ChronWeasely

ChronWeasely t1_jeeuusp wrote

Can this be combined with something else to increase the total recovery? 70% in an efficient process is good, but losing 30% each cycle isn't. I'm assuming then a secondary processing with more energy intensive means will recover most of the remaining 30%, but costing approximately 70% less to process due to decreased volume?

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ChronWeasely t1_ja5wkun wrote

Well that's just a separate issue and not covered by this supreme court case. Section 230 of the CDCA provides a lot of protections to hosts and depending on the wording of the ruling, a lot could change in a lot of places. Youtube receives lifetimes of videos every day. If every single one needed a full screening before hosting, something would have to give. Costs would increase on their end. While I can say "they can just shrug off the cost" we know that's not how it would play out. Not saying I like it, and I think hosts need some responsibility, but these things are all tied together. Not to mention possible effects on ad revenue due to slower publishing of content and the likes.

Legal Eagle did a good video about it last week. I'd recommend checking it out.

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ChronWeasely t1_ja33l3z wrote

The implications for social media are huge though. A ruling against Facebook will fundamentally change the role of the social media companies. The internet will become "less free" as companies need to regulate so much information that they'll reject an incredible amount to deflect possible litigation.

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ChronWeasely t1_j90b0of wrote

The "trend line" with the attached conclusion is what makes it egregious and masks the logarithmic nature of the y axis. Like it misses the important points with overfitting.

And the interesting thing is two things

  1. in one year, prices fell by 99%
  2. in subsequent years, prices have fallen another 60%

But it makes it look like there is a continuity that in reality doesnt fit a trend line at all as is seen in the non-logaritmic version

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ChronWeasely t1_j5zmn0c wrote

Who didn't see Iron Man and think, "Damn, wish I just had a HUD for life sometimes."

Like you are a block away from your destination, but you are second-guessing the location and don't want to pull out your phone and open up the map. Then you walk another block to discover you went the wrong way about 5 blocks back and have 10 to walk still because you were actually thinking of that other place.

Not based on real life obviously.

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ChronWeasely t1_j5tqesd wrote

That's about 3kb of info about each of the 3.32 billion objects. Depending on compression, that could be almost nothing except brightness values for each pixel, or there might be a lot of info tucked in there.

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ChronWeasely t1_j0omyk1 wrote

Must have to do with stability. The basic delivery mechanism is not uncommon for new mRNA treatments. One of several. Lipid stabilization, which lets it enter cells by just merging with cell walls, which are also lipid, and dumping the mRNA inside. As the mRNA doesn't need to go any further in the cell, that's all that's needed.

Some more complicated ones have several components to navigate each part of the delivery mechanism.

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