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I’m glad you got the joking intent of my comment :D
Now do it without the wiki
And then it’s Gentoo time
$ makepkg --syncdeps
$ makepkg --install
Btw
It’s not an LLM, it’s a GAN and it’s inner workings are very different.
If that 1/6th has the most positive feedback in recognizability, for the GAN it becomes a high weighted part of the standard. These model’s categorizing flow favors unique features of images.
The algorithm is optimizing for results that are rated as precise, not just frequent.
Does it help the model to produce images that are indoubtably “american” for it’s raters or for it’s automated rating system? If yes they are statistically significant. Low frequency and systematic rarity can be both significant in a statistical analysis.
Are you sure?
Maybe you are confusing “traditional” with “religious”.
Pick up a dictionary, or even better, an encyclopedia.
Probably they don’t because it’s not context appropriate, as we all do with our dresses. More so if you and them live in a state or city with a different dress code. These things strongly depend on context.
For generative models though, they produce usually the most stereotyped answers possible, with a pinch of randomness, so we shouldn’t be surprised about this phenomenon. They are rewarded by these things.
A traditional dress is not a religious dress, it’s a dress used for a long time for it’s usefulness or fashion.
The historical use of the turban is fascinating, spanning for millennia and in a lot of regions and ethnic groups of the world.
I suggest the wiki page for further info, more precise than I have on hand.
An excerpt about the Pagri:
In Rajasthan state of India these turbans, known as Pagri or Safa, is a traditional headwear that is an integral part of the state’s cultural identity.
My point was (but it might be lost in sarcasm) that being the “hat” of Indian kings, nobles and emperors for millennia, we have a lot of drawings and also photos of Indian people with turbans, that most probably these generative models have been trained on.
On a footnote: why should the concept of a traditional dress be offensive? A lot of human groups have one.
Edit these are the words most associated with “Pagri” in english. It’s a matter of data.
What a surprise! A traditional outfit appears statistically significant to a large statistical model and shows more frequently. What a novel finding. I’m flabbergasted! What will be next? CEOs in jacket and tie? Dogs with fur? Why my 512x512 picture of a Inuit in a snowfield doesn’t portrait the subject wearing a bikini? Why can’t meta read my mind? WHY, MARK? WHHHHY?
Like you are 5: Wayland is a bunch of commands that your computer needs to draw the things that appear on your monitor.
No, the point is that people want a basic functionality implemented since windows 3.1 at least without having to pay (or tinker) for a dedicated app to restore usability.
Yes but the updates tend to reset it.
Yes, but it has some “quirks” that for somebody are a waste of time. Sometimes better and usable is enough.
For example I profoundly hate the start menu’s suggested apps default window. I just want it to list all apps when I click it. And on win 11 this is not customizable.
Everyone has his use case.
It’s not so odd when what you hate is exactly the lack of customizability.
Conmen gotta con.
Whatever they want. They are cats after all.