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Playing RPGs as a kid: ok I get fire damage and lightning damage, and I can even see cold damage, but wtf is water damage

Playing RPGs as an adult homeowner: oh fuck

do you ever have that thought

the thought where instead of doing your thing in an ad hoc way you're going to define a new file format to configure it in

and instead of writing the parser for the file format in an ad hoc way you're going to write the best parsing/lexing/generation/transformation framework there has ever been

so that when you finally get around to actually doing your thing, it'll be easy?

Long ago when you ran your app in Xcode it was pretty rare for you to see junk logs emitted from core frameworks that you don't control.

Nowadays just a simple SwiftUI control can regularly emit autolayout constraint warnings that we can't even address.

This log shows the first few lines of an app I just started working on. Only 1 line here is relevant to me, the rest is noise I can't hide or address.

proposal: a game that is just a creative management game engine and you can download mods that additively combine prisons, theme parks, hospitals, factories, restaurants, cities, beaver cities, etc.

dad bought himself a Smart Lightbulb and i did manage to get it to work with his phone but also confirmed that you can't actually control it if the router isn't connected to the internet.

in a democracy, freedom of speech serves to allow people to punch up without repercussions to their human rights

and you can recognise the fascist by the way he instead treats freedom of speech as if its purpose is to allow him punching down.

This served as a reminder to delete as many apps as I possibly could. Thanks Apple. And by “Thanks,” I mean

B̵̧̗̣̲̙̼̱̹̪̣̟͐͑͗̐̅̽͊̔̅̕͜͝͠E̴̢̛̱͕̟̮̞͈͓̫̒̈́͋̾̒̎̿̀̓̈́͊͝͝ͅ ̷̪̣͗̾̽̊̎́̓́͊̀̎͘N̵̨̢̳̟̔͐Ọ̵̢̦̣͈͕̖̪͙̖͔̫̯̰͌̌̊͂T̸͈͙̞̼̜̫͍̬̹̭̙̾̔̃̃͊́̽͑͗̃̕͠ͅ ̵̢̠̭̗͕͂̊͑̚A̸̝͗̅̾̋̎̃̈́̄͊͛̌̕͠F̸̧͔͍̪̥͚͉̦̙̺͌̓͌̾̀͆̋͂̈́͌̓͘͝Ŗ̴̞̩̔͂͒̀͒̆̂̓͌͛̀A̴̡̨̨̭̪̣̻̖̯͔͖̅̿͛̿̈́̀̾͆́̓͂͘͝͝ͅͅI̷̞̘̱̱̼̰͒͜D̵̮̰͈̩͚̺̱̮̻̲͗

@altruios @dalias @woe2you @tante

By this logic, I should be allowed to scrape movies encoded in H.264 off of streaming websites and transcode them to H.265.

The transcoder is inspired by the original copy and creates something new and different (at the byte level). Since the output product is now something completely different (but still contains the same information, a watchable movie), by your logic this is now completely legal instead of obvious piracy.

Yet if I were to do this, I would be breaking the law. Why is it different when AI does it versus when ffmpeg does it? They're both just software reading and interpreting information and transforming it into something else. Either both should be legal or neither should.

Cool project: "Nepenthes" is a tarpit to catch (AI) web crawlers.

"It works by generating an endless sequences of pages, each of which with dozens of links, that simply go back into a the tarpit. Pages are randomly generated, but in a deterministic way, causing them to appear to be flat files that never change. Intentional delay is added to prevent crawlers from bogging down your server, in addition to wasting their time. Lastly, optional Markov-babble can be added to the pages, to give the crawlers something to scrape up and train their LLMs on, hopefully accelerating model collapse."

zadzmo.org/code/nepenthes/

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