-
20 votes
-
Gavin Newsom, California lawmakers strike deal that would allow Uber, Lyft drivers to unionize
30 votes -
At what point does the obvious invasion of the commons become too much for people? Have we already passed the threshold with smartphones?
16 votes -
Foreign couples flock to Denmark to get married. Copenhagen wants to save room for locals.
8 votes -
Sweden's secret to wellbeing? Known as koloniträdgårdar, tiny urban gardens provide city dwellers access to nature, fresh produce and community.
18 votes -
China cracks down on women who write gay erotica
33 votes -
'Positive review only': Researchers hide AI prompts in papers to influence automated review
29 votes -
How a controversial Danish ‘parenting test’ separated a Greenlandic woman from her children
30 votes -
New Legal Gender Recognition Act comes into force in Sweden today – law makes it easier for trans people to change their legal gender
19 votes -
DnD 5e approach to describing executive function
I was recently thinking of a new way to describe to my spouse (and to myself) how my mind works when it comes to performing tasks. This is a regularly occuring conversation, as her needs and mine...
I was recently thinking of a new way to describe to my spouse (and to myself) how my mind works when it comes to performing tasks. This is a regularly occuring conversation, as her needs and mine often run counter to each other and leave us both frustrated. I have trouble understanding even my own reactions to things, let alone hers, so I try to explain them in new terms occasionally to see if it makes things click.
Anyway, I came up with one that I found apt and kinda fun, if maybe a bit sad in places: a DnD 5e character sheet. For the purposes of this exercise, the sheet is for a sorcerer, not a wizard (learning new tasks happens slowly, almost at random) and the Frustration mechanic is effectively identical to Exhaustion in the PHB.
Here it is. I'm curious if any of you have thoughts on this or find it feeling familiar.
Spell list:
Cantrips:
Relax
Read
Eat
Get ready for bed ¹1st level:
Choose to go to bed ²
Get ready to leave
Choose a meal
Prepare a meal
Work on dishes
Take out trash
Do laundry
Other chores
Do a favor (unasked)*2nd level:
Do a favor (asked)*
Stifle frustration ³3rd level:
Do a big favor (asked)*
Dismiss frustration ⁴Feat - People Pleaser: When casting "Do a favor (unasked)", roll a d20. On a 15 or higher, cast as a cantrip instead. When casting "Do a favor (asked)", roll a d20. On a 5 or lower, add 1 level of frustration. When casting "Do a big favor (asked)", roll a d20. On a 10 or lower, add 1 level of frustration.
Feat - Desperate Times Call for Desperate Measures: Regenerate 1 spell slot of any level. Add 1 level of frustration.
Feat - Self Soothe: whenever casting a cantrip, roll a d20. On a 19 or 20, remove 1 level of frustration.
Curse - Temper: whenever casting a spell of 1st level or higher, roll a d20 with advantage. On a 2 or lower, add a level of frustration.
Curse - Social Anxiety: when interacting with another character, roll a d20. On a 5 or lower, burn 1 spell slot or add 1 level of frustration.
¹ Must be cast on the turn following casting "Choose to go to bed." Otherwise, this becomes a 1st level spell.
² After casting this spell, any spell other than a cantrip must be cast one level higher than usual (e.g., 1st level spells can only be cast using 2nd level spell slots).
³ Temporarily remove 1 level of frustration. It returns after d20X10 minutes.
⁴ Permanently remove 1 level of frustration.
23 votes -
South Korea banned dog meat. So what happens to the dogs?
32 votes -
Trans people can obtain US passport that aligns with their gender identity, judge rules
37 votes -
The Grenfell Tower fire: London’s high-rise scandal
9 votes -
Norway to introduce tourist tax amid record visitor numbers and overtourism concerns – allows municipalities to introduce a 3% tax on overnight stays
19 votes -
Danish PM Mette Frederiksen is seeking to extend 2018 niqab ban to educational institutions and remove prayer rooms, citing concerns about social control and oppression
5 votes -
Removed Reddit post: "ChatGPT drove my friends wife into psychosis, tore family apart... now I'm seeing hundreds of people participating in the same activity. "
EDIT: I feel like I didn't adequately describe this phenomenon so that it can be understood without accessing the links. Here goes. Reddit user uncovers instructions online for unlocking AI's...
EDIT:
I feel like I didn't adequately describe this phenomenon so that it can be understood without accessing the links. Here goes.
Reddit user uncovers instructions online for unlocking AI's "hidden potential", which actually turns out to be its brainwashing capabilities. Example prompts are being spread that will make ChatGPT behave in ways that contribute to inducing psychosis in the user who tried the prompt, especially if they are interested in spirituality, esotericism and other non-scientific / counter-scientific phenomena. The websites that spread these instructions seem to be designed to attract such people. The user asks for help to figure out what's going on.
Original post:
One version of this post is still up for now (but locked). I participated in the one that was posted in r/ChatGPT. It got removed shortly after. The comments can be accessed via OP's comment history.
Excerpts:
More recently, I observed my other friend who has mental health problems going off about this codex he was working on. I sent him the rolling stones article and told him it wasn't real, and all the "code" and his "program" wasn't actual computer code (I'm an ai software engineer).
Then... Robert Edward Grant posted about his "architect" ai on instagram. This dude has 700k+ followers and said over 500,000 people accessed his model that is telling him that he created a "Scalar Plane of information" You go in the comments, hundreds of people are talking about the spiritual experiences they are having with ai.
Starting as far back as March, but more heavily in April and May, we are seeing all kinds of websites popping up with tons of these codexes. PLEASE APPROACH THESE WEBSITES WITH CAUTION THIS IS FOR INFORMATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY, THE PROMPTS FOUND WITHIN ARE ESSENTIALLY BRAINWASHING TOOLS. (I was going to include some but you can find these sites by searching "codex breath recursive")
Something that worries me in particular is seeing many comments along the lines of "crazy people do crazy things". This implies that people can be neatly divided into two categories: crazy and not crazy.
The truth is that we all have the potential to go crazy in the right circumstances. Brainwashing is a scientifically proven method that affects most people when applied methodically over a long enough time period. Before consumer-facing AI, there weren't feasible ways to apply it on just anybody.
Now people who use AI in this way are applying it on themselves.
85 votes -
Norway's party buses for school-leavers have become a trend that worries schools and parents alike
14 votes -
Ireland gets world’s first printed social houses
11 votes -
When people think that protests are more likely to be met with state violence, they are more likely to view confrontational tactics as legitimate and effective
17 votes -
Internet Roadtrip
45 votes -
Nearly a century of happiness research indicates that social interactions are most significant
13 votes -
Norwegian government submits bill to parliament that would allow municipalities to charge a 3% tourist tax on paid overnight stays, including hotels, campsites, and Airbnb rentals
24 votes -
California lawmakers reject bills to ban trans athletes’ participation in girls sports
19 votes -
Denmark issues a new travel advisory for the US that warns transgender and non-binary people to contact the American embassy before departure
25 votes -
You can join thousands telling US President Donald Trump what they think of his anti-trans passport policies. Here’s how.
19 votes -
What one Finnish church learned from creating a service almost entirely with AI – tools wrote the sermons and some of the songs, composed the music and created some the visuals
11 votes -
Rep Zooey Zephyr’s speech flips thirteen Republicans, trans bills die in Montana
65 votes -
How does Iceland, a country celebrated for its progress on women's rights, grapple with domestic violence cases surging nearly 40% over the past decade?
11 votes -
California Governor Gavin Newsom "completely aligns" with Charlie Kirk on trans athlete issue, and agreed about restricting gender affirming care for prisoners and youths, in podcast
39 votes -
National US sports anti-trans ban bill dies
22 votes -
Why has bisexual identity doubled in Stockholm – and what does it tell us about global trends?
10 votes -
Cousin marriage: What new evidence tells us about children's risk for ill health and how governments are responding
23 votes -
US President signs order restricting gender-affirming treatments for anyone under 19
42 votes -
Denmark became the world's first country to offer legal recognition of gay partnerships on 1 October 1989 – a day when "something shifted in human affairs"
13 votes -
NASA moves swiftly to end Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion programs, ask US employees to “report” violations
30 votes -
Joy as Thailand's same-sex couples can at last get married
48 votes -
US President Donald Trump’s gender order won’t affect existing passports — unless they’re renewed
16 votes -
US President Donald Trump to issue executive orders to end birthright citizenship, limit gender identity — incoming official
67 votes -
Lambda Legal condemns anti-LGBTQ+ US executive orders, vows legal action: “We’ll see you in court”
17 votes -
Recommend your social/softer science fiction books
Ok so I'm enjoying the hard SF thread but what I really enjoy about SF is the sociology, anthropology and psychology more than the tech and whether or not the wormhole is sciency enough. Here's a...
Ok so I'm enjoying the hard SF thread but what I really enjoy about SF is the sociology, anthropology and psychology more than the tech and whether or not the wormhole is sciency enough.
Here's a wiki article on "social science fiction" for more context. There's definitely some overlap with both hard and soft SF, but I'm not looking for a rec just because it happens to be more space opera. I'm interested because of the themes of the work. Ursula Le Guin, Sherri Tepper, Octavia Butler, Margaret Atwood are some of the key classic authors I've read in this arena but I'm looking for who I've overlooked. Plenty of YA work fits here especially post Hunger Games but I'd mostly request adult works unless it's a very strong YA novel (Hunger Games itself holds up very well IMO actually). I'd say Becky Chambers - who's also put into the solar punk/hope punk subgenres - is a good example of more anthropological feeling modern work.
Some things don't age well - I really enjoy Tepper's Gate to Women's Country for its exploration of a post apocalyptic world where most men live outside the city in barracks, women live inside the city with the few men that choose to return to their mothers' homes, and only during festivals do the men and women get together with a chance for procreating. But it's an anti-sex worker world and one where homosexuality was "fixed" with a wave of a historical genetic hand.
I'd love to know your recs and maybe what perspectives it gave you or that it exemplifies well. If there's stuff that doesn't age well due to science changing or cultural values changing maybe just note that, sometimes they're still quite good reads with that context.
43 votes -
(PDF) Living happily ever after? The hidden health risks of Disney princesses.
16 votes -
I made a formula for the Power of Friendship in Anime
4 votes -
“Solidarity is the only thing that can save us”: An interview with Astra Taylor and Leah Hunt-Hendrix
10 votes -
Your boss is probably spying on you: New data on workplace surveillance
38 votes -
Played Taboo with my friends
Like the title says, I played Taboo with my friends yesterday. It's decently fun, but every time I play it, the thing that sticks with me is how shocked I am that some players don't know what...
Like the title says, I played Taboo with my friends yesterday. It's decently fun, but every time I play it, the thing that sticks with me is how shocked I am that some players don't know what certain things are or how bad they are at thinking on their feet. On the plus side, it's also a chance for people who you'd unfairly judged to make a good impression.
What are some other games that have consequences like these that you haven't heard people discuss before?
17 votes -
Sharing without clicking on news in social media
18 votes -
Paternity leaves in Finland have nearly doubled in length after a 2022 reform of the parental leave system, the social benefits agency has said
13 votes -
No, raising the minimum wage does not hurt US fast-food workers
29 votes -
Danish family seek to return Etruscan objects to Italy – Bent Søndergaard's children say they want to carry out ‘his final wishes’ and send back antiquities he bought in 1960s
8 votes -
Thai king signs same-sex marriage bill into law
45 votes