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  • Also in Aus here, using ISP DNS, not blocked. I think what you generally find is that most ISP's just don't do the DNS blocks, even if they're required to. Like you said, it's very easily circumvented and also it just doesn't lead to any measurable outcome other than the ISP customer's dissatisfaction in some cases. It's probably more profitable to retain the customers and deal with whatever regulatory blowback.

  • The world's most-powerful AI model suddenly got 'lazier' and 'dumber.' A radical redesign of OpenAI's GPT-4 could be behind the decline in performance.
  • Can you quantify the difference? Far as I can tell, there's just an imaginary line where software becomes AI just because the logic filtering it depends on to operate is sufficiently complex. The term doesn't really seem to be a useful categorization either, e.g. the fundamentally different approaches of diffusion models and transformer models.

  • *Permanently Deleted*
  • Aesthetics are the same bogeyman excuse used to justify really any significant change in a phone since IP ratings first came in with. I recall back when USB-C was first showing up in smartphones, there was a time where simultaneously some manufacturers were pushing for the change and others trying to push back on it, with both groups citing aesthetic reasons.

  • Lemmy.world is now the biggest Lemmy instance!
  • For me, it's because the password I entered didn't meet the minimum requirements. The instance signup page had some kind of issue with actually letting me know that was the problem, it just gave me the spinning pinwheel forever. I refreshed and tried changing the password to something more complex and it worked instantly

  • Resistances are currently garbage

    Info from kripparrian's video

    Let's say you're playing a sorceror or necromancer, so your main stat is intelligence, which also grants resistance to all elemental, poison and shadow damage. You probably have a bunch of paragon glyphs that grant resistances, and your gear grants you additional resistances too.

    You can go to your build stats with advanced tooltips on and observe the stats of your individual elemental resistances. The game will show you that your current resistance stat reduces incoming damage of that type by x%.

    If you were to now swap your gear, skills and points over to something different at random, and check this stat again, you will find that actually the majority of the damage reduction you had for the same damage type is still there, despite removing all your resistance buffs.

    Most of the resistance to a given damage type comes from wearing any item at all, so relative to an item which prioritises the resistance type in question, the difference in damage reduction for that damage type is almost negligible. After investing all of your gear, glyphs, and skills into resistances, on the classes with the most resistances in the game, the difference will be damage reduction of a few %, for that damage type only.

    Comparing to non-elemental situational damage reduction stats like 'damage reduction from close', kripparian's calculations showed that a perfect roll on an elemental resistance item still yielded significantly less damage resistance to an elemental damage type than a typical 'damage reduction from close' roll yields for all damage types (it is situational, but most enemies in the game are close).

    Given there are 6 forms of elemental damage in the game, for the specific items compared the resistance item yielded less damage resistance overall by a factor of 33x. For most of the other stats in the game, they are in a roughly similar ballpark in terms of efficacy, except this one which is over an order of magnitude worse than really anything else.

    It's a wasted stat. If you tiered out all the possible stat rolls for all of the items in the game for any class, for any item where an elemental resistance is possible it is the worst roll you can get. The class worst affected by this is necromancer, followed by sorceror, and kripparrian goes on to point out that these are currently considered the worst performing classes in endgame

    Just a PSA really, I think a lot of players are currently running a build that could be objectively improved by rerolling a resistance stat or replacing that item.

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    YSK how to subscribe to kbin magazines from lemmy
  • That's the box I used too. I looked into it a bit further and I think possibly the issue is the community/magazine you were searching for had not been subscribed to before by a user on your home instance. In that case the instance has no index for that community/magazine and you need to manually point it toward the instance it's on. But once this is done the community info is cached in the search for any user on that instance looking for that community later on. I guess once the ecosystem is mature then provided you're on a relatively populated instance and the community you're searching for isn't too niche, you could just go to the community search first and it'd work most of the time.

  • I feel like there is a pending wave of AI bots incoming
  • Reddit's rise to prominence is in part a result of emphasis on facilitating the discourse Facebook used to be a place for. Facebook as a venue for discourse has gradually ended over the past decade or so, for the majority that still use it it is now just a centralised email server for sending event invitations.

    No one has global Reddit traffic data except for Reddit - market estimation methods can't really account for a deviation from the norm on such a short timeframe. Regardless, it's the users that matter that are gone, we agree on that. The same ones that made Reddit the safehaven for Digg users to begin with.

    I don't think Reddit is going the way of the Dodo, it's Reddit as a platform for discourse I'm on my soapbox about. Probably the largest exchange of ideas in human history happened on it. But the writing is now on the wall, to continue posting you first need to overcome the internal conflict of putting stock in a platform whose killer use case was predicated on user goodwill now burned. That itself is enough of an obstacle to make folks disengage, skewing the userbase, post quality declines, and then it's just another cesspool. All of this takes time though

  • I feel like there is a pending wave of AI bots incoming
  • My personal compulsion to browse reddit certainly isn't to think actively about the content I'm being fed, that's kind of the whole point - here's all the links you want spoonfed to you so you don't need to seek them out. The algorithmic approach to content delivery is the core product, and it became popular because it is good method of consumption. But when content quality goes down on average, eventually you end up with a Facebook situation - those are the users that actually don't care.

    Thanks for the link, on the face of this I'm not sure if this really goes for or against my idea about the available metrics at hand not really being sufficient to make accurate/meaningful observations about the data. It certainly does feel to me like there's an undeniably significant protest occuring on the platform now, even within the confines of established rules on reopened subs. And also datapoints not considered, such as subs which have been reopened by direct admin action, or under threat of it.

  • I feel like there is a pending wave of AI bots incoming
  • I'm just trying to summarise to be concise, this part is what I was getting at

    look at how little it took for the protest to wane, some subs are still protesting or migrating, but the majority reopened and they’re going on like nothing happened.

    I disagree that "the majority reopened", of a total proportion of subs that blacked out I think the majority are either blacked out or have not resumed operations as normal. This is different from a majority proportion of all subs, which is a much larger, and the majority of which also never participated in any blackout. Since the majority of traffic on reddit goes to a minority of subs, it's not clear which metric you're looking at or whether it's meaningful in context.

    Since reddit algorithms to some extent relied upon that consistent operating principle of posts in popular subs being boosted, initially the result of the blackout was extreme - the website could not functionally aggregate posts on most users frontpages with so many subs on private mode. But that is not a problem directly caused by the blackout, it's caused by reliance on consistent data. So all reddit needed to do in that case was adjust the algo to significantly improve the average user experience during peak blackout. Instead of users seeing a bunch of posts about private subs they can't interact with, they just get fed posts from subs that didn't black out, so users could engage with reddit while an active ongoing protest was happening on the platform and might not even notice.

    So I guess my point is that someone's impression of how the frontpage looked at t+24hrs, or t+48hrs, or today, as an indication of how reddit's going right now, is inaccurate because of the inherently subjective nature of the information visible from just browsing the platform.

  • Confusing right from left is easier than confusing up from down.
  • Whether something is up or down is more meaningful in terms of our average interaction with that object than whether it is left or right. Conceptually the latter is inherently relative to the observer, and in many circumstances the observer could just turn around to change the state of whether it's left or right, so it doesn't matter which way it is. Whereas they can't do as much about many things that are "up" or "down" like the sun, a tree canopy, the earth's mantle. Those things are more constant generally so it's easier to grasp them

  • Is there a way of "merging" multiple related communities into a single view in the lemmy 'federation'? detailed question inside
  • I feel like any cases of multiple communities for a given subject will naturally resolve as users develop a preference for one community over the other. The users from the lesser communities will organically migrate to the dominant community for that subject, or we'll arrive at the conclusion that each community actually explores niches of that topic that are worthy of separation or delineation.

    That's how it worked on reddit, anyway. Multireddit functionality of any sort was missing on most platforms, and yeah there's a lot of users that want it. But a lot of that desire is borne from the current state of Lemmy, rather than what it will be once the fediverse is more developed both as a concept in software and a concept in social media interaction

  • A helpful guide for upgrading your gear
  • Great comprehensive guide, I also watched some vids from Kripparrian which he linked that were very informative. Bye bye resistance gems, turns out resistances are effectively broken right now. Was thinking about spending some time leveling an alt necro or sorceror but might wait for balance changes given the current state of that

  • I feel like there is a pending wave of AI bots incoming
  • Calm before the storm, sure. Most migration away from reddit (whether the migration ultimately proves to be consequential or not) will logically happen when the measures that made users migrate actually go into effect.

    Either that or the community's reaction to the 3rd party app thing was overblown. In the specific circumstances I don't think it was.

    That's a more realistic clear and present danger to the platform IMO - an influx of actual users that makes the numbers to date pale in comparison.

    The way the respective platforms handle bots is subtly different, but in a way that could result in profound changes either good or bad. But we haven't actually seen that yet, and the software is still a work in progress. The existing migration has really lit a fire under the devs on issues that were identified years ago where progress has been slow, so for now I'm happy to let that play out and happy with what we've already got. I'm sure if bots become a bigger problem then that's what devs will shift focus toward.

  • I feel like there is a pending wave of AI bots incoming
  • If not for the reddit blackout, we wouldn't be having this conversation. Characterizing the recent action against reddit as an inconsequential 2 day blackout is inaccurate I think. Shitposts and memes are the content that exists independent of platform, it's not what made Reddit popular.

  • These were like 50 bucks a year ago
  • It's just human nature, simply complacency. At times when doing business is generally more difficult, why produce more when you can produce less and charge more? On a long enough timescale in current conditions, every business will do it eventually.

    This is what has just been happening with Cal-Maine eggs for example. Exaggerating about supply chain pressures and arbitrating prices to cover production slowdown was just the easiest thing to do in the circumstances. It isn't until much later when the earnings reports come out with no substantial supply chain interruptions to mention that people start to realize what's going on, and by that point they've already siphoned hundreds of millions more from the public than the circumstances warranted.

    Egg prices are dropping now. Why? There's been no recent change in cost indicated in Cal-Maine's production. The only recent news regarding their operations is the release of that earnings report. It's as if public knowledge about their record profits is somehow affecting the price of the commodity they produce?

  • Just an idea
  • Coming from reddit is fun app, I don't really understand how what you're proposing would work. You want the same functionality of having a separate account on each instance, but consolidated into one app to easy switch between accounts/instances, right?

    If we translate this use case into the existing rif app layout, the subreddit selector panel on the left would need to have like lemmy instances instead of subreddits, with communities nested under each instance.

    So you would have a different frontpage for each instance, which consisted of only the posts for communities hosted by that instance. Maybe I'm on the wrong track here, or you have a better idea of how it'd work.

    How is that better or more intuitive than just having one personal frontpage for all of your subscribed communities? That way you don't even need to make a conscious decision to browse beehaw posts, they're just in the same feed as everything else.

    I feel like it's more about the way you're thinking about posts being hosted on a particular server and what that means. In the context of Lemmy it only means something where the post you want is on an instance that's been defederated from for whatever reason, and even then only in terms of community discovery. Otherwise it's kinda meaningless in terms of your interaction with posts.

    Thinking of the given community as a community 'on beehaw' per se is only really pertinent in cases where the fact it's on beehaw alone has some kind of impact on how you interact with it, e.g moderation style. But even in that case, moderation style could equally be an attribute you ascribe to the community itself, rather than beehaw. e.g. preferring r/games over r/gaming.

    This way it makes more sense to think of the community as a lemmy community than a beehaw one, which seems fairly intuitive to me. Plus, that way the instance is doing the link aggregation and not your phone, which would be problematic for users and for scaling the ecosystem

  • It's still "fun", but
  • Yep the original post on the beehaw instance is like a master record of the post that lives on their server and only their users and users from federated instances can interact with it. Meanwhile the act of a lemmy.world user subscribing to a given beehaw community triggers the lemmy.world instance to archive posts there and create separate self-contained records of them which only lemmy.world users can interact with

  • InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)BE
    joshinya @lemmy.world
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