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On March 23, 2023, a DOE employee attempted to back up his personal porn collection. His goal was to use the 187,000 images collected over the past 30 years as training data for an AI-image generator. He said he had depression, something he’d struggled with since he was a kid. “During the depressive episode he felt ‘extremely isolated and lonely,’ and started ‘playing’ with tools that made generative images as a coping strategy, including ‘robot pornography,’” according to a DOE report on the incident.
I'd never even considered using depression as a justification for viewing porn at work, but got to give this guy credit for chutzpah.
121 sats \ 1 reply \ @siggy47 10h
Wait. Is that wrong?
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36 sats \ 0 replies \ @optimism 9h
No robots were hurt in the creation of this porn.
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21 sats \ 0 replies \ @grayruby 7h
A headline I did not expect to read today.
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The longer you delay post nut clarity the hazier your views become! It's just science
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I also don’t know what robot porn is. Is that like a Bender from Futurama fucking another robot from that world?
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His story is contradictory, at least according to the article. He claims it was an accident to upload to his work computer. But then also claims he didn’t consider the consequences about doing what he did. That would imply he knew what he was doing but didn’t care about what would happen? That’s not what happens when you do something by accident.
Also, Jesus, 30 years worth of photos. That’s a hell of a backup.
I knew of a person that was fired for violation of HR terms on his computer. It was heavily suggested it was porn viewing. He was WFH, and kept his work laptop right next to his personal one, and they were similar models. Easy mistake!
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @jasonb 8h
Dude. What a bizarre time we live in…
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