Even if there were tools that can dictate what is AI-generated and what not, they'd have to rely on a pattern, or on an artifact from AI-generated imagery (which, as far as I know, does not exist), and that is what can be used as proof, not the result of the tool itself being used.
computerguy
They're not really DLCs, just cosmetic packs that you can get if you play for long enough. The actual DLCs are the seasonal updates.
Hunting Down The Freeman?
Blue's News, IGN and a local news reporter.
I believe our best american hacker "4Chan" is our best bet against this Torovolts guy.
YEEEEEEEEE-hive.
Born in Portugal, lived in Brazil since my 3 years of age.
I didn't mean it as in "it only works in Chrome", but how some websites just seem to ignore any problems that are in non-Chromium browsers.
Tacoma. Incredible game, barely has any gameplay, though, and is very short if you don't actively look for side-content, which is the main focus of the game. It's mostly storytelling through holographic logs of an abandoned station. Your goal is to salvage previous data in there and an abandoned AI, that your company needs to reclaim.
If Apple is aiming at a casual public, they probably have already wasted money they're not gonna get back. The only way for it to work would be if they made it cheap, compact and even more "plug-and-play" than any current VR set already is, and that $3k price tag mentioned in the article already tells me it's not gonna be one of those things.
Ungoogled Chromium.
I was looking for private browsers, and found myself astonished at how the market is saturated in Chromium-based browsers, and how every website seems to only support theses browsers, so I had to accept that Chromium will be all there is until a new big thing appears, and wound up finding a Chromium fork that seems to remove all google aspects from it. I've had to tweak a few things but the experience has been very smooth so far.
But then, it begs the question, how would you prove it's an AI work? For all anyone knows, it's my art, I made it, it's undistinguishable from what I could make. What the court will see is, I submitted that art in the Internet, you take that, I sue you for copyright, you argue it's an AI work, and the Court will request you to prove it really is an AI work, and perhaps launching an investigation on me to see whether I really made the AI artwork.