If I was a politician using AI, I’d be afraid of it “hallucinating” and telling key constituents to, like, fuck off and die. Mostly because I’d be afraid some key constituent would piss me off and I’d tell ‘em to FOAD.
If I was a politician using AI, I’d be afraid of it “hallucinating” and telling key constituents to, like, fuck off and die. Mostly because I’d be afraid some key constituent would piss me off and I’d tell ‘em to FOAD.
When I was in the Air Force, I read a lot of reports about this flying saucer:
The Grand Prix would be the rarer, and even now more valuable pick.
OK, a couple of things here:
Yes you are missing something.
Nonetheless, his car was found to be illegal. And was disqualified.
A ‘60s Japanese car. That’s sat, unmoved, on dirt for 30 years. In Nebraska, where the weather ranges from the 90-degree summers to sub-zero winters, year in and year out.
Pop Quiz Questions:
I’d rock it and put my business name on it.
Depending on your “Buick”, you may own a car that’s 100% an import right now.
But did those dealer trucks have a grand or two’s worth of quality side boxes and a custom-sized headache rack?
Gun. Safes.
Awww, ain’t that cute.
I’ll go against the current here and say Nice Price.
C’mon, we’re not talking about felony car stops here. We’re talking about keeping indifferent Florida drivers from mowing down inattentive students walking in a high-density pedestrian area. This is literal public safety stuff.
That’s good, because QR codes don’t supply any security.
Just think: if you can’t report it, it’s almost like it didn’t even happen.
I would defile that thing.
Yet another example proving there’s no security whatsoever involved in any way when you’re using QR codes ...
He was Trump’s pick, but he was voted in by the Commission, which was stacked with Republican picks at the time. Perhaps when Biden is able to fill the holdover seats on the commission, things will change.