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Cake day: June 2nd, 2026

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  • The tells are getting subtler but currently a good tell is the camera work. If the video looks amateurish (grainy, blurry), but the video is more stable than a $60k gimbal mounted movie grade model with active scene stabilization, it’s probably AI. Another giveaway is motion morphing items from hammerspace where there’s a visible “seam” where the LLM is trying to reconcile two prompts. (example: you see a video of a horse rider, and the bridle and reins might suddenly decrease in length instead of becoming taught when the rider wishes the horse to stop, or you may see objects morph into existence from other structures, but so fast you might have to rewatch it a few times to catch it.)


  • you do know that like 85% of TF2 servers (yes there are still TF2 players) are community hosted? I hope this dipshit is ready to deal with the business end of a fully loaded Gaben.

    a bit of context as a current Minecraft player:

    About two years ago, Microsoft made Mojang add a rather draconian player reporting feature to all of their server software that constantly scans the chat for “malicious content.” “Malicious content” is the usual boilerplate corporate image ass covering, but while that is bad enough, it also has the power to ban a player from even accessing their OWN private, Singleplayer world, should the algorithm deem the infraction severe enough. Unfortunately, the console version of the game (known as “Bedrock” by the community, due to it having a shared cross play API for all console ports) was wholly owned by Microsoft, with Mojang only getting a developer credit. This means for the console player, there is little to be done. Meanwhile on the original PC version (Known as “Java” for the language it’s coded in) had this implemented as well, but because Mojang owns all the licencing for THAT version, and they have an open, “hands off” modding API policy (within reason) for it, Modders IMMEDIATELY coded a workaround that deactivates the part of the code operating the chat reporting feature, by spoofing the blockchain authentications that verify that the chat entries scanned are “authentic” (basically it makes the receiving server at Mojang believe that every chat entry’s “encryption key” is “inauthentic” so it can ignore all of them, no matter what their content is. The clever bastards.) This mod (“no chat reports”) is now considered a part of standard server op support QoL installs, for the Java player base.