futuristick

462 posts

futuristick

futuristick

@futristick

this identity of concession which each makes to all, is called society

Katılım Ekim 2017
190 Takip Edilen91 Takipçiler
futuristick retweetledi
the human sadiepede 2
hanging out with me is like, hold on, i need to get a picture of this corner
the human sadiepede 2 tweet media
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futuristick
futuristick@futristick·
@glosseantics @Jacobkupp haven't seriously done it in a year+ but I can see several dozen "long-term" (their terminology) $30-40+ tasks, a few $50+, 1x $60+ for anecdata, my experience is of doing it occasionally for extra cash as a student, spending a few weekends grinding, total $10k+ over 3ish years
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moving partsisan
moving partsisan@glosseantics·
the amount of people i know are posting AI safety 9 hrs/day while doing data annotation gig work for sub-minimum wage and not discussing that aspect at all [in hopes of a future job never to come...] BRO! YOU ARE CURRENTLY BEING EXPLOITED!! NOW! IN THE AGI-LESS PRESENT!!!
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futuristick@futristick·
@glosseantics @Jacobkupp at least in the case of DA it's basically all hourly, the number of queries for a given task is functionally unlimited
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moving partsisan
moving partsisan@glosseantics·
@futristick @Jacobkupp this is something i do just want to see more on the ground experiences with, but from what i have seen, the amount of "amount of queries given" and "amount of kind of pointless writing-justification work [upwards of 3 standard pages] means that is a daily wage and not hourly
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futuristick
futuristick@futristick·
@glosseantics @Jacobkupp understating the pay, pretty easy to consistently get $40-50+/hr if you don't mind how mind numbing it is
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moving partsisan
moving partsisan@glosseantics·
@Jacobkupp work for reasons of disability or refugee apps or etc making like $30-60/day who also do have strong commitments about ''the future of AI'', in many directions -- i do think this could be very important, theres not much meaningful and current work on the industry
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futuristick@futristick·
@Cadeyrnn ontario if the electorate's average iq wasn't below room temperature
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futuristick@futristick·
@drowldr get in loser we're killing the boomers
Mike Klassen 麥嘉信 🇨🇦@MikeKlassen

Council approved our motion to review and refine Vancouver’s multiplex housing policies, with support from the entire @Vote4ABC team. As multiplex housing rolls out across Vancouver, we’ve heard concerns from residents about massing, setbacks, tree canopy, and neighbourhood fit. This motion responds to that feedback while continuing to support the delivery of much-needed family-oriented housing. The goal is straightforward: better-designed multiplex housing that fits more comfortably into established neighbourhoods while maintaining certainty for builders and supporting housing supply. Good planning means learning from early implementation and making thoughtful improvements where needed. #vanpoli

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futuristick@futristick·
incredible how thoroughly the americans' attempt to polarize abundance into a left/right issue has failed the people yearn for state capacity
carl beijer@_carlbeijer

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B0b_Gratton
B0b_Gratton@b0b_Gratton·
@V3locTWT They are at almost every protest, go outside
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Risk Arb
Risk Arb@th3devilsbanker·
@Cazzy That won’t pencil anywhere in city of Vancouver or along skytrain corridor for new build
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Cazzy Star
Cazzy Star@Cazzy·
This just isn't relief. It's a ridiculously low drop and overall average price. Vancouver is not nice enough nor high enough wages to justify $2300+ for a tiny apartment, esp outside downtown. A 20% drop in 3 years means $2900 down to $2300. Our city and renters deserve better.
Cazzy Star tweet media
Mayor Ken Sim@KenSimCity

Vancouver renters are finally getting relief because we’re building more homes and removing the barriers that drive costs up. That’s not by accident; when you make it faster and easier to build, rents stop climbing and start coming down. See my full statement below:

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futuristick@futristick·
(assuming there are plausible changes that would produce an extra $N in revenue for CCo, assuming CCo's mandate is disjoint from B, etc)
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futuristick
futuristick@futristick·
there's few things I hate more than the idea that crown corporations shouldn't be profitable if there's budget item B that, if you had an extra $N surplus, you would spend $N on, and you have crown corp CCo running an $N deficit, that's a direct $N subsidy from B to CCo!
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Joseph Hillenbrand
Joseph Hillenbrand@joeyeatsfridays·
In the last two weeks I’ve gone from unemployed and living in an apartment with my wife, to having a full-time job, living in a house, and becoming a father. I honestly feel like a completely different person.
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Maharg 🇨🇦🇩🇰
Maharg 🇨🇦🇩🇰@GsusChriste·
Lombardi is the most interesting option in the OLP leadership race, because he actually has something interesting and new to contribute
Eric Lombardi (EricForOLP.ca) 🇨🇦🚀@EricDLombardi

Canadian leaders are too afraid to engage seriously with the frustration many normal people feel about immigration after the last few years. But I share many of their concerns. We have made honest conversation too difficult. And in Ontario especially, we have been naive about the effects of sudden population growth on housing, wages, infrastructure, public services, and yes, social and cultural cohesion. Immigration has historically been one of Ontario’s greatest strengths. It helped build our industries, our cities, and our prosperity. But many Ontarians feel gaslit if they express frustration about current circumstances. Young people watched rents explode. Entry-level work became more competitive and lower paid. Colleges transformed into immigration pathways. Infrastructure and healthcare struggled to keep up. It has changed our politics, too. People are not imagining this. Ontario experienced a genuine immigration shock. This at least is somewhat acknowledged. And while Ottawa deserves plenty of blame, Ontario cannot pretend this simply happened to us. Doug Ford’s government helped create the conditions for this crisis by blowing up the higher education funding model. They froze tuition, underfunded colleges and universities, then allowed institutions to make up the difference by massively expanding international student enrollment. That turned parts of our higher education system into an immigration-processing business. Now Ontario now needs a reset. And because immigration policy is ultimately federal, Ontario will need to work closely with (and pressure) Ottawa to pursue a system that is sustainable, orderly, and capable of maintaining public trust. Permanent immigration should return to a more normal and sustainable baseline, and no longer be subject to insiders claiming “labour shortages”. Over the next 5-10 years, Canada should gradually unwind the enormous temporary resident population from roughly 5 million people nationally to well under 1 million. Some, of course, should be offered a path to stay, but many cannot and we need to honestly acknowledge that. That likely means a prolonged period of near-flat population growth. Going forward, temporary worker, asylum, and student streams need to shrink substantially. More than they have. Visa rules need to actually mean something. Asylum claims cannot quietly become a parallel permanent residency system. At the same time, we should reward people who follow the rules. If someone came legally, worked or studied honestly, avoided welfare, and left when required, they should receive a meaningful advantage if they later apply to immigrate permanently. And finally, we need to remember what immigration policy is for. It is not primarily a humanitarian program. It is a civilization-building and economy-building program. Ontario and Canada should prioritize immigrants with the skills, education, economic potential, and cultural compatibility to help build a prosperous, cohesive, high-trust society.

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futuristick@futristick·
sources inform me the liberal party executive will allow Nate Erskine-Smith to stand in Salford and challenge Prime Minister Mark Carney
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futuristick@futristick·
honestly absurd how every time it seems alberta's clownish fiscal management might finally catch up to them, we get deus ex oil prices
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