> Those aren't models, they are applications built on top of models.
The point holds about the underlying models.
> Sure. But there are no open models that do that, and no indication of whether the various closed models do it either.
An indication that they don't do it would be if they could be easily tricked by the user into assuming they said something which they didn't say. I know no such examples.
The point holds about the underlying models.
> Sure. But there are no open models that do that, and no indication of whether the various closed models do it either.
An indication that they don't do it would be if they could be easily tricked by the user into assuming they said something which they didn't say. I know no such examples.