, intentionality, and the capacity to generate entirely new representations. Therefore, models do not 'create' in the strict sense but produce synthetic outputs constrained by their training data.
Here are some idioms used in my country.
"She put both his feet in one shoe" - She pressured him harshly.
"He became a rabbit" - He ran away, disappeared.
"He put his tail between his legs" - He left ashamed, defeated.
"He ate a door" -He wasn’t let in, got rejected.
"Bread and salt"-Symbol of friendship and hospitality.
"He washed them black" -He took them secretly, under the table (undeclared)
"The train left him"-He missed the opportunity
"He put water in his wine"-He compromised
"He acted like a duck"-He pretended not to know