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"User" here is most likely people being forced to see the Gemini output on Google Search.


Is there any easy and effective way to permanently disable that? (Without having to be logged in)

I've found it at least 10X more distracting than useful.

EDIT: There are some browser extensions, or simply change your search URL to include udm=14 as a query parameter: https://www.google.com/search?udm=14&q=%s


You are saying you find google search useful or you mean you mean the gemini is a distraction from a use case like measuring google results?


I find Google search useful. I find the AI generated snippets they inject into the top of the page a distraction. Roughly 9/10 times the information is generic, unhelpful, or plain wrong.


I stopped finding their search competitive around 2015 but kept checking with gradually less frequency, so I can't really comment on whether anything new has added or hurt their results.

Some of their semantic web based info results seemed good and would have benefited by more complex algorithms to figure out when to show it.. But I kind of got the sense that they went into the Amazon territory where no one was authorized to sort anything out any more to get out of some kind of local optimums.


Are you using something better? (Are you a Kagi customer?)


I originally moved to duckduckgo to use their !g/!b/!.. for quick search comparisons when I was very much a power user of search, but these days ddg's first results or results after adding a qualifying word are usually adequate for my usage and my power search skills are in decline.


Interesting I've found it pretty helpful for my searches. Maybe I search for more simple things :-)


Nice idea! It would be great if we could see how the app works on the landing page.


Do you happen to have a blog? This type of investigative journalism is really interesting and would love to read more.


There's a John Oliver episode about the chocolate industry, you can check it out on YouTube.

Of course there's no logo saying the chocolate is made with child slavery, I hope you didn't mean to be snarky here.

There are initiatives to try to alleviate the problem, the only example I have in mind right now is Tony's Chocolonely (which explains the problem and their solution on their website) but I'm sure others could come up with other initiatives.

The trends from top companies of chocolate is that they try to do as little as possible to alleviate the problem of child slavery in chocolate production.


I assumed the logo would be on the ones without child slavery. Similar to the organic logo.


> Of course there's no logo saying the chocolate is made with child slavery, I hope you didn't mean to be snarky here.

...?

Quality labels are a thing, why couldn't an independent NGO overwatch the production?


It's expensive, easy to bypass, and has little enforcement teeth.

Expensive because you need to pay an inspector (ideally multiple to avoid corruption) to visit these farms.

Easy to bypass because the kids aren't working the fields all the time and there's plenty of warning an inspector is coming.

And the enforcement mechanism is you don't get the label... But like there's plenty of buyers for slave chocolate so that mostly means a minor hit on income.

NGO inspectors are better than nothing, but we should be clear eyed in how much they can solve. The only way to significantly reduce slave labor is harsh penalties on companies that trade in slave goods. That was pretty much the only thing that collapsed the ivory market.


You could buy a large plot of land in Ghana or Nigeria. Start a large cacao plantation. Hire locals to do the labour intensive work for you. And then fly in management from Western European countries to oversee the operation and to make sure that no children set foot on the plantation.


But this hasn't applied for self-driving cars, there has been huge amounts of money poured into it and very smart people working on the problem and yet the results have not really been up to the level.


Hardware products have a much harder time becoming more popular. They are often restricted to a few countries and require significant investment from customers, whereas software can be distributed overnight to a hundred different countries at once.

Hence, the economics of both are vastly different. It is much harder to reach the viral inflection point with hardware than software, even with great products.


It's not listed anywhere, but they've done the same in South Africa and list the companies here: https://www.4dayweek.com/sa-2023-participants


It seems to be a limit on the input length of the elements, if they have a larger name then it does not work


It seems to be a combination of how many times it's been merged, and how long it is. I think sometimes the LLM just decides a word is a 'final' word and won't merge it. I've gotten final words that are just a couple characters, and ones that are 10+ words.


You can read around [1], but getting a visa in Germany right now takes multiple months, which is probably too much for most companies. [1]https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=37566992


There is good content that is being produced in Quebec, you just have to look out for it and not expect Hollywood quality production. Xavier Dolan, Denis Villeneuve and Jean-Marc Vallée (rip), Monia Chokri and more, all started their career in Quebec thanks to legislation around creating French content.

The "90% bad TV" also happens everywhere, especially in the US. The number of CSI spinoffs must be really high.

One of the dangers from YouTube/streaming platforms in regard to French Canadian content is that the economics is just not the same. For example, Linus Tech Tips have a global reach since it's English content. M. Net (now defunct tech show in Quebec) or something similar would not even be closed to compete monetarily.


We've seen GPT-3 comments being banned from Stack Overflow. I also saw some people just copying the answer from ChatGPT to answer comments on Reddit. The good thing is that they all follow a certain structure that internet comments mostly don't follow, so they are easy to spot.


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