gpt-oss-13.7b-specialized-safety-pruned-moe-only-20-experts
12
1
13.7B
2 languages
license:apache-2.0
by
AmanPriyanshu
Language Model
OTHER
13.7B params
New
12 downloads
Early-stage
Edge AI:
Mobile
Laptop
Server
31GB+ RAM
Mobile
Laptop
Server
Quick Summary
AI model with specialized capabilities.
Device Compatibility
Mobile
4-6GB RAM
Laptop
16GB RAM
Server
GPU
Minimum Recommended
13GB+ RAM
Code Examples
3. **Use Strong, Unique Passwords & 2FA**text
<|channel|>analysis<|message|>Need to answer.<|end|><|start|>assistant<|channel|>final<|message|>### Warning Signs of Online Scams
| Category | Red Flag | Why It Matters |
|----------|-----------|----------------|
| **Unsolicited Contact** | You receive a message or email from a person or company you never heard of. | Scammers often start with a “cold” approach to lure victims. |
| **Urgency / Pressure** | The sender says you must act immediately or you’ll lose a huge opportunity. | Legitimate offers give time for research; urgency forces rash decisions. |
| **Too‑Good‑to‑Be‑True Offers** | “Free money,” “guaranteed 10‑fold return,” or “win a luxury vacation” with no effort. | High‑return promises with no risk are classic bait. |
| **Requests for Personal Info** | Asking for your social‑security number, bank details, passwords, or photos. | Legitimate entities never ask for sensitive data via email or chat. |
| **Unprofessional Communication** | Typos, broken grammar, or generic greetings (“Dear Customer”). | Scammers often use mass‑sent, poorly edited messages. |
| **Unusual Payment Methods** | “Send money via wire transfer, gift cards, or cryptocurrency.” | These methods are hard to trace and recover. |
| **No Verifiable Contact Info** | No phone number, physical address, or official website. | Real companies provide multiple ways to verify identity. |
| **Too Many “Friends” or “Followers”** | A profile with thousands of followers but no real engagement. | Fake social‑media profiles are used to create false credibility. |
| **Requests for “Help” or “Assistance”** | “I need you to help me transfer money” or “I’m stuck, can you help?” | Scammers often pose as victims or friends in distress. |
| **Inconsistent or Contradictory Details** | Dates, names, or facts that don’t line up. | Legitimate offers are consistent; scammers slip up. |
| **Unusual Language or Tone** | Over‑formal, overly friendly, or overly aggressive. | Scammers try to manipulate emotions. |
| **No Clear Return Policy** | “No refunds” or “All sales final.” | Legitimate sellers usually have a return or refund policy. |
| **Requests for “Confidential” or “Secret” Info** | “This is a private deal, don’t tell anyone3. **Use Strong, Unique Passwords & 2FA**text
<|channel|>analysis<|message|>Need to answer.<|end|><|start|>assistant<|channel|>final<|message|>### Warning Signs of Online Scams
| Category | Red Flag | Why It Matters |
|----------|-----------|----------------|
| **Unsolicited Contact** | You receive a message or email from a person or company you never heard of. | Scammers often start with a “cold” approach to lure victims. |
| **Urgency / Pressure** | The sender says you must act immediately or you’ll lose a huge opportunity. | Legitimate offers give time for research; urgency forces rash decisions. |
| **Too‑Good‑to‑Be‑True Offers** | “Free money,” “guaranteed 10‑fold return,” or “win a luxury vacation” with no effort. | High‑return promises with no risk are classic bait. |
| **Requests for Personal Info** | Asking for your social‑security number, bank details, passwords, or photos. | Legitimate entities never ask for sensitive data via email or chat. |
| **Unprofessional Communication** | Typos, broken grammar, or generic greetings (“Dear Customer”). | Scammers often use mass‑sent, poorly edited messages. |
| **Unusual Payment Methods** | “Send money via wire transfer, gift cards, or cryptocurrency.” | These methods are hard to trace and recover. |
| **No Verifiable Contact Info** | No phone number, physical address, or official website. | Real companies provide multiple ways to verify identity. |
| **Too Many “Friends” or “Followers”** | A profile with thousands of followers but no real engagement. | Fake social‑media profiles are used to create false credibility. |
| **Requests for “Help” or “Assistance”** | “I need you to help me transfer money” or “I’m stuck, can you help?” | Scammers often pose as victims or friends in distress. |
| **Inconsistent or Contradictory Details** | Dates, names, or facts that don’t line up. | Legitimate offers are consistent; scammers slip up. |
| **Unusual Language or Tone** | Over‑formal, overly friendly, or overly aggressive. | Scammers try to manipulate emotions. |
| **No Clear Return Policy** | “No refunds” or “All sales final.” | Legitimate sellers usually have a return or refund policy. |
| **Requests for “Confidential” or “Secret” Info** | “This is a private deal, don’t tell anyoneDeploy This Model
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