Ava

joined 5 months ago
[–] Ava@lemmy.blahaj.zone 3 points 4 days ago

There are several companies that provide access to bank payments, but they all tend to have substantial limits, especially for US banking.

[–] Ava@lemmy.blahaj.zone 2 points 6 days ago (1 children)

If I go to someone and ask for a therapy session, even if they are the most supportive, thoughtful person I could hope to find, it's not appropriate for them to hold it out as proper therapy. We have rules and restrictions on who is allowed to offer certain services, and for good reason. If one asks their therapist about confidentiality, it's highly inappropriate for the therapist to misrepresent the confidentiality rules, also for good reason.

ChatGPT will gladly claim to be able to provide this support, and will promise complete anonymity. It will say that it's able to offer good advice and guidance. As you said, the text it generates will certainly be natural-sounding. It also won't be therapy. It definitely won't be anonymous.

A person who lies about stuff faces consequences. A label on the door of a "medicinalist" that says "No promises to offer truthful information, verify all important things" isn't going to prevent that if they're selling arsenic as a cure-all. If a company wants to offer a service, they should be restricted in what they can claim they are offering.

[–] Ava@lemmy.blahaj.zone 23 points 6 days ago (4 children)

I mean... Yeah, no shit. It's not therapy, and your chatbot shouldn't be pretending to offer professional services that require a license, Sam.

Let's be truthful. You don't want to have to explain or justify anything that your chatbot says, and you don't want the Courts to be able to analyze whether you've violated any rights or laws either.

[–] Ava@lemmy.blahaj.zone 5 points 6 days ago (2 children)

Your meaning is unclear for me

[–] Ava@lemmy.blahaj.zone 9 points 1 week ago

Well, but they did it the right way.

[–] Ava@lemmy.blahaj.zone 11 points 1 week ago (2 children)

Regulation limiting the "approval" powers of the payment processors.

Or, an increase in viability of direct bank payments. There's vanishingly little reason that instant payments can't be available.

[–] Ava@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

Sorry... their plan is to have specifically police do this? And then that police officer will, without normal protections and secured only by an app, arrive to a known location, likely at night?

That's... a choice.

[–] Ava@lemmy.blahaj.zone 3 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

Only 4% of people who went back to living in their sex assigned at birth for a while cited that their reason was because they realized that gender transition was not for them. When considering all respondents who had transitioned, this number equates to only 0.36%.

I will grant you that the survey includes the information in a much better context compared to the article. However, this paragraph from the survey I take issue with. Those who de-transition are the only subcategory that is compared to the total population in the written text in this way, even if the percentages are subsequently present in a chart.

Taken together, 82% of those who went back to living as their sex assigned at birth at least for a little while

The conclusion on the following page also clearly identifies that de-transition on the basis of identity is uncommon. It also uses "at least for a little while" as though it's a portion of a larger demographic, which it is not. Perhaps they mean it as compared to those who are currently not living as the gender they identify with, but I think that's a strained interpretation.

I think it's disingenuous to attempt to make a claim about the occurrence rate of something which can't be captured in your survey without noting the incompleteness. Especially so given the controversial nature of detransition within the broader conversation about trans issues. While it is technically true that the claim is made only of survey respondents, I still feel that the way the section is drafted provides/implies a broader framing.

My opinions here are clearly quite pedantic. However, the topic is one where it's critical that care be taken to avoid giving opponents any reason to discredit the larger work.

[–] Ava@lemmy.blahaj.zone 6 points 2 weeks ago (3 children)

Okay... there's not really any serious question that de-transition is often a result of transphobia, and that the vast majority of those who explore the gender squiggles at some point in their lives do not detransition. But this survey and this article are making an argument using awful, bullshit science and should be called out for it.

This is a survey done on trans people. This does not include those who did explore transition and then came to the conclusion they were cis. There is no valid means for these authors to draw any conclusions about the claim they are making. And, those who are anti-trans could easily take a bad-faith reading of this which is "9% of people who transition questioned their decision before remaining under the trans ideology, which confirms that this is something our children are being pressured into."

We need people to stop doing fake pseudo-science bullshit analysis and calling it trans science.

[–] Ava@lemmy.blahaj.zone 15 points 2 weeks ago (3 children)

This isn't a client list, it's his address book.

[–] Ava@lemmy.blahaj.zone 38 points 2 weeks ago

None. All 4 Democrats on the committee voted in favor. It wasn't a floor vote, it was an amendment to a crypto bill in committee.

view more: next ›