Any images being presented/created/passed then questioned and the same image (use a checksum I guess) is returned.
I've read that the double dash (emdash?) is a bit of a giveaway as although correctly used, it's not very prevalent in current English (although, I do remember Microsoft Outlook used to convert hyphens to that as well). And I think double-space after a full-stop/period?
I don't understand. The US already has the organisation(s) and people in-place to fund $2bn into 17 countries rather than direct the UN to do it through OCHA. So, why bother?
Werner Vogels introduced in his closing speech at re:Invent this year the term "Verification Debt" and my stomach sank, knowing that term is going to define our roles in the future. The tool (AI) isn't going to get the blame in the future, you are. You are going to spend so much time verifying what it has generated is correct, the gains of using an AI, may start to be less beneficial than we think.
I think it's more difficult when certain very old web interfaces using Java used to be so strict on the version. There would be warnings like "You need Java 1.4 build 232, not Java 1.5" etc. I don't think the openjdk builds go back far enough for those (looks like Java 8 from a quick glance).
Network company: "China is doing better than us in their home market where we don't supply much."
Also Network company: "It's not our fault, it's Europe's."