I actually skimmed through the bill, it's short at 38 pages. It does nothing about liability or handing out money to companies working on self-driving tech. However, you're right that it preempts state/local laws regarding self-driving cars. Mostly it establishes committees and tasks various bodies with reviewing/researching/planning. It also log-rolls a couple unrelated auto regulations mandating 'improved' headlights, and a warning indicator to remind you if someone is in the back seat when you turn the engine off (baby in a hot car etc.)
My guess is that the observatory's computer system was hacked, and they're being quiet because initial data points towards China/Russia. I bet observatories have info on where all the black satellites are. Or maybe they just wanted to disable it.
Now if only someone would release a modern dual-SIM phone (with 2nd SIM 3G/LTE) with a sub-5.0" screen size.
Large size only bothers me when it's in my pocket. Once I whip it out, it can be as big as it wants to be. This is where the Samsung foldable phone comes in. I just pray it doesn't try to unfold while in my pocket...
The obvious next step is for their screens to emit no photons, radios to emit no electromagnetic waves, lightning ports to emit no signals, and speakers to emit no sounds. If one follows the Way, then one will Know what the iPhone deems them worthy of.
A competition held a couple months ago used a 1-mile test track in a 6-foot-diameter tube. It's expected to be half the diameter required for the real thing, but it was evacuated of air so it's not too far off from the production tube characteristics. The maglev aspect is only starting to get traction (ha!), with a 75-foot test track; speeds should pick up once maglev is incorporated, compared to the most-publicized test vehicles which use wheels.
Uploaded content is normally hashed for deduplication purposes. Also, there are ASICs dedicated to hashing data (e.g. cryptocurrency miners). So it'd be cheap/free. The only real problem would be old sites hashing a backlog of old content using the algos required, but they could presumably do it over time if noone yet noticed any of it was infringing.
For those who don't live in the region, Hawthorne City is in the SW of Los Angeles County, California. Neither the summary nor article bother pointing out where the heck Hawthorne is.
Remember the Great Recession from 10 years ago? It'd turn out the same way: the little people collapse, and the big players responsible walk away scot-free with huge bailouts while spreading propaganda that things unrelated to them were at fault.
Article 13 would be a pain, but it'll most likely not wreck the Internet. What'll probably happen is that some company starts offering filtering services for uploaded data. User uploads video/photo/whatever to your site, you then hash that data (with say MD5+SHA256, chance of collision for both is nearly nil). Hash is sent off to 3rd party filtering site, they return back 'Prohibited' or 'Allowed'. They charge your business per unit or per month, costs you a negligible portion of your revenue and you don't have to R&D a solution for yourself. It's considered 'good enough' for compliance with the law, and there's a central place people can go to to challenge misclassified data, which is an improvement over having to go to hundreds of different sites that banned your data.
If you start now, by the time you actually complete a degree, AI will have taken your job. If ever there's a white-collar job that software can replace, it's data analysis.
Remember this Slashdot story from a week ago? Poking ISPs with a stick (e.g. with the One Touch Make Ready push) caused them to fight back, now they're trying to get laws passed that would regulate Google's data in transit (along with other edge providers'.) Maybe don't call it a victory for Google just yet.
Ma was lucky to get in on the leading edge of a major new industry (electronic retail), just like the other ultra-rich (oil, computer software, internet services.) How many more of these 'major new industries' will be created in the future, before we've turned over every major technological stone which can be uncovered? Eventually we're going to reach a point where we've discovered every major field that will exist, and there will be no hidden wellspring of techno-economic growth just over the horizon; the scary thing is that we will never realize it, it will ALWAYS be believed to be 'just over the horizon'. We have to plan for such a future, no matter how many people insist there will be another 'just over the horizon', otherwise we'll have no path forward if there's ever a drought of new tech.
Will never happen. There are way too many games like PUBG that would've never become Steam hits if they had such a policy. It only needs to be enough to make the trolls miss it/lose out with their scams; $100 would likely be enough.
Obviously Britain needs to build some artificial brains in order to make up for the deficit in human brainpower. Then their AI expertise will be unmatched!
So THIS is why the TSA only allows a few ounces of liquids on carry-on. Down with those fucking liquids! I'm doing my part by boycotting all liquids, for approximately the next three days.
The problem with Bullet is that periodically, the CCP uses it to send you a picture of an executed family member, and charges you $1 for the 'privilege'. I filed a bug report a few minutes ago, and I think I hear knocking on the door now. That's customer service! Be right back...
Going much higher than 1% would require slashing their profits, and selling at a lower price in India. If they did this, the phones would be exported to Europe en-masse to undercut the ones sold there at a higher price. Carrier-unlocked iPhones aren't otherwise region-locked, so there's little they could do to stop that.
I actually skimmed through the bill, it's short at 38 pages.
It does nothing about liability or handing out money to companies working on self-driving tech. However, you're right that it preempts state/local laws regarding self-driving cars. Mostly it establishes committees and tasks various bodies with reviewing/researching/planning. It also log-rolls a couple unrelated auto regulations mandating 'improved' headlights, and a warning indicator to remind you if someone is in the back seat when you turn the engine off (baby in a hot car etc.)
My guess is that the observatory's computer system was hacked, and they're being quiet because initial data points towards China/Russia. I bet observatories have info on where all the black satellites are. Or maybe they just wanted to disable it.
Supernatural climate change and divine wisdom leads to antediluvian inbreeding depression. God damn it!
Now if only someone would release a modern dual-SIM phone (with 2nd SIM 3G/LTE) with a sub-5.0" screen size.
Large size only bothers me when it's in my pocket. Once I whip it out, it can be as big as it wants to be.
This is where the Samsung foldable phone comes in. I just pray it doesn't try to unfold while in my pocket...
The obvious next step is for their screens to emit no photons, radios to emit no electromagnetic waves, lightning ports to emit no signals, and speakers to emit no sounds. If one follows the Way, then one will Know what the iPhone deems them worthy of.
A competition held a couple months ago used a 1-mile test track in a 6-foot-diameter tube. It's expected to be half the diameter required for the real thing, but it was evacuated of air so it's not too far off from the production tube characteristics. The maglev aspect is only starting to get traction (ha!), with a 75-foot test track; speeds should pick up once maglev is incorporated, compared to the most-publicized test vehicles which use wheels.
Uploaded content is normally hashed for deduplication purposes. Also, there are ASICs dedicated to hashing data (e.g. cryptocurrency miners). So it'd be cheap/free. The only real problem would be old sites hashing a backlog of old content using the algos required, but they could presumably do it over time if noone yet noticed any of it was infringing.
For those who don't live in the region, Hawthorne City is in the SW of Los Angeles County, California. Neither the summary nor article bother pointing out where the heck Hawthorne is.
Remember the Great Recession from 10 years ago? It'd turn out the same way: the little people collapse, and the big players responsible walk away scot-free with huge bailouts while spreading propaganda that things unrelated to them were at fault.
Article 13 would be a pain, but it'll most likely not wreck the Internet. What'll probably happen is that some company starts offering filtering services for uploaded data. User uploads video/photo/whatever to your site, you then hash that data (with say MD5+SHA256, chance of collision for both is nearly nil). Hash is sent off to 3rd party filtering site, they return back 'Prohibited' or 'Allowed'. They charge your business per unit or per month, costs you a negligible portion of your revenue and you don't have to R&D a solution for yourself. It's considered 'good enough' for compliance with the law, and there's a central place people can go to to challenge misclassified data, which is an improvement over having to go to hundreds of different sites that banned your data.
I'm still waiting for those 1TB optical disks that've been promised for 15+ years.
How do these compare to the Goodenough solid-state batteries?
If you start now, by the time you actually complete a degree, AI will have taken your job. If ever there's a white-collar job that software can replace, it's data analysis.
The exploits are almost old enough to legally drink alcohol in the United States,
Exploitability is the #1 thing I look for in drinking buddies.
Remember this Slashdot story from a week ago? Poking ISPs with a stick (e.g. with the One Touch Make Ready push) caused them to fight back, now they're trying to get laws passed that would regulate Google's data in transit (along with other edge providers'.) Maybe don't call it a victory for Google just yet.
Lakshmi, Hindu god of wealth. There is a Hindu minority in China.
Ma was lucky to get in on the leading edge of a major new industry (electronic retail), just like the other ultra-rich (oil, computer software, internet services.) How many more of these 'major new industries' will be created in the future, before we've turned over every major technological stone which can be uncovered? Eventually we're going to reach a point where we've discovered every major field that will exist, and there will be no hidden wellspring of techno-economic growth just over the horizon; the scary thing is that we will never realize it, it will ALWAYS be believed to be 'just over the horizon'. We have to plan for such a future, no matter how many people insist there will be another 'just over the horizon', otherwise we'll have no path forward if there's ever a drought of new tech.
Next Up: Boring Company-branded spleefs. Wonder how fast those will sell out.
So if one has their appendix removed, does the biofilm ever recover?
"I'm sick of development, so here's version '1.0'."
Also define 'forever' in a timescale that doesn't apply to Notch, Rockstar or Valve.
Will never happen. There are way too many games like PUBG that would've never become Steam hits if they had such a policy. It only needs to be enough to make the trolls miss it/lose out with their scams; $100 would likely be enough.
Obviously Britain needs to build some artificial brains in order to make up for the deficit in human brainpower. Then their AI expertise will be unmatched!
So THIS is why the TSA only allows a few ounces of liquids on carry-on. Down with those fucking liquids! I'm doing my part by boycotting all liquids, for approximately the next three days.
The problem with Bullet is that periodically, the CCP uses it to send you a picture of an executed family member, and charges you $1 for the 'privilege'. I filed a bug report a few minutes ago, and I think I hear knocking on the door now. That's customer service! Be right back...
Going much higher than 1% would require slashing their profits, and selling at a lower price in India. If they did this, the phones would be exported to Europe en-masse to undercut the ones sold there at a higher price. Carrier-unlocked iPhones aren't otherwise region-locked, so there's little they could do to stop that.