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  • 169 Posts
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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: June 21st, 2023

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  • I’d prefer to just leave this as disclaimers in the flair, title, or body. A percentage is awkward to use. I can imagine users setting it to 1% just to get around people’s content filters. I just don’t think people will be honest with a tool like this.

    I assume this is for AI art communities, in which case I think anti-AI users would already block. I’d prefer self-assignable community tags. An AI community could tag itself with #ai and users with a global blocklist could just block #ai. Somebody here mentioned wanting a “politics filter” and you could apply that here too. Communities can assign themselves with #politics.

    On top of that it can be like how Lemmy communities already post to Mastodon or Misskey using hashtags of their names (e.g. !gundam@ani.social posts show up in #gundam).

    Anyway, I think most AI stuff stay within their own communities. I don’t often see both AI and non-AI stuff within the same community.


















  • I was watching this late last night so I missed the first part and I didn’t realize that it was Patrick Galbraith on screen! I’ve been reading some of his works lately like Otaku and the Struggle for Imagination in Japan and his articles like Lolicon. I think everyone here on !anime should read his works.

    Anyway, I’m too young to know what much of anime culture was like two decades ago, and my only trip to Akihabara was a few years ago so I never really saw what the “old Akihabara” was like. Though my experience was pretty much exactly described as the “current Akihabara” in the video so it’s pretty cool to learn more about it.

    I should probably go back with a friend because I mostly just went around for a few hours looking at figures, searching for a particular monochrome Hitagi figure. Though it is true, there was a lot of ehh… sex industry stuff lol. Kind of funny how Galbraith mentions it in the video with such an ominous tone lol.






















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