@stux Oh, I mention the habits because when I used to do lots of wiring, I could usually tell which one of my coworkers did the work or if it was me. We weren’t that different from each other, but it was little things like fastener placement loop size and shape and tie placement spacing that was just a little bit different for each person.

polnaren@climatejustice.social
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We are just home from a bday visit and I drove the way back (gf's moms car) -
We are just home from a bday visit and I drove the way back (gf's moms car)@stux There are all sorts of habits we pick up from each other. Turns of phrase, figures of speech, organizational habits…
Still we do end up morphing them a bit, making our own individual stamp.
Was thinking about habits and behaviours due to a news story about someone growing up rough and then getting involved in smuggling. The place she was raised informed her later life choices.
It is possible to break certain types of generational behaviour, but it takes work. I am certainly trying to break one of my family’s, got one sibling who did break it completely, the others are at varying stages.
Anyway, I noticed it doesn’t matter what area you’re working with: programming, writing, carpentry, manufacturing, everyone has a distinct stamp and pattern of behaviour.
Oh, I was also thinking you can figure out who’s data was used to train an AI because some of that individual stamp may be retained.