FundMECFS

joined 1 week ago
[–] FundMECFS@quokk.au 6 points 3 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago) (1 children)

Liquor Liscence is common. Policing where people are allowed to drink what they bought is pretty uncommon.

[–] FundMECFS@quokk.au 2 points 3 days ago

Happy cake day!

[–] FundMECFS@quokk.au 22 points 3 days ago (4 children)

Not Brazilian. But as someone who has had the privilege to travel around in the past, the US was the only country I visited that had these super strict Puritan Alcohol laws.

[–] FundMECFS@quokk.au 2 points 4 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago)

Deleted for Privacy

[–] FundMECFS@quokk.au 3 points 4 days ago* (last edited 3 days ago)

Removed for Privacy

[–] FundMECFS@quokk.au 3 points 4 days ago

Yet the Australian people are not much better at reckoning with the fact they live in a settler colonial state than the USians.

[–] FundMECFS@quokk.au 5 points 4 days ago

This is so cool. You have a cool friend.

[–] FundMECFS@quokk.au 17 points 4 days ago

Fuck they’ve actually created a Nazi Cyberpunk Diner.

[–] FundMECFS@quokk.au 17 points 4 days ago (2 children)

Damn. Poor USians. Y’all are getting scammed for shitty food 😭

[–] FundMECFS@quokk.au 2 points 4 days ago

If you read the nihongo (japanese), it says its supposed to look like seals (not taste like them). Guessing this is from an aquarium giftshop or something.

[–] FundMECFS@quokk.au 5 points 4 days ago

I hereby propose during the Next Cycle, we switch to: Really Really Free Markets

 
 

cross-posted from: https://quokk.au/post/119938

The appearance of thousands of formulaic biomedical studies has been linked to the rise of text-generating AI tools.

Data from five large open-access health databases are being used to generate thousands of poor-quality, formulaic papers, an analysis has found. Its authors say that the surge in publications could indicate the exploitation of these databases by people using large language models(LLMs) to mass-produce scholarly articles, or even by paper mills — companies that churn out papers to order.

 

The appearance of thousands of formulaic biomedical studies has been linked to the rise of text-generating AI tools.

Data from five large open-access health databases are being used to generate thousands of poor-quality, formulaic papers, an analysis has found. Its authors say that the surge in publications could indicate the exploitation of these databases by people using large language models(LLMs) to mass-produce scholarly articles, or even by paper mills — companies that churn out papers to order.

 

Researchers have been sneaking secret messages into their papers in an effort to trick artificial intelligence (AI) tools into giving them a positive peer-review report.

The Tokyo-based news magazine Nikkei Asiareported last week on the practice, which had previously been discussed on social media. Nature has independently found 18 preprint studies containing such hidden messages, which are usually included as white text and sometimes in an extremely small font that would be invisible to a human but could be picked up as an instruction to an AI reviewer.

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