In my (admittedly very limited) experience with trying to talk about "controversial" topics, Claude seems to be much stricter about shutting down the conversation fast.
I've been talking to it daily for months and never had anything shut down. My only experience with that was DeepSeek not wanting to talk about internal perceptions of intellectual property laws within China.
Probably depends on the type of sensitive topic. The ones I got shut down in were related to sex (but not explicit themselves, not like direct descriptions or something) and I mostly mention it since ChatGPT for example had no problem discussing that but Claude shut down immediately.
This is also very noticeable in Video Games.
I remember the first time I played One Step From Eden, I thought I would never be able to keep up with it's frantic pace, but the more practice and understanding I had the more the game "slowed down". To a point of course, it's still a fast game but it feels orders of magnitude slower than initially.
Same with e.g. the Souls games, whose bosses are often designed to be visually and audibly overwhelming when you first encounter them. But after a while, when you get better, come back to a fight later, or watch someone else playing, you'll see it very differently from playing yourself, to the point where a lot of things just feel painfully slow and/or clearly telegraphed.
Doesn't make it much easier though as the window for when you should hit that dodge button is still narrow.
I fly fighter jets in a simulator called DCS. When you get task saturated you can feel the time speed up and then slow down. Hearing the RWR scream "missile missile missile" at you slows down the seconds to a crawl as you yank the stick and pray you turned in time to out run it. Then time speeds up to a frantic rush when you are trying to operate the radar and not hit a mountain at the same time.
Human time sense is just so weird when you pay attention to it a little.
More directly, I recall there used to be a website that allowed you to unit another website and then destroy/deface it with multiple tools. Lasers, bombs, things like that.
Disappointingly I can't seem to find a trace of it.
As impressive as it is, for some uses it still is worse than a local SD model.
It will refuse to generate named anime characters (because of copyright, or because it just doesn't know them, even not particularly obscure ones) for example.
Or obviously anything even remotely spicy.
As someone who mostly uses image generation to amuse myself (and not to post it, where copyright might matter) it's honestly somewhat disappointing. But I don't expect any of the major AI companies to release anything without excessive guardrails.
They have a 30 day time frame to leave a review. That's why so many reviews just say "Everything arrived on time" and none of them say "this thing broke after 31 days".
AliExpress highly encourages leaving a review. They also encourage taking pictures. As a result, loads of random pictures in reviews.
You can do an additional remarks later, but I often don't bother. It's drowned out anyway.
What I often do is read the reviews. What's usually done is a critical review and still 5 stars. The fake reviews are pretty easily spotted. It shouldn't be this way, but in my experience it's still better than Amazon. With Amazon more effort is made to fake a review.
On mobile screens the cards that were previously selected take a lot of space in the background; if you click that background card, intending to “deselect” the foreground card, then you suddenly play the background card. But yes, if you click anywhere else then all cards are deselected. Still, I find this very unintuitive.
I changed the behavior now: tap and hold magnifies it and short tap select the card. At least with my fingers now I was able to avoid the mentioned side effects
Interestingly, my experience with it has been the opposite.
While it's quite good at understanding what's in the picture it only has gotten my country right a few times and even then it just gives the capital, which I'm quite far away from.