
If something is irrelevant, it should simply be removed. Are we able to find some suitable size value? - Kslotte ( talk) 14:27, 12 July 2010 (UTC) How do you propose separating "relevant" from "trash"? I think that's ill-advised. I see that 150KB and above are huge pages where navigation becomes hard on devices with a slow internet connection.
150KB for discussion more categorized as trash. What should the archive page size be? We should give some guideline. would be a short-term solution, while mw:LiquidThreads would be a long-term solution. That is due to that the MediaWiki subpage feature is not enabled in those namespaces. Several of the archive templates do not work properly in the namespaces "Category talk" and "Help talk". Here's why, and where anyone interested can read more: I don't intend to change any of their looks, I am just going to fix several bugs and do other code improvements. I am planning to rework some of the archive templates. "It's the same as if you were to go to the website directly and interact with users.This is just a heads-up for any template programmers that are interested in archive boxes. "The model is quite vile, I have to warn you," Klicher said in his 20-minute explainer. It's so bad that Kilcher gave a content warning before going on to explain why his AI is actually "more truthful" than other neural networks. "It perfectly encapsulated the mix of offensiveness, nihilism, trolling, and deep distrust of any information whatsoever that permeates most posts on /pol.” World's WorstĮven though it was eventually outed as a bot posting from the island nation of Seychelles - known, unrelatedly, for its climate change mitigation efforts - the posts got lots of attention and interaction beforehand.Ĥchan, of course, is the sort of like the armpit of the internet - anything goes as long as it's technically legal.
"The model was good in a terrible sense," Kilcher said in a video he uploaded last week. Kilcher wasn't exactly surprised by the results, and said that building a model based on the worst of the internet's worst was, in a strange way, enlightening. The outlet reported that Yannic Kilcher, an AI researcher and YouTuber, used more than three million 4chan threads from the infamous void that "/pol/," one of the most horrific portions of the already-notorious site.
They weren't any old 4chan posts, either. VICE reported this week that the worst has come to pass: a guy trained an artificial intelligence using millions of 4chan posts, and then turned the resulting monstrosity loose on the web, letting it post directly to the cursed messageboard. "The model is quite vile, I have to warn you." Bad Seed