Jamie
Just for you, I turned it into webp and made it 40KB. I could have also made it look less like garbage, but then it would have been 50KB, which is unacceptable.
I like a challenge, it's a little fuzzy, but here's one that's just slightly over 10kb.
I remember reading about Mold years ago and being impressed, even though most of my programs that I compile don't really benefit in any way. I appreciate that it kept going.
Yet you still posted it in jpeg. Can't fool me with your sly tricks.
Input #0, image2, from '85974f2f-5463-40ba-93ea-45417c183fcc.jpeg':
Duration: 00:00:00.04, start: 0.000000, bitrate: 54211 kb/s
Stream #0:0: Video: mjpeg (Baseline), yuvj444p(pc, bt470bg/unknown/unknown), 1513x947, 25 fps, 25 tbr, 25 tbn
No, that image plus the one on my instance are images I got from thispersondoesnotexist that I thought had funny expressions.
I'm sure there's some mechanism in antitrust to prevent the broken up companies from doing things like that. Otherwise, a "primary" company would just contract out the old other pieces and they're basically whole again.
I'm not famous and if I have to put a picture of myself up in public I'd be AI generating myself.
I suppose another solution might be that it falls under those lines, but some misbehaving services where they're uploaded are giving out improper filenames and not confirming the type.
Though I can't imagine many of those being incredibly popular, or, it's just that images are recycled for so long that eventually many of them hit such a site in their lifetimes.
Companies have gotten broken up before, like AT&T once did many years ago. In this case, a Google breakup would probably separate some of their services into different companies. At the very least Google (the "advertising" company) should be separate from Chrome (the "browser" company), because it creates a conflict of interest and creates monopolistic behavior.
In any case, trying to do something is better than doing nothing and hoping it turns out all right.
I didn't include details because I still had to research after the comment, but this page details several methods of contact. The antitrust email looks like a good place to start if you don't want to mail anything. But physical mail is harder to ignore, it actually has to get into someone's hands and be dealt with. So I'll try to write up a letter and send that to maybe the regional office nearest Google's HQ.
I'm on Linux using ffmpeg on the command line. No Windows or GUIs in sight in this process.