No wonder.
- Water: 2 hydrogens per 1 oxygen, 66%!
- Carbohydrates: same story
- Fats: a LOT of hydrogen
- Proteins: yep, lots of hydrogen!
- Vitamins: same
Most organic molecules feature a lot of hydrogen that essentially serves as a placeholder for all the free bonds of carbon (and there is plenty!), oxygen, and nitrogen. Hydrogen is essentially the default thing to connect to about any organic molecule. And yes, it is primarily taken from water in the grand scheme of things.
Well, then why don’t we float away? /s
Unrelated to the topic:
Is the aim of CC “…” text at the botton to prevent ai from using your comments or something? (I’m trying to understand.)
Unrelated to the topic:
Is the aim of CC “…” text at the botton to prevent ai from using your comments or something? (I’m trying to understand.)
In theory, yes. I realize it probably won’t work, but it’s a momentary copy and paste, so it’s a low hanging fruit to give it a try, just in case it does work.
Ahah you blundering fool, I’m going to add that comment directly into my AI because you did not provoke the magical spell to stop me.
I have to admit, I loled.
The terms of that license seem like a non-commercial AI would be just fine to use it, is that not intended?
The terms of that license seem like a non-commercial AI would be just fine to use it, is that not intended?
IANAL, but I think its the citation stuff that would have to obeyed, which is far as I know bots today never give citation of where they’re modeling from when they post comments, so I’m hoping since they’re not citing they’d stop using.
I saw somebody else doing it, I figured it couldn’t hurt, one copy and paste and I’m done.
Typically the citation is included with the software, possibly linked from a site / service and/or included in their dataset repo (e.g. on huggingface.co)
True, but they still have to cite my name, and I’m not sure they’re going to name every person that they use every one of their comments to train their models from.
Granted it relies on them honoring the license, but still easy thing to try.
Not me. I make my hydrogen from scratch every morning. Takes a while, but you can really tell the difference.
Mine is mixed with methane.
If you break down that far, isn’t everything as old as the universe?
When fusion or fission occurs you get new atoms.
It’s Hydrogen that’s existed since the universe cooled enough for electrons and protons to make atoms. Seconds after the big bang.
That’s most hydrogen.
It’s never been fused into heavier elements just still sticking around and caught in the planetary part of the solar system rather than the sun itself. Or any previous suns.
There’s some helium like that but most helium was formed inside suns later, and heavier elements all formed later in suns or supernovas.
It’s Hydrogen that’s existed since the universe cooled enough for electrons and protons to make atoms. Seconds after the big bang.
Atoms didn’t exist until 380,000 years after the big bang. Before that the universe was too dense for atoms to form and everything existed as a hot dense plasma where no electron could be captured by protons and neutrons. The protons that make up the nucleus of hydrogen did exist, it’s just that everything was too energetic to become an atom yet.
As far as I’m aware, protons don’t decay. If they formed at the beginning of the universe, they stick around until they get annihilated by anti-matter. But are we getting new protons after the universe formed? No idea.
Hydrogen is a colorless, odorless gas that, given enough time, starts to wonder where it came from.
As Carl Sagan said, “The cosmos is within us. We are made of star-stuff.”