spiralsheep: Sheep wearing an eyepatch (Default)
Humph ([personal profile] spiralsheep) wrote2026-02-10 02:16 pm

In which there are my 5/5 and 4/5 reads, January 2026

- Unwise Wording of the week: "Romance delivered in as little as 60 mins with Morrisons Now. Free delivery on your 1st order, use code: freedelnow. Choose Now". o_O

- Pre-Wednesday Reading: 18 books in January 2026 (no dnfs). These were my faves.

1. REDACTED fantasy novel (series), 4/5
Reminder, don't stan for creeps: when a rich and powerful 60-something is accused of sexually abusing his employee, who is 4 decades younger than him, the issue isn't whether she "consented" or not, the issue is why a 60-something is aiming himself at an employee (and with a notable age-gap).

2. Between the Stops, the view of my life from the top of the number 12 bus, by Sandi Toksvig, 2019, non-fiction autobiography and localised histories, 4/5
Fascinating, amusing, readable in short chunks (appropriately for both the subjects :D ). Another excellent suggestion from my book club ladies.

3. redacted & 4. children's picture book )

6. Spent, Alison Bechdel, 2025, slice of life comic, 5/5
An updated and reframed set of episodes continuing Bechdel's DtWOF series. Doesn't do exactly what it says on the tin but is entertaining and edifying anyway. Probably partly inexplicable to anyone unaware of DtWOF, and also anyone even mildly conservative.
(Thanks again to white_hart for this rec.)

9. Bandette vol.5, The Wedding of BD Belgique, by Paul Tobin and Colleen Coover, 2025, lighthearted crime-caper comic series (best not read as a standalone), 4/5
My love of the Bandette series is well known and this is another delightful episode.

10. REDACTED historical biography comic, 4/5
Who knew there were two Jane Austen biographical "graphic novels" from mainstream publishers? I also have the other one To Read before I formulate valid opinions.

11. reread & 12. you don't need my opinion & 13. reread )

14. This Much is True, by Miriam Margolyes, 2021, non-fiction autobiography, 4/5
After reading Between the Stops I wondered what else the library might have in the same classmark and luckily my eyes alighted on this volume. Margolyes, who is Ashkenazi Jewish, details her family history which she has researched meticulously, explains how she became the respected person she is (not a National Treasure but a National Trinket as she herself jokes), and goes on to share scurrilous but generally harmless celebrity anecdotes (only one of which I disbelieved as overly embellished from whatever original event occurred). If you've seen Margolyes on various chat shows then you might find some of this book repetitive and her second, Oh Miriam!, is rather regurgitative of the same material but it was new to me and I enjoyed this first one.
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james_davis_nicoll ([personal profile] james_davis_nicoll) wrote2026-02-10 08:52 am
Entry tags:

Scarlet Morning (Scarlet Morning, volume 1) by ND Stevenson



Two orphans escape their dismal island home for adventure in a slowly dying world.

Scarlet Morning (Scarlet Morning, volume 1) by ND Stevenson
sisterdivinium: mother superion and jillian salvius from warrior nun being close hehe (Default)
sisterdivinium ([personal profile] sisterdivinium) wrote in [community profile] halfamoon2026-02-10 10:51 am
Entry tags:

Day 10: self-rec, Warrior Nun - Jillian Salvius/Mother Superion

I had chosen something else to share today but then I noticed that a lot of people had seen it already despite it fitting the "acting the fool" theme rather well. So it was that I decided to link this fic I wrote back in 2024 instead, which I believe also shows a more foolish side to a character -- Jillian and her big brain, specifically :)

Title: Miscalculations
Fandom: Warrior Nun
Pairing: Jillian Salvius/Mother Superion
Rating: G
Length: 2267 words
Notes: Post-s2. More on the funny side than not.
Summary: Out of all the reasons why Jillian Salvius would call on her, Mother Superion had not been expecting this

Read on AO3 (you must be logged in! If not, you can also read it where it was originally posted, here).
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firecat (attention machine in need of calibration) ([personal profile] firecat) wrote2026-02-10 05:37 am
Entry tags:

Duck, politics incoming

This article boils down to “we told you so.” But I like how it explains why the mainstream media dismissed and downplayed what we told you (because their “how to do journalism” rules demand it, e.g.: “Insist on a both-sides structure even when one side is lying“).

“The Media Malpractice That Sent America Tumbling Into Trumpism” by Parker Molloy
https://newrepublic.com/article/205913/media-malpractice-trumpism-project-2025
linky: Kyoka glancing to Lachesis. (Gotchard: KyokaLachesis - Glancing)
Linky ([personal profile] linky) wrote in [community profile] halfamoon2026-02-10 08:15 am
Entry tags:

Day 10: Art - Kamen Rider Gotchard - Kyoka/Lachesis

Title: Together At Last
Fandom: Kamen Rider Gotchard
Pairing/Characters: Kyoka/Lachesis
Rating: G
Author's note: Also drawn for the [tumblr.com profile] tokushippingweek prompt of Canon Divergence.
Also on Ao3, or viewable behind the cut:

Read more... )
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osprey_archer ([personal profile] osprey_archer) wrote2026-02-10 08:06 am

Book Review: Does My Head Look Big in This?

In 2005, my family went on a three week trip to Australia and New Zealand, on which I embarked determined to bring back gems of antipodal literature.

Unfortunately, I was not very internet savvy at that point, so I didn’t successfully manage to search for the titles of these gems. Presumably I could have asked the booksellers, but this literally didn’t occur to me until I was writing this post, so clearly that was a non-starter.

So mostly I purchased the complete works of Isobelle Carmody, plus some of Lynley Dodd’s Slinki Malinki books (happy to report that my niece now enjoys them). But I did consider Randa Abdel-Fattah’s Does My Head Look Big in This?, before concluding that this book would obviously make it to the United States before long.

I was correct! The book made it to the United States within a year or two after that trip. I proceeded not to read it for another twenty years.

But finally I have read it. At this point it’s kind of a period piece of my own youth. CDs! DVDs! Young people who use their cell phones to actually call each other! Be still my beating heart.

But also, the character who is so relentlessly fat-shamed by her mother and her classmates that she informs our heroine that she wishes she could become anorexic. Unable to achieve this fatal disease, she instead takes up smoking. She ultimately gives it up when she gets a boyfriend who likes her curves, but still. Oh, 2005, how I don’t miss you. What an awful year. Awful decade in fact. Sometimes I feel like an old curmudgeon shaking my metaphorical cane at The State of the World These Days, so it’s cheering in a way to be reminded that I hated the world when I was a teenager, too.

“But Aster,” you complain. “The actual book? Do you have any thoughts about Does My Head Look Big in This?

Well, to be honest, the book also reminded me that I had a tortured relationship with contemporary YA even before its Twilightification. It also seemed to me that the move from children’s literature to YA echoed the arc of Fern’s character growth in Charlotte’s Web: at the start she saves Wilbur the runt pig and spends hours listening to the talking animals, but at the end all she cares about is some stupid boy who took her for a ride on the Ferris wheel. It’s a shift from wonder and possibility and talking animals to boring romance and clothes and makeup (or boring sports if the main character is a boy).

As an adult I have more tolerance for this sort of thing, but I suspect that in my youth I would have been horrified that our heroine starts wearing the hijab full-time and still spends most of her time thinking about clothes and makeup and boys. To my seventeen-year-old mind, the chief benefit of wearing the hijab would be never having to think about any of those things ever again! Or at least until you’re ready to get married. (I recognize that this is not how it actually works, but it’s still what I would have thought.)

So in fact it’s a good thing that I waited 20 years to read the book, because I probably would not have much appreciated the book in 2005. But in 2026, it’s given me a nice wander down memory lane.
bluedreaming: (killuazoldvck​ - dewi hw skeletons I)
ice cream ([personal profile] bluedreaming) wrote in [community profile] fan_flashworks2026-02-10 06:58 am

Melody of Secrets: Fanfic: crossfire hearts

Fandom: Melody of Secrets
Mods please use the f: tv (category) tag
Rating: T
Length: 100 words
Content notes: reference to canonical character death
Author notes: The title is from No Gifts from War by Angkarn Chanthathip, translated by Tracey Martin.
Summary: Finally knowing the truth doesn’t mean that things aren’t still broken.

Read more... )
Schneier on Security ([syndicated profile] bruce_schneier_feed) wrote2026-02-10 12:03 pm

AI-Generated Text and the Detection Arms Race

Posted by Bruce Schneier

In 2023, the science fiction literary magazine Clarkesworld stopped accepting new submissions because so many were generated by artificial intelligence. Near as the editors could tell, many submitters pasted the magazine’s detailed story guidelines into an AI and sent in the results. And they weren’t alone. Other fiction magazines have also reported a high number of AI-generated submissions.

This is only one example of a ubiquitous trend. A legacy system relied on the difficulty of writing and cognition to limit volume. Generative AI overwhelms the system because the humans on the receiving end can’t keep up.

This is happening everywhere. Newspapers are being inundated by AI-generated letters to the editor, as are academic journals. Lawmakers are inundated with AI-generated constituent comments. Courts around the world are flooded with AI-generated filings, particularly by people representing themselves. AI conferences are flooded with AI-generated research papers. Social media is flooded with AI posts. In music, open source software, education, investigative journalism and hiring, it’s the same story.

Like Clarkesworld’s initial response, some of these institutions shut down their submissions processes. Others have met the offensive of AI inputs with some defensive response, often involving a counteracting use of AI. Academic peer reviewers increasingly use AI to evaluate papers that may have been generated by AI. Social media platforms turn to AI moderators. Court systems use AI to triage and process litigation volumes supercharged by AI. Employers turn to AI tools to review candidate applications. Educators use AI not just to grade papers and administer exams, but as a feedback tool for students.

These are all arms races: rapid, adversarial iteration to apply a common technology to opposing purposes. Many of these arms races have clearly deleterious effects. Society suffers if the courts are clogged with frivolous, AI-manufactured cases. There is also harm if the established measures of academic performance – publications and citations – accrue to those researchers most willing to fraudulently submit AI-written letters and papers rather than to those whose ideas have the most impact. The fear is that, in the end, fraudulent behavior enabled by AI will undermine systems and institutions that society relies on.

Upsides of AI

Yet some of these AI arms races have surprising hidden upsides, and the hope is that at least some institutions will be able to change in ways that make them stronger.

Science seems likely to become stronger thanks to AI, yet it faces a problem when the AI makes mistakes. Consider the example of nonsensical, AI-generated phrasing filtering into scientific papers.

A scientist using an AI to assist in writing an academic paper can be a good thing, if used carefully and with disclosure. AI is increasingly a primary tool in scientific research: for reviewing literature, programming and for coding and analyzing data. And for many, it has become a crucial support for expression and scientific communication. Pre-AI, better-funded researchers could hire humans to help them write their academic papers. For many authors whose primary language is not English, hiring this kind of assistance has been an expensive necessity. AI provides it to everyone.

In fiction, fraudulently submitted AI-generated works cause harm, both to the human authors now subject to increased competition and to those readers who may feel defrauded after unknowingly reading the work of a machine. But some outlets may welcome AI-assisted submissions with appropriate disclosure and under particular guidelines, and leverage AI to evaluate them against criteria like originality, fit and quality.

Others may refuse AI-generated work, but this will come at a cost. It’s unlikely that any human editor or technology can sustain an ability to differentiate human from machine writing. Instead, outlets that wish to exclusively publish humans will need to limit submissions to a set of authors they trust to not use AI. If these policies are transparent, readers can pick the format they prefer and read happily from either or both types of outlets.

We also don’t see any problem if a job seeker uses AI to polish their resumes or write better cover letters: The wealthy and privileged have long had access to human assistance for those things. But it crosses the line when AIs are used to lie about identity and experience, or to cheat on job interviews.

Similarly, a democracy requires that its citizens be able to express their opinions to their representatives, or to each other through a medium like the newspaper. The rich and powerful have long been able to hire writers to turn their ideas into persuasive prose, and AIs providing that assistance to more people is a good thing, in our view. Here, AI mistakes and bias can be harmful. Citizens may be using AI for more than just a time-saving shortcut; it may be augmenting their knowledge and capabilities, generating statements about historical, legal or policy factors they can’t reasonably be expected to independently check.

Fraud booster

What we don’t want is for lobbyists to use AIs in astroturf campaigns, writing multiple letters and passing them off as individual opinions. This, too, is an older problem that AIs are making worse.

What differentiates the positive from the negative here is not any inherent aspect of the technology, it’s the power dynamic. The same technology that reduces the effort required for a citizen to share their lived experience with their legislator also enables corporate interests to misrepresent the public at scale. The former is a power-equalizing application of AI that enhances participatory democracy; the latter is a power-concentrating application that threatens it.

In general, we believe writing and cognitive assistance, long available to the rich and powerful, should be available to everyone. The problem comes when AIs make fraud easier. Any response needs to balance embracing that newfound democratization of access with preventing fraud.

There’s no way to turn this technology off. Highly capable AIs are widely available and can run on a laptop. Ethical guidelines and clear professional boundaries can help – for those acting in good faith. But there won’t ever be a way to totally stop academic writers, job seekers or citizens from using these tools, either as legitimate assistance or to commit fraud. This means more comments, more letters, more applications, more submissions.

The problem is that whoever is on the receiving end of this AI-fueled deluge can’t deal with the increased volume. What can help is developing assistive AI tools that benefit institutions and society, while also limiting fraud. And that may mean embracing the use of AI assistance in these adversarial systems, even though the defensive AI will never achieve supremacy.

Balancing harms with benefits

The science fiction community has been wrestling with AI since 2023. Clarkesworld eventually reopened submissions, claiming that it has an adequate way of separating human- and AI-written stories. No one knows how long, or how well, that will continue to work.

The arms race continues. There is no simple way to tell whether the potential benefits of AI will outweigh the harms, now or in the future. But as a society, we can influence the balance of harms it wreaks and opportunities it presents as we muddle our way through the changing technological landscape.

This essay was written with Nathan E. Sanders, and originally appeared in The Conversation.

EDITED TO ADD: This essay has been translated into Spanish.

cmk418: (Gloria)
cmk418 ([personal profile] cmk418) wrote in [community profile] halfamoon2026-02-10 06:38 am
Entry tags:

Day 8 - Fic - OZ (HBO) - Gloria Nathan

Title: Little Annoyances
Fandom: OZ (HBO)
Character: Gloria Nathan
Rating: G
Word Count: 254
Summary: Another day, another email from the drug company

Little Annoyances )
cmk418: (tpol)
cmk418 ([personal profile] cmk418) wrote in [community profile] halfamoon2026-02-10 06:19 am
Entry tags:

Day 10 Theme - Acting the Fool

Today's theme is Acting the Fool.

Here are some ideas to get you started: Sometimes even the smartest characters can make a really dumb mistake or behave like a complete idiot. Sometimes even the most serious characters can have a moment of playful silliness. Show us a moment that a character may not have been at her most sensible (whatever that may be for her).

Just go wherever the Muse takes you. If this prompt doesn't speak to you, feel free to share something that does. You can post in a separate entry or as a comment to this post.

Want to get a jump start on tomorrow's theme? Check out the prompt list in the pinned post at the top of the page. Please don't post until that day.
cimorene: A white hand emerging from the water holding a tarot card with an image of a bloody dagger (here ya go)
Cimorene ([personal profile] cimorene) wrote2026-02-10 01:35 pm
Entry tags:

I've read 61 detective novels this year so far. Lol.

Yesterday I sat down to make a consecutive list with ratings (by hand, because it's just nicer to write with a fountain pen) and it took three hours.

I have read a total of 19 by John Dickson Carr, counting the first one a few years ago (Castle Skull) and The Hollow Man, from the bookclub list in Wake Up Dead Man. Several more of his early books have the same irritating features as these, but his later books frequently do not. He has other weaknesses - most strikingly, his focus on surprising puzzle solutions sometimes leads to endings that are flat, thin, and/or ridiculously silly, like in the acclaimed The Judas Window (1938, 4/5, rec) and the less-beloved The Ten Teacups (1937, 3.5/5, rec). I can recommend about half the ones I've read so far. The only ones I would rate 5/5 apart from the previously mentioned Till Death Do Us Part (1944) are 1939's The Black Spectacles, 1944's He Who Whispers, and 1938's To Wake the Dead. I give 4.5/5, however, to 1935's The Red Widow Murders. Yet I nearly DNF 1942's The Emperor's Snuffbox (2/5) and 1935's Death Watch (3/5) and I ranted about 1937's The Burning Court (1/5) for a good ten minutes.
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She Who Staples ([personal profile] shewhostaples) wrote in [community profile] girlmeetstrouble2026-02-10 11:21 am

Next book: This Rough Magic (Mary Stewart)

Our next book will be This Rough Magic by Mary Stewart. We'll start in two weeks' time, on 24 February, and posts will be weekly.

I've just picked it up on Kobo for £2.99, which isn't bad.

Hope to see you there!
queenslayerbee: peitho and astrea by thegodfather. one girl with eyes closed, illuminated by sunshine, wearing a sunray gold crown. another woman, obscured by shadows, behind her surrounding her neck with one hand and lightly touching her chest with another, with bright red nails. (trapped (house of providence))
escritorzuela ([personal profile] queenslayerbee) wrote2026-02-10 11:44 am

FANFIC: mimicry (The Locked Tomb)

One more!

Title: mimicry.
Fandom: The Locked Tomb.
Pairing: Nona x Camilla Hect.
Summary: written for the prompt: "The Locked Tomb, Nona, Like Humans Do." in the Three Sentence Ficathon.
Word count: 100.

read more
-

Nona practices in the mirror.

She tries on Palamedes's smile, the unwitting curve on the corner of his lips when, deep in thought, he devises a new path to be explored; she tries on Pyrrha's booming laugh, striving to reach the accompanying spark in her eyes when someone surprises her; she tries on the proud tilt of Corona's visage, chin up, the swagger in her step.

She wouldn't land Camilla if she tried her, but she doesn't: that serenity of bearing, that fortitude of conduct —those are for Nona, Nona only, to wrap herself into; not to extend to others.
sholio: sun on winter trees (Default)
Sholio ([personal profile] sholio) wrote2026-02-10 01:25 am

John Dies at the End - Jason Pargin (series)

So I read the fourth book in this series (by accident, not realizing it was the fourth) a couple of years ago, and stalled out on book 1. After reading the SCP Foundation book last week, I decided there would never be a better time for a cosmic horror-comedy book I already owned - and I was so right, I marathoned the entire series this past week and absolutely loved it. There's a new book coming out in 2026 and I cannot WAIT.

These books, and especially the first half of book 1 (by far the weakest part of the series), are dudebro-ish and sometimes very early-2000s deliberately transgressive humor (i.e. South Park - this gets MUCH less as it goes on, but never really goes away), and they are sometimes lovely and insightful, and sometimes just incredibly stupid, and I can see why someone would bounce off them, especially considering how I struggled to get through the early parts of book 1. But after four books, I love these characters so much that I will follow them anywhere. Even through the stupid parts!

These books, especially the first one, are primarily narrated by Dave, a slacker dudebro in the general style of early 2000s movies etc (this is very clearly in the style of the Kevin Smith movies, South Park, and other things of that era). Dave is a depressed loner working at a video store whose best and only friend is John, a Bad Idea Friend who takes every drug he gets his hands on, belongs to a shitty band, and drags Dave into a never-ending series of terrible, terrible life choices.

The plot-relevant one of these is taking a new drug sweeping their depressed Midwestern town of [Undisclosed], a drug which looks like mobile and intelligent used motor oil. It turns out that it kills most of the people who take it, but they are among the few survivors, and are suddenly able to step outside time and space, and see everything going on their small depressed Midwestern town -- all the ghosts, all the cosmic entities. They can uncontrollably travel in time, they can freeze time, and they're swept up in an attempt to fix a series of goddawful cosmic horror rifts in time and space that are wrecking their whole dimension.

The third member of the group is drawn in during the first book when she becomes a victim and later a friend: Amy, who was shattered physically and emotionally in a car accident, and then comes to the attention of cosmic horrors; starts off as one of the people they're trying to help, and gets sucked into weird spacetime shenanigans with things that she (unlike John and Dave) can't actually see. It's with Amy's introduction that the first book feels like it really kicks off and gets good.

The body count is high and gory, there are tons of gore and grossout humor and some incredibly soft, emotional and deeply affecting moments as well. This is a series where
some spoilers for one of the booksthe big dilemma can be how do we kill some giant extradimensional maggots that pretend to be adorable human children, who everyone else sees as adorable human children, while they munch gorily on their caregivers and no one else can see it ... or maybe it's the realization that the hideous maggots are also children, deserving of care and consideration as any other children, and maybe the people you need to stop are the government agents coming to kill them.


If whether the dog dies is an important factor in your reading or viewing, please click
this spoilerthere is a dog, and the dog dies.


These books are so hard to rec, because you have to slog through the worst part of the series (the first half of book 1) to get to the almost transcendentally good late middle of book one; it can be lovely enough to make me cry or just spectacularly stupid within a chapter or two. A lot of stuff is brought up and then never explained. But sometimes the explanations made me put the book down and have feelings for a while. It made me laugh a lot. There are so many bodily fluids and terrible bodily function jokes. Some of its best moments involve the characters being forced to contend with the fact that life is complicated and stupid and cruel, and the best thing you can do, maybe the only thing you can do, is to simply be kind, and make the kind choice, if that's the only choice you have to make.

Sometimes defeating the apocalypse cultists means sitting down with them and understanding their heartbreaking loneliness and convincing them to walk away because you can be the person who turns them around and becomes the only person in their lives to ever believe in them and tell them that they can be something better than this.

... And sometimes it involves a triple-barreled shotgun and a plan involving a room full of fake silicon butts. That's what this series is like.

A spoiler from book 4 )
icon_uk: Mod Squad icon (Mod Squad)
icon_uk ([personal profile] icon_uk) wrote in [community profile] scans_daily2026-02-10 09:39 am

Mod Post: Off-Topic Tuesday

In the comments to these weekly posts (and only these posts), it's your chance to go as off topic as you like.

Talk about non-comics stuff, thread derail, and just generally chat among yourselves.

The intent of these posts is to chat and have some fun and, sure, vent a little as required. Reasoned debate is fine, as always, but if you have to ask if something is going over the line, think carefully before posting please.

Normal board rules about conduct and behaviour still apply, of course.

It's been suggested that, if discussing spoilers for recent media events, it might be advisable to consider using the rot13 method to prevent other members seeing spoilers in passing.

The world situation is the world situation. If you're following the news, you know it as much as I do, if you're not, then there are better sources than scans_daily. But please, no doomscrolling, for your own sake.

The Winter Olympics are underway in Italy.

Alongside the usual magnificent achievements, there was also controversy caused by Gus Kenworthy, a British skiier, though one who was raised in America and had competed for the USA in the past, leaving a less than subtle message about his about American current affairs. Aside from everything else, I admire his calligraphy in a challenging medium.

The Superbowl happened, but being neither American nor a sportsperson, I can't get worked up about the game and can only point you to the half time show with Bad Bunny (Which annoyed all the right people, especially when you read the disaster which was the "alternate" half time show with Kid Rock), and the movie trailers)

The Madalorian and Grogu got one which was more... vibes than anything else, though the voiceover did seem like it was about to recommend some sort of old fashioned farm product, possibly cheese or cured meats.

Supergirl featured an adorable cameo by everyone's favourite superdog as a puppy. As an aside DC are also sponsoring puppies for training as guide and service dogs, always a worthy cause IMHO, and the first puppies are appropriately named: Krypto, Clark, Kara, Lois and umm... Lobo?

"Star Trek: Starfleet Academy" told a story about what did, or did not, happen to Benjamin Sisko, in a sort of love letter to DS9 as SAM the photonic life form tried to find out more. The pacing and some of the story choices felt weird to me, even whilst acknowledging I am probably not a target demographic anymore. However, for a couple of the surprises we got, I'll forgive it a lot.

And in slightly on topic news, Jay and Miles of the long running XplaintheXmen podcast have announced the series will end at some point during this coming year. They will cover the Grant Morrison as their finale. As a longtime fan and commentator there, I will miss them, but am glad they are going out on their own terms, and on a run I've been looking forward to them covering (though I will miss them covering the Chuck Austen run, which I suspect would have been... entertaining)

Also, for those who are interested, they have provided some basic resources for those looking to get more involved in local activism (directly, or supporting) in their most recent post.

And adding in Sir Ian McKellen's magnificent recitation of lines attributed to Shakespeare from "Sir Thomas More", on the subject of the treatment of immigrants, which shows that some things never change.