I think Shapez levels become procedural after a certain number of predetermined ones?
I think Shapez levels become procedural after a certain number of predetermined ones?
“oh we can’t possibly understand that field, as there is no agreed industry standard for how to treat it” - Get out, you know exactly what it means.
Hopefully it would also apply to websites which port scan your computer.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:New_pages_patrol already does something like that to ensure all new pages get some minimum number of views to check the quality.
“Project Highrise” is another nice calm relaxing game, although in the other dimension to most city builders
Still plenty of people on Second Life.
Or set your location to a European country?
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Their goal is a healthy and open internet, with the browser being one method of achieving that.
Nissan apparently collects “Sensitive personal information, including driver’s license number, national or state identification number, citizenship status, immigration status, race, national origin, religious or philosophical beliefs, sexual orientation, sexual activity, precise geolocation, health diagnosis data, and genetic information.”
I guess Subaru don’t need telemetry to guess your sexual orientation.
All new cars - Bruce Schneier wrote in cryptogram that he tried to buy a new car without a permanent internet connection to the manufacturer and it wasn’t possible.
It was a staple of Asimov’s books that while trying to predict decisions of the robot brain, nobody in that world ever understood how they fundamentally worked.
He said that while the first few generations were programmed by humans, everything since that was programmed by the previous generation of programs.
This leads us to Asimov’s world in which nobody is even remotely capable of creating programs that violate the assumptions built into the first iteration of these systems - are we at that point now?
It seems to be saying that only the purchaser was speculating but the seller was essentially selling things ‘to themselves’ (or to someone closely related who knew what was going on) to try and create the illusion of an actual market existing?
Next week: Why have Nescafé invented a new way to package coffee after their Nespresso pod lawsuit didn’t prevent third party compatible pods?
Donating to an organisation in your own country (or within a region like the EU) might be a lot more financially efficient - both because your local banking system makes it easier, and because nobody is charging for currency conversions.
If the watch history is off, why don’t they just use the favorites and liked videos to form recommendations?
Apparently Word is a good PDF editor. Or Inkscape for single page documents.
Newspaper: Hackers are announcing a trove of personal data leaked from [company] after a forwarded spreadsheet inadvertently contained more data than the sender realised.