I don't see how. You could ask a neural network to do the tokenization I suppose, but in doing so you'd have to convert the prompt into tokens via the same deterministic process the network was trained on, essentially…
A tokenizer is a deterministic string-matching program, it's not made out of weights in the same sense as a neural network itself.
The links have _ostensibly_ pointed to the destination for quite some time, at least for me. The current techniques they use for tracking clicks do not require otherwise. They just use pings[1] where supported, and a JS…
Maybe you're joking, but .ai is the ccTLD for Anguilla. I don't think they meant to imply the companies in question reside there.
CSP affects inline scripts as well. They are actually disallowed by default and must be explicitly whitelisted.
You could let the user decide with buttons on the error dialogue. Lot's of crash reporters use this pattern.
I think you might be confused. The repeal will switch us to DST year-round, which seems to be what you'd prefer.
I don't see how. You could ask a neural network to do the tokenization I suppose, but in doing so you'd have to convert the prompt into tokens via the same deterministic process the network was trained on, essentially…
A tokenizer is a deterministic string-matching program, it's not made out of weights in the same sense as a neural network itself.
The links have _ostensibly_ pointed to the destination for quite some time, at least for me. The current techniques they use for tracking clicks do not require otherwise. They just use pings[1] where supported, and a JS…
Maybe you're joking, but .ai is the ccTLD for Anguilla. I don't think they meant to imply the companies in question reside there.
CSP affects inline scripts as well. They are actually disallowed by default and must be explicitly whitelisted.
You could let the user decide with buttons on the error dialogue. Lot's of crash reporters use this pattern.
I think you might be confused. The repeal will switch us to DST year-round, which seems to be what you'd prefer.