

I like the quarterstaff, but you know what would make it even better? If you took a sharp piece of metal and put it on one end so you can stab a dude after bonking him. I don’t know what you’d call it though. A staffstab?
I like the quarterstaff, but you know what would make it even better? If you took a sharp piece of metal and put it on one end so you can stab a dude after bonking him. I don’t know what you’d call it though. A staffstab?
You’d love vbscript: https://stackoverflow.com/q/2202869
Brings a new meaning to “eat the rich”
Suppose you were a USA citizen and couldn’t immigrate to a saner country. What would you be doing right now?
Goes to show how far Blizzard has fallen that they resorted to copying porn characters when they made Overwatch. What happened to all the good character designers?
Feeling pressured into marriage is a common issue for aromantics dating an alloromantic, regardless of sexuality.
Just steal one. As long as you hide it well, they’ll never catch you.
Can I pet it? Does it bite?
I haven’t followed the Sarah Silverman case, but I think it’s likely that’ll end in a settlement. NYTimes is less likely to settle, since they seem to be trying to set a precedent, and they’ve got the resources to do that.
Copyright law is full of ambiguities and gray areas, some intentional and some unintentional. The concept of “fair use” is an example of an intentional gray area, since the idea is that society as a whole will benefit from allowing people to skirt copyright law in certain circumstances, and lawmakers can’t possibly hope to enumerate every such circumstance. It then falls on courts to determine if a given circumstance falls under “fair use”. The problem is courts move very slowly when faced with a new circumstance that hasn’t been litigated before, and that’s what’s happening with AI companies training AI on copyrighted works. Once decisions have been made and stare decisis is established, then they’ll move faster. The NY Times vs OpenAI is the case to watch IMO, since that’s the biggest one challenging the idea that training AI is fair use.
I asked my goose friend what he thinks about this and he just honked. Though I suspect he didn’t hear me, since he seemed to be busy balancing on his unicycle (his feet can’t reach the pedals, so he has to flap his wings to balance)
Thanks for the gold, kind stranger!
The silliest person I know was deadly serious and no-nonsense at work. Their silly side only came out among friends. Maybe you just need to befriend a goose?
Reminds me of this:
What, you don’t let your infants play near downed power lines? Kids these days are so sheltered.
I’m not worried about CCTV footage in the US, at least as far as government surveillance is concerned. The main reason is the difficulty in wiretapping, compared to the payoff. For the government to get access to CCTV cameras owned by private citizens, they’d have to backdoor every single manufacturer, then figure out how to stream footage without being detected. This is definitely possible, but it’s considerably more difficult than wiretapping phone conversations. I’m sure the NSA/CIA/etc has done this before on a targeted basis, but doing it in general is very risky and a ton of work(if they want to keep it a secret), and what do they get in return? The NSA has a lot of resources, but it’s still limited.
Mario 2 was released in 1988, 3 years before this comic. Larson is a gamer confirmed
That’s called semantic satiation: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semantic_satiation