Not through the API.
admin
I'm not a lawyer. But isn't the reason they had to go to reddit to get permission is because users hand over over ownership to reddit the moment you post. And since there's no such clause on Lemmy, they'd have to ask the actual authors of the comments for permission instead?
Mind you, I understand there's no technical limitation that prevents bots from harvesting the data, I'm talking about the legality. After all, public does not equate public domain.
I think creating a lora for your character would help in that case. Not really easy to do as of yet, but technically possible, so it's mostly a ux problem.
As if their user base has that kind of attention span /s.
So ehm, how old are your kids and how do they like it so far?
I'm with the other person on this one. The question is stupidly vague. Whereas "ever" isn't very productive, neither is "live up to its hype" - that could mean anything, depending on whoms hype you follow.
All in all, this feels live a clickbait circlejerk article.
How is still an excuse in the days of docker?
I only apply at companies where I get to pick my OS.
Why would you wish for technology to stop improving?
Thanks for that clarification. I was afraid it would be that murky.