āif Iāve ever received an artistās free labor on a silver platter then I think that should be the default and anyone who wants compensation is gouging meā
By the way what this jokerās complaining about having to pay for is a D&D-compatible book of disease and medical game mechanics written by two actual medical students in what little spare time I imagine medical students to have
Gathering the dataset was much more painful than I had expected - I hadn’t really read many of these before, and most were obscene, or aggressive, or kind of insulting. I began to regret the whole project.
But although the neural network figured out the basic forms “You must be a … because….” or “Hey baby, wanna…” it never learned to generate the worst lines - most of these were based on wordplay that it didn’t have a chance of reproducing.
Instead, it began to generate lines that varied from incomprehensible to surreal to kind of adorable:
Are you a 4loce? Because you’re so hot! I want to get my heart with you. You are so beautiful that you know what I mean. I have a cenver? Because I just stowe must your worms. Hey baby, I’m swirked to gave ever to say it for drive. If I were to ask you out? You must be a tringle? Cause you’re the only thing here. I’m not on your wears, but I want to see your start. You are so beautiful that you make me feel better to see you. Hey baby, you’re to be a key? Because I can bear your toot? I don’t know you. I have to give you a book, because you’re the only thing in your eyes. Are you a candle? Because you’re so hot of the looks with you. I want to see you to my heart. If I had a rose for every time I thought of you, I have a price tighting. I have a really falling for you. Your beauty have a fine to me. Are you a camera? Because I want to see the most beautiful than you. I had a come to got your heart. You’re so beautiful that you say a bat on me and baby. You look like a thing and I love you. Hello.
the blue jay is a brightly colored medium-sized corvid native to north america, primarily the united states. like other corvids (crows, ravens, magpies and others), they are known for their intelligence and problem solving skills; while tool use in the wild isnāt confirmed, captive blue jays have been observed making and using tools. blue jays occasionally feed on eggs and small animals, but more commonly feed on nuts, soft fruits, and insects.