It's my understanding that LLM's are thoroughly unsafe, always reporting everything it does and every input back to whoever made the LLM. So, wouldn't it be easy for whoever owns the LLM to see what it's being used for, and to refuse service to scammers?
Usernameblankface
It seems like an opportunity for vehicle-to-vehicle charging, putting the power gained from gravity into another vehicle.
It would need to happen quickly and at the same time as unloading and it would have to keep enough energy to climb the hill plus a safety margin.
Does it discharge extra energy into anything else? Does it burn off extra energy as heat to maintain regenerative braking?
What on earth was the prompt for this?
In Ideogram, prompt: a fork in the road
In Google Gemini
Prompt: generate a picture of a fork in the road
Bing
Prompt: a fork in the road
Idk where the cat came from, Bing must do some edits and expansion of very short/simple prompts behind the scenes. Sometimes it will just refuse to make anything if the prompt is too vague or short
That's so good! It's worth opening the picture to get the full detail and check out the candy Sailor Moon. I love that it's lit from inside, and the chocolate bar garage door is a nice touch
Saving this for when I have time to watch it. The inner workings of computers are electricity and magic to me
The negotiations must have been brutal! /s
Aha, occupant fatalities. I was hoping to find out if they were measuring people inside the cars mentioned or people in other cars or pedestrians or all of the above