This isn’t accurate. The thing that’s going to possibly be depleted is “Arrow 3” - the first line of aerial defense (excluding operations that target the launchers within Iran). They still have plenty of Arrow 2 and David’s’ slingshot missiles.
Training is much more computationally intensive than computing a _single_ answer. But not compared to running the model over time at scale for millions of users.
It's still an uncredited effort by another person, copied and posted elsewhere as magic trick. I just think it is nice to publicly credit the people via whom one builds one's wisdom.
This is all very unfortunate. However - once the world realizes that deepfakes can be generated virtually for free and for anyone, no one will trust them. We might even be better off with them rather than without as no one could tell if a genuinely leaked photo of yours is real. The same has happened with phone records as evidence in court (in some countries)
You can disable this by running Chrome with —-disable-web-security. If you only need this to access local files, you can do —-allow-file-access-from-files
And you would learn that if you don't have wildcard cookies, which I generally wouldn't recommend, subdomains are isolated from each other. But with meta if the brand weren't tarnished, a new domain for subdomains like Google's withgoogle.com and web.dev would be a good place to add sites like this rather than subdomain.facebook.com
Seems like the article fails to realize that the more popular an application is, the more likely it is to be deleted. Which is a very basic assumption to make.
Also, it might be with something with how hard it is to uninstall the app in a specific platform. For example - I actually didn’t have a “delete” button for the Facebook app on my previous phone. This might popularize the search term significantly.