It's usually someone complaining about the same thing over and over and acting as if that something is novel.
I get that someone might have a personal gripe with LLMs. Maybe, it consumes a lot of power to train or something to do with copyright. However, if someone's main point is that someone might go off to do something "offensive", then that gets silly.
It might be this far distant country which someone knows next to nothing about, then they pull out these questionable nuggets of information from who knows where it even comes from. In one case, there were two partially overlapping laws.
Over the years, there has been a particular and rare kind of Internet troll (or moron) who might come up with "ages of sexual consent" for countries on a map or individually, and it would basically be wrong.
Apart from being obnoxious, I'm also concerned that this sort of misinformation might spur racism.
The post debunking porn (and other such things) being spooky takes a more holistic approach rather than just leaning on one particular point / argument.
The points work best when they are taken as a *whole*. They don't work as well when they're taken individually.
"unpopular opinion"
Actually, the theory that porn or dolls or whatever is some sort of outlet which reduces crime is *anything* but an unpopular opinion. I'm not even kidding when I say that I've heard it from a number of people in private. They didn't get it from me either. And yes, from conservatives.
What someone might mean is that there are a few people on social media (with narcissistic traits) who performatively say the opposite.
Intuitively though, this crime reduction theory would make sense to someone, and there are piles of evidence which someone could interpret that way. It's not surprising that it keeps coming up.
The ironic thing about "unpopular opinions" is that they can actually be quite common.
A human rights reputation isn't something which a country can get from getting a seat on a council or spending some money. It takes time and commitment.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/oct/10/saudi-arabia-narrowly-fails-in-bid-to-win-a-seat-on-un-human-rights-council
"Saudi Arabia narrowly failed in its bid to win a seat on the United Nations Human Rights Council"
If Saudi Arabia wants to improve their #HumanRights reputation, then they actually have to make human rights an integral part of what they do.
A seat on the Human Rights Council doesn't really improve their human rights reputation.
Software Engineer. Psy / Tech / Sex Science Enthusiast. Controversial?
Free Expression. Human rights / Civil Liberties. Anime. Liberal.