Aggregators crawl the web to find similar interests and lump em together, for ease and also to generat3 revenue. Personally I see them mostly in stuff like manga sites and lookup sites.
What this may mean for the poster is not that he’s disagreeing with the actors statement, but more that they probably all aren’t directly affiliated with the one site. They may have had profiles up with different sites and agencies and this one site has crawled and pulled their info into a more easily searchable database. That in turn would make this a bit less collaborative, and perhaps more emblematic of a common trait than a specific strategy.
Exactly what I was suggesting. I had previously thought it was the former, but the description of the site makes it sound like it’s a product of common traits (skankery, slampiggery even).
Uhhh… let’s see, first you need some cups. Then vanilla beans still in the sleeve. Mix cups and vanilla in a blender, add eggs and milk. Bake at 350c for 4 hours.
So the thought is that it’s not civil to suspect that an overly complicated and generic response, that’s not quite on topic as a human might be, is AI-generated and call that out?
If so, glad you point out here, because otherwise I wouldn’t naturally assume that violated a civility code.
It just seems to me how like LinkedIn has pages for people even though the people aren’t members, they create the pages just on information they’ve scraped from the web to make it look like the person has an account on that site.
I don’t know if that’s the case with how that website works, but the description of it made it sound like that’s exactly what it does.
My impression was the opposite. These were profiles deliberately setup, by people like boebert, for this “talent agency” to gain work. And the guy that runs it all had known connections to the right wing network and is essentially an Israeli mobster IIRC facilitating connections with conservative politicians and “news” networks.
Sorry, not sure what you’re referencing with mention of an aggregator? Can you source what you’re claiming?
Aggregators crawl the web to find similar interests and lump em together, for ease and also to generat3 revenue. Personally I see them mostly in stuff like manga sites and lookup sites.
What this may mean for the poster is not that he’s disagreeing with the actors statement, but more that they probably all aren’t directly affiliated with the one site. They may have had profiles up with different sites and agencies and this one site has crawled and pulled their info into a more easily searchable database. That in turn would make this a bit less collaborative, and perhaps more emblematic of a common trait than a specific strategy.
Exactly what I was suggesting. I had previously thought it was the former, but the description of the site makes it sound like it’s a product of common traits (skankery, slampiggery even).
Removed by mod
Uhhh… let’s see, first you need some cups. Then vanilla beans still in the sleeve. Mix cups and vanilla in a blender, add eggs and milk. Bake at 350c for 4 hours.
Removed, see the new civility guidelines.
Thanks, where can I find those guidelines?
So the thought is that it’s not civil to suspect that an overly complicated and generic response, that’s not quite on topic as a human might be, is AI-generated and call that out?
If so, glad you point out here, because otherwise I wouldn’t naturally assume that violated a civility code.
A simple look at my history would suffice to show I’m not AI, even if you don’t like what I say :P
You should see all the mistakes I make.
Edit also what ai talks about sites like mangapark stealing and collecting manga?
It’s on the sidebar for the community.
It just seems to me how like LinkedIn has pages for people even though the people aren’t members, they create the pages just on information they’ve scraped from the web to make it look like the person has an account on that site.
I don’t know if that’s the case with how that website works, but the description of it made it sound like that’s exactly what it does.
My impression was the opposite. These were profiles deliberately setup, by people like boebert, for this “talent agency” to gain work. And the guy that runs it all had known connections to the right wing network and is essentially an Israeli mobster IIRC facilitating connections with conservative politicians and “news” networks.
That’s pretty flimsy evidence. Do you have anything more concrete?