You saw some weird shit and decided to subject us to it too? Why?
catloaf
For reasonable people. For others, it's an avenue to get away with war crimes.
Your account may be banned by the admins if they don't like you. If it's on your home instance, you lose the entire account. That's why it's important to create your account on a trustworthy instance (or host your own).
I'm a stickler for content appropriateness, but even I can see how a game company's gaming console is related to gaming.
Never? They were very clear about the first captchas being used to train OCR, way back in like 2010.
Then just say "something" not "someone" if you're talking about things and not people. There's no need to create unnecessary problems.
I can think of no logical explanation for that. Maybe if you wanted to use CPU encoding and use the system at the same time. But given how many cores systems have these days, percentages don't mean much. As long as you leave a few cores available, you'll be able to use the system.
If you don't care about that, let it go to 100%.
What platform, version, drivers, encoder, and ffmpeg?
Edit: also the command and a sample file ideally
I don't think they add user input to their training data like that.
Unless you changed it in the application config somewhere, inside the container it's still running on 8080, so the port should be 8090:8080. https://docs.docker.com/engine/network/#published-ports
And it saves them on bandwidth costs!