Perfectly Replicating Coca-Cola
Perfectly Replicating Coca-Cola
Perfectly Replicating Coca-Cola
I got paid minimum wage to solve an impossible problem
Il computer quantistico fotonico della QuantHum Edge a Cisterna supera i 9.900 qubit: l’Italia firma il nuovo record
Microsoft’s Entra ID vulnerabilities could have been catastrophic
We’re Suing Minecraft in a Class Action Lawsuit
We’re Suing Minecraft in a Class Action Lawsuit
Claude Code: Data Exfiltration with DNS - Embrace The Red
Permanently Deleted
Un video per sensibilizzare sui rischi dei deepfake
Inside a phone smuggled out of North Korea
Turning Portal 2 into a Web Server
Insufferable
What makes us tick - 1952 cartoon explaining how the stock market works
Rust turns 10: How a broken elevator changed software forever
How a Single Line Of Code Could Brick Your iPhone
Visualizing all books of the world in ISBN-Space
"A calculator app? Anyone could make that."
[Steam] RPG Maker VX Ace
[Epic] The Callisto Protocol
ECI per la preservazione videoludica
Yes and no. The example you made is of a defective device, not of an "unethical" one - though I understand how you are trying to say that they sold a malfunctioning product without telling anyone.
For LLMs, however, we know damn well that they shouldn't be used as a therapist or as a digital friend to ask for advice; they are no more than a powerful search engine.
An example that is more in line with the situation we're analyzing is a kid that stabs itself with a knife after his parents left him playing with one; are you sure you want to sue the company that made the knife in that scenario?