Никита Хромин (ночной линейный редактор)
So-called "celeb bait" ads have been a long-running issue for the company. Engadget has previously documented celeb bait scams on Facebook, including ones that frequently use Elon Musk and Fox News personalities to hawk fake cures for diabetes. The Oversight Board has also criticized the company for not doing enough to combat such scams. In its update, Meta says that "because scam ads are designed to look real, they’re not always easy to detect." The company also noted that it has now enrolled "more than 500,000" celebrities and public figures into its facial recognition system that's meant to automatically detect scam ads using the faces of famous people.
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And, while it’s not an ad, or a robot exhibit, I have to wrap things up with another collaboration between Maxell and The Computer Museum. Opened in 1990, The Walk-Through Computer was a “giant $1.2 million exhibit--the only one of its kind in the world–features an authentic, two-story working model of a desktop computer enlarged to 50 times its normal size. People can walk through it and see how a computer actually works.” At its entrance was a six-foot-tall floppy disk:
但追踪下去,发现了一个反常识的现象: