MattW03

joined 1 year ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] MattW03@lemmy.ca 1 points 2 days ago

Is just plain greed. Ofc AI Slop misinformation is more then welcome to control the narrative.

[–] MattW03@lemmy.ca 2 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (1 children)

Yep. Is basically a firefox stripped from junk. Just remember is very stick on privacy, if something is not visible or some pics don't upload, you just have to enable the site permission from the icon in the navigation bar.

[–] MattW03@lemmy.ca 14 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (3 children)

LibreWolf looks good these days.

As there seems to have been recent confusion about this, just a quick "official" toot to then pin: we haven't and won't support "generative AI" related stuff in LibreWolf. If you see some features like that (like Perplexity search recently, or the link preview feature now) it is solely because it "slipped through". As soon as we become aware of something like this / it gets reported to us, we will remove/disable it ASAP.

https://chaos.social/@librewolf/115716906957137196

[–] MattW03@lemmy.ca 1 points 2 days ago

I've just copied the body in the comments as whole. Deleted now.

 

<Please don't tell me this isn't a proper content for the community. THIS is tech right now.>

The rise of AI has left big tech companies performing mass layoffs and pushing artificial intelligence, chatgpt, and machine learning systems faster than the public can fully understand them. As investors pour billions into the next wave of automation, many are beginning to question whether the ai bubble is being built on genuine progress or on hype designed to inflate valuations. The pressure to dominate artificial intelligence has fueled mass layoffs, restructuring, and sweeping promises about what ai will eventually become, creating a widening gap between the narrative of innovation and the realities of the tech industry. Amid soaring expectations, concerns about an ai bubble burst continue to grow, especially as companies position automation as the future while quietly removing the workers who once powered their success.

Across the industry, the excitement around ai has transformed into an economic engine that rewards speed, disruption, and scale above all else. Tech leaders frame artificial intelligence as the cornerstone of a new economy, while investors treat every advancement as a signal for explosive growth. Yet the aggressive push for ai adoption has created instability, encouraging companies to chase breakthroughs without clear long-term strategies. This environment has led to speculation about whether the ai bubble is sustainable or whether the rapid expansion of big tech will eventually collide with financial limits, power shortages, and market exhaustion. As more companies cut costs under the banner of automation, the link between stock growth and real productivity becomes harder to trust.

Workers across the country are feeling the impact of this shift as mass layoffs accelerate in the name of “efficiency.” The fear of losing jobs to ai has created uncertainty in nearly every profession, from white-collar office roles to creative industries, customer service, and engineering. Many now worry that artificial intelligence is being used less as a tool for progress and more as a justification for reducing payrolls and protecting profits. This tension has fueled wider conversations about wealth inequality, big tech influence, and the expanding power of billionaires who shape the future of work. With each announcement of new automation tools, concerns about job displacement and long-term stability become harder to ignore.

The possibility of a market crash tied to artificial intelligence underscores the fragility of the current boom. Investors have seen similar patterns in past economic bubbles, where enthusiasm outran reality and companies relied on speculation to maintain growth. The momentum behind the ai surge has created a culture where breakthroughs are expected on a constant cycle, placing enormous pressure on companies to deliver results that may not be achievable. As questions grow about the limits of computation, energy demands, and the cost of scaling large-language models, many believe the hype surrounding ai could lead to a significant correction.

The conversation around the ai bubble reflects deeper anxieties about technology, power, and the future of the job market. As big tech reshapes the economy, people are increasingly aware of how artificial intelligence, automation, and corporate influence intersect with mass layoffs, wealth concentration, and economic instability. This moment represents more than a technological shift — it reveals a struggle over who benefits from innovation and who carries the consequences when that innovation is pushed too far.

#financialeducation #financialfreedom #history

0:00 Intro
0:23 Why The AI Boom Is Mirroring Bubbles Of The Past
0:46 Sam Altman On If AI Is “Too Big To Fail”
1:01 Why This RUSH For Data Centers Mirrors Every Bubble Of The Past
2:54 Why Your Tax Dollar Is Paying For The AI Data Centers
4:05 Why Companies Are Using Circular Financing 
4:43 The AI Circular Financing Is JUST Like The Dot Com Bubble
5:44 How In The World Is OpenAI Making These Deals…
6:31 Sam Altman Gets Triggered With AI Bubble Question
6:47 Why The U.S. NEEDS The AI Bubble
8:18 Why AI Is A Financial Bubble
9:43 Why Companies Are LYING About Mass “AI Layoffs”
11:23 Why The AI Bubble Is Almost Guaranteed To Burst 
13:49 Why Your Electrical Bills Are Going Up
15:47 Why It’s Not JUST Billionaires Building Bunkers (Real Life Experience)
17:58 Millionaires Are Building Bunkers While People Can’t Afford Groceries
19:22 Why I Don’t Believe AI Will Miraculously Create New Jobs 
[–] MattW03@lemmy.ca 4 points 2 weeks ago

Just photoshop them with a big pair of tits and post them on Instagram.

 

“The Nameless City” occupies a peculiar and revealing place in H.P. Lovecraft’s oeuvre. Written in January 1921 and first published later that same year in the amateur journal The Wolverine (before appearing Donald Wolheim's Fanciful Tales), it fits comfortably in neither his Dunsanian dream fantasies nor his later cosmic horror tales. Instead, it stands astride both, blending several strands of Lovecraft’s evolving imagination into a single narrative. The result is a story that feels simultaneously archaic and forward-looking, poised between decadent fantasy, pulp archeological adventure, and the nascent Cthulhu Mythos that would soon define his mature fiction.

 

Session 9 is one of those horror films that stay with you long after you have finished watching it. The film uses paranoia and dread to sink its teeth into you. Honestly, there are very few films that pull off the slow burn sensation in the same way as Session 9. However, the film still flies mainly under the radar. If you are one of the people who somehow missed this gem, settle in; things are about to get wild.

[–] MattW03@lemmy.ca 9 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago)

I want my lawer you Reptilist ba#@#&d!

[–] MattW03@lemmy.ca 12 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago) (1 children)

Let's keep it easy. There's 2 + all the other number who results in 15 = 17.

Someone may mistake by doing 2+5 then the rest of the operation, resulting in 21. But is wrong.

 

Some people are scared of chainsaw-wielding maniacs in masks; others get chilled from dramatic revelations about unassuming but ultimately dark figures; then there are those who are scared of humanity’s place in the universe, that people are more insignificant than they are and are more susceptible to powers bigger than they can imagine, like internet algorithms.

This is cosmic horror which, as the name suggests, could suggest space, other dimensions, or other places entirely. All it needs to make people paranoid is to make them feel weak next to phenomena they can’t and would never understand. It’s inspired classic novels, movies, TV shows, and manga.

Summary

  • Cosmic horror explores humanity's insignificance in the face of unknown and powerful forces, like internet algorithms, creating feelings of paranoia and fear.
  • Manga like Soil, Gantz, and Parasyte delve into cosmic horror themes, blending genres like crime drama and action to explore humanity's helplessness against unknown threats.
  • Renowned horror mangaka, like Junji Ito, have crafted terrifying stories that embody cosmic horror, with themes of unpredictable futures, survival in desolate settings, and the manipulation of reality.
 

https://www.deviantart.com/loneanimator

Lovecraft and Barlow

I Have Seen the Dark Universe Yawning

 

The 28 Years Later franchise is back on the big screen in less than two months with Nia DaCosta’s (Candyman) 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple, a sequel to this year’s 28 Years Later. It’s the second installment in a planned trilogy, and it’s releasing in theaters January 16, 2026.

Check out a brand new official UK poster from Sony below!

The titular bone temple is a primary location in Danny Boyle’s trilogy-starter, and the title of DaCosta’s sequel makes it clear we’ll returning to that location. The Bone Temple will focus on Jack O’Connell’s “Sir Jimmy Crystal” and his merry band of evil-doers, with young hero Spike (Alfie Williams) also returning. Here’s the brand new official synopsis from Sony:

Expanding upon the world created by Danny Boyle and Alex Garland in 28 Years Later but turning that world on its head – Nia DaCosta directs 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple.

In a continuation of the epic story, Dr. Kelson (Ralph Fiennes) finds himself in a shocking new relationship – with consequences that could change the world as they know it – and Spike’s (Alfie Williams) encounter with Jimmy Crystal (Jack O’Connell) becomes a nightmare he can’t escape. In the world of The Bone Temple, the infected are no longer the greatest threat to survival – the inhumanity of the survivors can be stranger and more terrifying.

[–] MattW03@lemmy.ca 2 points 3 weeks ago

I mean, fuck them?

[–] MattW03@lemmy.ca 6 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

Keep pushing ✊️

[–] MattW03@lemmy.ca 20 points 3 weeks ago* (last edited 3 weeks ago)

Tecton a youtuber/twich gamer streamer. I've crossed a couple of his video during my Genshin phase ( I got better). He's the classic shitty rude streamer. The classic freedom-of-speech = freedom-to-sht-on-other kind of guy.

 

 

Imagine a story set in a future of abundance, with flying cars and brain implants, yet people still casually die of smallpox. Or a tale of interstellar travel where characters don laser guns yet also call each other on wired telephones. When I read or watch stories taking place in high-tech futuristic societies with space travel and intelligent robots, and yet characters still age, it feels as if they could still catch smallpox. A cringe-inducing anachronism, like an astronaut on Mars listening to music from a cassette player. While aging is currently inevitable, advances in biomedical research and our understanding of aging processes point towards a future where we can design our own biology and define how long we live.

Aging Fast and Slow (and Not at All)

We can already slow the aging process in animals. For example, in the microscopic roundworm C. elegans, tweaking a single gene can extend its lifespan more than tenfold, allowing animals that normally only live for a few weeks to live for more than six months. If we could apply such discoveries to humans, it would mean people living for over one thousand years. Of course, worms are simple organisms whose adults are mostly composed of nondividing cells, yet scientists can also slow aging in more complex mammals. In the workhorse of biomedical research, the house mouse, dietary and genetic manipulations can extend lifespan by up to fifty percent, postponing age-related diseases and allowing animals to be healthier for longer.

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