Yeah, it's really more about two massive industries colluding to extract additional income from working Americans. Rental agencies contract with Spectrum, get a cut off the top, and the renters are stuck with a shitty internet service they don't want. Honestly, renting has never been a great experience for the average American, but it's been getting worse over time. Rental agencies are starting to cut staff, reduce actual beneficial services offered, force renters into paying for additional junk services they don't want or need (what the fuck is a $50 a month "beautification fee," anyway? Nobody ever fucking cleans this place...), and, of course, increase rent every year. And they can do this because...what the fuck else are you going to do? If you're working class and live in a high cost of living area, you can't just move, or buy a house. You have to rent. No other options, really. And while you'd think "well, if someone else opens an apartment complex that offers better services, you can just move there." Sure, and spend 15 grand moving a mile and a half only to have the apartment complex you moved to suffer the same enshittification after 6 months that the first one did.
From what I understand it is some thing for AI, to stop them from harvesting or to poison the data, by having it repeating therefore more likely to show up.
You know if you want to do something more effective than just putting copyright at the end of your comments you could try creating an adversarial suffix using this technique. It makes any LLM reading your comment begin its response with any specific output you specify (such as outing itself as a language model or calling itself a chicken).
It gives you the code necessary to be able to create it.
There are also other data poisoning techniques you could use just to make your data worthless to the AI but this is the one I thought would be the most funny if any LLMs were lurking on lemmy (I have already seen a few).
That's a neat idea and I've considered it, but would need time to research and test. Time I don't have, so this is the easiest thing I came up with.
If there were a bot, plugin, browser extension, or something that did the necessary modifications and kept up to date with new developments in AI, I'd use it.
I find most landlords if you start pushing for addendums do one of two things: they immediately shut down, which is usually an indicator they're going to be difficult anyway. Or they don't care enough and they'll wave it away just to get you in the door, especially when the clause you are disputing is insignificant and looking for someone else could cost them 5x or more what that little clause was worth anyway because of a missed month.
This is obviously contingent on a lot of things. Do you need to move now? Is it incredibly difficult to find anything and this checks off every other box? Etc. But just something to consider if you have room to abandon ship on a rental you find.
I'm actually shocked at how small an amount of people have t-mobiles. It works fantastic and never drops in my area, which is a whole lot better than the cable net I had. My phones are t-mo so the internet (its a gateway they give you, so modem/wifi in one) is $30 a month with no taxes or bs. Straight $30. I think it's $50 if you aren't a t-mo cell customer.
I also game online and have no lag or jitter(unless it's server side and everyone is complaining). Like I said before. I have good ping and zero packet loss. Sounds like you had a bad wifi set up.
I think in my part of europe cable is the only realistic solution, every home cellular thing has a download limit. All of the cable offerings here are flat
Latency. Also, wired is always better than wireless. I'll save the long boring explanation for another time, but suffice it to say that wireless constantly has dropped packets, and constantly has to retransmit data.
Not by much. My average ping on cable was around 30ms with no packet loss. On t-mo 5g it's usually around 50ms with no packet loss.
Fifty is still a good ping. Even for fps gaming. Stuff doesn't get dicey until you've gone over 80. As further, I've had no gaming issues at all with it.
I'm on T-Mobile via an MVNO for $204/year all-in (Mint, 5GB/month) and have 5G Business Internet through them for the flat $50. Combine that with being exclusively on solar power, and it's cute to hear when the local utilities go down.
Is it as fast as fixed internet? No. Is that relevant 95% of the time? Also no.
Curious question: what does the business internet plan get you over the home plan? I'm on Comcast Business right now, but I'm always looking for better options (plus we're looking at getting a 5G failover at work).
Fast wise I'm at around 50 ping with no packet loss and over 400mbps.
Non "speed test" website wise, I will get over 30MB/sec downloads when I'm pulling in a game download from steam, so I know mine at least does over 280mbps in the real world.
I'm sure "location, location, location" on this, and it will vary a lot depending on your area and congestion in that area.
T-mos general coverage outside of city centers and interstates is trash (they're all pretty bad, but Tmo is very binary). I'd get it over xfinity, but it's not even offered in my major university town due to coverage limitations. And it's not like there aren't big pipes nearby - the university consumes more than 100TB of data traffic a day; their Netflix traffic alone was so large just 3 years ago that they were on the edge of getting a co-located Netflix rack on campus.
I get you for your area, but that's not the case in my state. Also, t mobile has the largest 5g coverage area nationwide by a large margin. Like, not even close. Area wise Verizon and at&t combined still don't match it.
i think sometimes.. in certain outskirt or rural areas there may be cases when a slow and steady provider (verizon/visible) may be considered a safer option for some.
Safer? It's like half the monthly price, has a ping/latency of around 50, and speeds over 250 mbps with almost no downtime. It's just been a good option.