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skolskoly

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skolskoly
·hace 26 días·discuss
As far as I can see, there is still one tell that was missed/left in:

>Grok showed discipline, despite its goblin-like nature.
skolskoly
·el mes pasado·discuss
https://web.archive.org/web/20220202042136/https://www.fda.g... https://www.tga.gov.au/safety/safety-monitoring-and-informat...

Did some further reading, and it seems likely that the shortages were at least partially created by a boom in demand and crackdown on counterfeit ivermectin products. It's hard for me to see this as a partisan issue when everyone involved was just doing the best they could under fog-of-war conditions.
skolskoly
·hace 3 meses·discuss
https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/71MTbRmLY8L._AC_UF894,10...
skolskoly
·hace 3 meses·discuss
My mind went to that immediately. This does reek of being a copycat, doesn't it?
skolskoly
·hace 3 meses·discuss
I was weathering the excessive and confusing analogies and then I read:

>introduced a level of cognitive complexity that makes Kierkegaard read like Hemingway.

and I fucking lost it.
skolskoly
·hace 4 meses·discuss
>Sentence fragment. Sentence fragment. Sentence fragment. That's not X, that's Y.

I can't even call this LLM smell at this point it's a stench.
skolskoly
·hace 5 meses·discuss
To be clear, I don't disagree with you, and to say otherwise wasn't my point. I do think people get confused to the point where they for some reason start labeling all sarcasm as type A or B, and the entire value of the term gets lost.

The way I see it, the non-friendly type shares a lot in common with the concept of shibboleth. Which is to say, you can absolutely make sarcastic insults to the detriment of someone else for your own, or a friend's enjoyment, by relying on shared exclusive knowledge. (In essence, holding that shared context above the other person in contempt) However, you can also just be abrasive for your own enjoyment, and that's something entirely differently. (Sadism, for example, is not inherently sarcastic) People frequently confuse the two, but without ironic context - a knowledge of false belief - it is not ironic, and therefore not sarcasm.
skolskoly
·hace 5 meses·discuss
>Sarcasm happens when the observed irony does not extend to the speaker.

This seems... dead wrong. In the examples in the article, both comic frames function as sarcasm, because everyone involved has no illusion that anyone is going to die if they don't see the film. The irony is entirely in the speaker's statement, which everyone knows to be false, including them. People treat 'ironic insults' as sarcasm, but this only works amongst good friends who have the shared context necessary to understand the falsity of the insult. But, then socially incompetent see this and attempt it, and fail to achieve the sarcastic humour. Which is probably why people conflate sarcasm with... failed sarcasm, frankly.
skolskoly
·hace 6 meses·discuss
We have a word for that: Lawyers!
skolskoly
·hace 9 meses·discuss
Fake it til you make it is good. But, better yet, we figured out you can just keep faking it until some other sucker wants to hold the bag.