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Isn't this 'pretend-and-perceive approach' what all aphantasics do by default when asked to imagine something? That is, until they know they're aphantasics AND choose to feel 'confusion, frustration, shame, and inadequacy' instead.

I certainly think that is what I've done.

I've meditated, and experimented with self hypnosis (still on the fence on whether hypnosis works), and I simply always interpreted such "visualize" instructions as metaphorical, as I had no idea until a few years back that people meant them literally, so pretending was the only option I thought possible.


No. I can imagine just fine without visualizing. It's the same as "thinking". Posit a sphere of radius x. Why do I need to see to imagine that?

Regulations are coming faster and harder when people are this eager to comply in advance.

Influenced by many comments on this site, I recently switched from $10 Github Copilot to $20 Claude Code and so far haven't seen any benefits. Maybe it's because I don't know how to 'close the agentic loop' in this project. I thought it being more agentic meant I can just tell it to research a subsystem on its own and plan the changes I want, but that caused it to spawn 3 subagents and consume the entire 4-hour token limit. Copilot feels more frugal with token usage.

Ah, that makes sense. After all, Anthropic is selling tokens, so they would like you to consume more of them.

The $100 Claude plan is the minimum, I feel. Otherwise you run out of tokens way too often.

This is probably true and not emphasized enough. Many are making their value judgements with token limits (which is fair, it is expensive).

If disclosed properly.

Excuse my FUD, but are they really non-profit as described in FAQ? I find it a little hard to believe given how aggressive they are at marketing the paid version.


As someone who runs a charity, it surprises me how often people equate "non-profit" with "doesn't get paid" or "does everything for free". Non-profits still need money, they just don't use that money to make profit that is paid to shareholders. Instead, they use the money to further the stated objectives of the organisation.

NB: I'm not trying to imply anything about whether Anna's Archive is non-profit or not. Just that the fact that it aggressively tries to raise money isn't a relevant factor.


This kind of implies a legitimacy that AA just doesn't have. They're not 'a' non-profit, and there's simply no way to know that they're not taking in loads of money and pocketing it.


> They're not 'a' non-profit

How do you know?

> and there's simply no way to know that they're not taking in loads of money and pocketing it.

Or that they are, right?


They are not a non-profit because they are not a registered company/organization.


There is no requirement for a non-profit organisation to be registered.


When people talk about a "non profit" entity, they are almost certainly referring to a legal non-profit. Maybe that's not what GP meant.

And yes, you are technically correct in that there's no way to know that they are or are not pulling in money and pocketing it. I'm not sure how that's relevant to the questions asked but okay.


> When people talk about a "non profit" entity, they are almost certainly referring to a legal non-profit.

In UK, a non-profit association does not have to be legally registered to be legal.


There is. Without a legal framework its just an association that claims not to make a profit. This is all word games though as be clearly don't agree on the definition of a non-profit organization.


> There is.

No. In UK, many an unregistered association is a non-profit e.g. sports clubs, volunteer groups, societies.


In UK there is simply no such status as "non-profit", so technically none of what you listed are "non-profit" organizations. These are unincorporated associations, that, by the way, can be making profit (but that would be on shaky grounds, since common law makes it hard not to fuck up, being as vague as it always is). However, there is a "charity" status in UK, and you'd have be a registered organization to obtain it.

Anyway, "non-profit" is (i.e. "only makes sense defined as...") a legal status, it isn't just a way to say "not making money" (after all, we wouldn't call any failing business a non-profit, right?), so it really doesn't make any sense to ask if an illegal underground gang is "non-profit". GP is correct to point that out.


> In UK there is simply no such status as "non-profit"

Incorrect.

‐--------

https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/non-prof...

noun [ C ]

uk /ˌnɒnˈprɒf.ɪt/ us /ˌnɑːnˈprɑː.fɪt/

(also not-for-profit)

an organization whose aim is to make money for a social or political purpose or to provide a service that people need, rather than to make a profit

(Definition of non-profit from the Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary & Thesaurus © Cambridge University Press)

‐--------

That's Cambridge UK.

> However, there is a "charity" status in UK, and you'd have be a registered organization to obtain it.

Again incorrect.

See https://www.gov.uk/setting-up-charity


I'm not entirely sure what this sort of pedantry is meant to accomplish. Congratulations on being technically correct, I suppose?

Both I and GP have pointed out the crux of the matter, and you are ignoring it.


By pedantry, you mean "pointing out completely misusing terms and falsehoods about UK law", right?


> Both I and GP have pointed out the crux of the matter

"They're not 'a' non-profit".

> and you are ignoring it.

No. I am challenging it.

I've seen no evidence either way and so far it seems nor have you. So let's wait and see.


Literally everybody except you knows what I and both GP were referring to.


Everybody including me, I'd say.


They provide LLM data sets for 'donations'. They collect other open collections and beg for paid memberships to access pirated material. Its a russian project. You can for sure assume that someone is earning something somewhere.


> Its a russian project

I've seen people claim this a lot, but is there a single proof that supports this? The only potential insights into AA owners was an arrest of a few people suspected of running the site, and they were Latin American, not Russian.


Check their gitlab for bounties. They have a lot of money in reserves to be spent on that. There are a few open bounties for hundreds of thousands of dollars. I've also worked on a bounty for them once and can confirm they have plenty more money in their budget. So I believe that they don't pocket donations, or at least not a very large portion of them.


Obviously social trust in the US has declined and Trump benefited from that. But this is not evidence that the primary cause is sociopathic, non-empathetic actors. Theoretically it could also be things such as increased diversity, loss of shared identity, people acting in good faith but failing to adapt to social media.


That’s fair. I focused on the broader question for some reason. I’ll blame it on morning brain.

I’ll ask you this: Do you think Donald Trump is a socially adjusted, empathetic person? A lot of people like him currently because he is a bully.

Edit: I think Nixon is another person whose character deserves scrutiny. His decisions shattered a lot of people‘s perception of the US government.


I think much of the semantic proximity to evil can be derived straight from the facts? Imagine telling pre-1913 person about the holocaust.


I hate this bot-detection anime girl popping up on my monitor while I pretend to be working. Same goes for the funny pictures at the beginning of some Github readmes. Sorry for complaining about a tangential annoyance, but I haven't seen this particular sentiment expressed yet.


I use a uBlock Origin filter to block the anime girl from loading:

  ! Title: Hide Anubis Image
  */.within.website/x/cmd/anubis/static/img/*.webp$image


Normally I don't mind, but on this page it took at least 15 seconds for me.


It is expressed very often.


I had an idea!

Instead of using this to do some proof of work, why not just get the bot detector to mine bitcoin or something...

I mean it is just as useless... And at least the website gets some money back from the raw extraction of data now happening...

Edit: speeeeeling


this was the plan, this was the plan. just wait little bit it get spread more.


Also this is a joke


This scenario was a lot scarier before 2022.


Comment dates on hn frontend are sometimes altered when submissions are merged, do you handle this case properly?


It is handled on the Unlurker front page (you will see a little note that says “time adjusted for second chance”). The replay doesn’t do any adjustment for it, but I think that makes it reflect the reality of when the comments came in since the adjustments are like a temporary bump


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