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Изворен канал @pythonotes · Post #146 · 16 сеп.

Функция sub в regex может принимать функцию в качестве аргумента repl. 📄 Из документации: If repl is a function, it is called for every non-overlapping occurrence of pattern. The function takes a single match object argument, and returns the replacement string. То есть для каждого совпадения будет вызвана функция для вычисления замены вместо замены на одну и ту же строку для всех совпадений. Иными словами, для замены разных совпадений на разные строки не потребуется запускать re.sub() много раз для каждой строки замены. Достаточно определить функцию, которая вернёт строку для каждого из совпадений. Описание слишком запутанное🤔, давайте лучше рассмотрим на простом примере: Создаем карту замены. То есть какие строки на какие требуется менять. remap = { 'раз': '1', 'два': '2', 'три': '3', 'четыре': '4', 'пять': '5', } Пишем функцию поиска строки для замены. Единственным аргументом будет объект re.Match. Используя данные этого объекта мы вычисляем замену on-the-fly! def get_str(match: re.Match): word = match.group(1) return remap.get(word.lower()) or word Пример текста. text = '''Раз Два Три Четыре Пять Вместе будем мы считать Пять Четыре Три Два Раз Мы считать научим вас ''' Теперь запускаем re.sub и вместо строки замены (repl) подаём имя функции. (Данный паттерн ищет отдельные слова в тексте) >>> print(re.sub(r'(\w+)', get_str, text)) 1 2 3 4 5 Вместе будем мы считать 5 4 3 2 1 Мы считать научим вас Думаю, достаточно наглядно 🤓 #libs#regex

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AI & Law

@ai_and_law · Post #643 · 26.08.2025 г., 07:04

🇺🇸Otter.ai Faces Class Action Over Voice Data and AI Training A lawsuit filed in California alleges that Otter.ai violated the U.S. Electronic Communications Privacy Act, the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, and multiple California statutes by recording individuals’ voices without consent and using them to train its AI models. The complaint, led by Justin Brewer, emphasizes that while Otter users may accept recordings, non-users—who are not asked for permission—are also captured, raising broader legal and ethical concerns. The case highlights a growing fault line: enterprise transcription and note-taking apps like Otter.ai, Read.ai, and Google Gemini are designed for convenience, yet their silent background operation may expose organizations to litigation. With over 100 potential plaintiffs, this class action underscores a central governance challenge—whether AI tool providers can rely on implied consent in multi-party conversations, or if explicit legal standards will redefine acceptable data practices in enterprise AI. #AIethics#DataProtection#PrivacyLaw#AIGovernance

AI & Law

@ai_and_law · Post #741 · 13.01.2026 г., 08:04

🇭🇰Hong Kong Issues Deepfake Protection Toolkit for Schools Hong Kong’s Office of the Privacy Commissioner for Personal Data (PCPD) has published guidance on the use of an AI deepfake protection toolkit aimed at schools and parents. The guidance explains common types of deepfakes and typical scenarios involving abusive deepfakes in school settings, focusing on risks faced by students. The toolkit provides practical measures for prevention and incident response, outlining the roles of schools, parents, and students. Recommended school-level safeguards include data minimization, restricting access to personal data, and implementing general data security measures to reduce exposure to deepfake misuse. The initiative frames deepfake risks as a data protection and child safety issue, reinforcing the role of privacy governance and preventive controls in educational environments as generative AI tools become more accessible. #AIandLaw#Deepfakes#DataProtection#ChildrenRights#PrivacyLaw#AIRegulation

AI & Law

@ai_and_law · Post #99 · 30.08.2023 г., 07:04

Zoom Addresses EU Privacy Concerns and Updates Terms of Service Greetings! In response to discussions about potential EU privacy law implications, Zoom issues a statement and revises its Terms of Service. The focus? Ensuring customer data isn't utilized to train AI models. Zoom's statement and Terms affirm that user-generated content, including audio, video, chat, and more, isn't employed for training Zoom's or any third-party AI models. This step aims to dispel any concerns. Zoom initially shared its statement on August 7 and later updated it on August 11, aligned with the revised Terms. The shared stance now unequivocally states, "Zoom does not use any of your customer content to train AI models." Earlier, a Stack Diary article flagged changes to Zoom's March Terms, raising potential concerns about broad data utilization for AI model training. Zoom's quick response aims to address these concerns and reaffirm privacy commitments. #Zoom#PrivacyMatters#TermsOfService#AIModels#DataProtection#PrivacyLaw#TechUpdates