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.
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.
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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.

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 t
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.
They show up fine in the communities search for me. https://i.imgur.com/iHO4wIP.png
Why does reddit consolidating all nsfw content delivery under its website and first party app suggest they want to stop NSFW content?
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