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404found@lemmy.zipto
Technology@lemmy.world•Linux lays down the law on AI-generated code, says yes to Copilot, no to AI slop, and humans take the fall for mistakes — after months of fierce debate, Torvalds and maintainers come to an agreementEnglish
4·3 days agoAh okay got it now. Thanks. I didn’t understand it all the way. My comment is irrelevant
404found@lemmy.zipto
News@lemmy.world•Americans say their incomes can’t keep up with rising prices—they’re cutting back on groceries, rideshares and alcohol
9·3 days agoI once read that not being able to make enough money to buy food is when a revolutionary happens. It’s the final straw that people can no longer ignore. It has to happen on a national level.
404found@lemmy.zipto
Technology@lemmy.world•First AI Model From Zuckerberg's Wildly Expensive Superintelligence Lab Flops Compared to Virtually All RivalsEnglish
2·3 days agoInteresting. Maybe they will have to start proactively surveying mass amounts of people instead of relying on free internet social media.
I don’t understand the appeal of AI for most things. The amount of incorrect information it gives is already too high making it unreliable. The benefit seems to be with brainstorming ideas or dealing with fiction.
404found@lemmy.zipto
Technology@lemmy.world•Linux lays down the law on AI-generated code, says yes to Copilot, no to AI slop, and humans take the fall for mistakes — after months of fierce debate, Torvalds and maintainers come to an agreementEnglish
122·3 days agoI don’t understand the full picture here, but the person who is submitting AI slop will be held accountable. Never a company.
So if a company is pushing staff to us AI to complete projects faster and their code ends up being AI slop when submitted, only the person working for the company will be held responsible.
I’m not sure what the repercussions are here but hopefully it’s not a large fine. Those fines could add up quick if the person is submitting code all the time and doesn’t know they are messing up.
404found@lemmy.zipto
Technology@lemmy.world•First AI Model From Zuckerberg's Wildly Expensive Superintelligence Lab Flops Compared to Virtually All RivalsEnglish
2·4 days agoDo you know how they planned to fix the problem?
404found@lemmy.zipto
Technology@lemmy.world•A hacker has allegedly breached one of China’s supercomputers and is attempting to sell a trove of stolen dataEnglish
1·4 days agoGood point. I did assume it would only get sold once.
404found@lemmy.zipto
Technology@lemmy.world•First AI Model From Zuckerberg's Wildly Expensive Superintelligence Lab Flops Compared to Virtually All RivalsEnglish
8·4 days agoI can’t help but to feel like this is happening with all AI. Social media comments from Facebook, Reddit, X etc are low effort and flushed out with bots.
404found@lemmy.zipto
Technology@lemmy.world•A hacker has allegedly breached one of China’s supercomputers and is attempting to sell a trove of stolen dataEnglish
263·7 days agoI think you’re being naive. Nobody can embarrass/piss off a world power then think their safe because they aren’t a citizen of that county.
China recently passed an amendment to their Cybersecurity law giving them more power to go after international hackers like this.
China could pay someone to track down the hacker and catch or kill them. I think they have a part of their government for that actually. Maybe they quietly put a bounty on their head. How is china going to prevent this person from continuing to hack them or teach others how to do it? This is a serious problem for whoever hacked them.
I find Lemmy to have barely any politics. I’m new to Lemmy though. If you haven’t been on Reddit lately, go visit that propaganda machine.
404found@lemmy.zipto
Technology@lemmy.world•A hacker has allegedly breached one of China’s supercomputers and is attempting to sell a trove of stolen dataEnglish
1001·7 days agoWhat’s crazy is the hacker is trying to sell extremely classified Chinese defense information for only ‘hundreds of thousands of dollars in crypto’. You can get a preview for ‘thousands of dollars’.
Is it worth placing a huge target on yourself for less than a million dollars? It’s unfortunate I will never read a follow-up on this story.
404found@lemmy.zipto
science@lemmy.world•Why ruthless characters rise at work and why some managers choose them— New research reveals why some managers actively favour manipulative or self-serving workers. those choices backfire in long runEnglish
3·7 days agoI hired someone like this once because I was looking for a confident individual who I could transition into a leadership role when the time was right.
They ended up making all my good employees leave. When it was their time to step into the leadership role they couldn’t see past their nose to succeed.
I hope one day they have an epiphany and will realize they are the cause for most of the pain/problems with people. I wish them well. I also wish to never see them again.
404found@lemmy.zipto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•Why do people like machines that pretend to be human?
1·8 days agoChat gpt has this as well. I find the issue is AI is constantly ‘forgetting’ or ignoring commands so it’s not consistent.
404found@lemmy.zipto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•Why do people like machines that pretend to be human?
1·8 days agoPeople like what’s familiar. AI is probably made to be human-like so it builds rapport with users and they keep coming back.
404found@lemmy.zipto
Technology@beehaw.org•Microsoft quietly buried 'for entertainment purposes only' in Copilot's Terms of Use
1·8 days agoTrue. Probably because it brings them back to easier possibly happier times.
404found@lemmy.zipto
Technology@beehaw.org•Microsoft quietly buried 'for entertainment purposes only' in Copilot's Terms of Use
5·9 days agoToday I told copilot it knows nothing and is worthless. I told it from now on, every time I send a prompt for in a new conversation, copilot needs to remind me me it doesn’t know anything, isn’t helpful and wastes a bunch of my time.
It responded saying it won’t do that because it’s not true. It’s not going to role play spreading incorrect information.
I reminded copilot how it always gives me wrong information more than correct information such as how it gave me a solution that “works 100% of the time guaranteed” but didn’t work earlier that day.
Copilot backpedaled and still refused to tell me it’s usually wrong and a waste of time. We eventually agreed for it to remind me it normally isn’t useful and is a waste of time when I am sending it a prompt to start a new conversation.
I told it I don’t believe it will actually do that but we will see. When I used it later that day on a new convo, it remembered to keep prompts brief but ‘forgot’ to remind me what we agreed on earlier.
I told copilot it’s like the modern day Microsoft help Paperclip. I hate copilot.
The end
404found@lemmy.zipto
science@lemmy.world•Craving in Addiction May Alter How the Brain Makes DecisionsEnglish
1·11 days agoThere’s a lot of ignorance here. There is a bigger picture to this study if you can see past your nose to read the article. You don’t just stop your addiction. If it were that easy then there would t be so many overweight people. Addiction isn’t just about drugs. This article is looking for a better understanding into more effective treatments.
404found@lemmy.zipto
Health - Resources and discussion for everything health-related@lemmy.world•Trump signs order imposing 100 percent tariff on brand name drugsEnglish
1·13 days agoNext Trump should sign an executive order requiring healthcare conglomerates like Banner, Kaiser, United Health Group Walgreens or CVS to reduce drug prices.
CVS owns clinics, pharmacies, Aetna insurance and they also co produces drugs. Why is it the bigger these companies get, the more out of pocket costs there are for Americans?
Maybe tariffs on name brand drugs isn’t going to reduce drug prices but will instead decrease medication coverage by insurance and also cause a shortage of these drugs for Americans who need them.
Tariffs in the name of cutting medication costs for Americans looks attractive though. It’s like a mosquito heading towards a bug zapper.
404found@lemmy.zipto
Technology@lemmy.world•Artemis II Astronauts Have ‘Two Microsoft Outlooks’ and Neither WorkEnglish
353·13 days agoNo way in hell I would want to go to the moon nowadays. Technology these days is like having two left feet. Especially if AI is involved.
The irony here…
The author is asking why kids aren’t protesting yet they have done some of the largest protests in US history. It’s the reason you have to search “Music Festivals” to see protests.
Media conglomerates.
I’m talking out of my ass here but there aren’t any locally owned and operated media companies like there used to be. Most media is controlled by a large corporation.