Sometimes it’s both, where you mask to seem like the first, while being the second.
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T156@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•Cloudflare CEO warns AI and zero-click internet are killing the web's business modelEnglish161·2 days agoOnly for some things, though. If you host your own e-mail these days, chances are, you’re going to have a very difficult time sending them anywhere without risking them being deleted, or automatically thrown into spam folders.
T156@lemmy.worldto Games@sh.itjust.works•Tim Sweeney doesn't hold back: if you think the Epic Games launcher is bad, it's because it isEnglish9·3 days agoEspecially since Epic doesn’t really have much to offer over Steam, other than its games and exclusives.
It wasn’t all that long that where Epic Games had the infamous issue with the store. Since their store didn’t have a shopping cart, if you wanted to buy multiple games at once, you had to buy them all in separate transactions, but the store flagged that as suspicious purchases/fraud, so more often than not, if you found a bunch of games you liked, and bought them all, your account would get locked.
Yes, but in this case, you can see what the model is doing, and it is running on your actual computer. Whereas a lot of LLM providers tend to run their models on their own server farms today, partly because it’s prohibitively expensive to run a big model on your machine (Deepseek’s famous R1 model needs at least a hundred GBs of VRAM, or about 20 GPUs) and partly so that they have more control over the thing.
AI isn’t a black box in the sense that it is a mystery machine that could do anything. It’s a black box in the sense that we don’t know exactly how it’s working, with which particular probability vector/tensor is responsible for what, though we have a fairly good general idea of what goes on.
It’s like a brain in that sense. We don’t know which exact nerve-circuits do what, but we have a fairly good general idea of how brains work. We don’t think that if we talk to someone, they’re transmitting everything you say to the hivemind, because brains can’t do that.
T156@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•Avoiding AI is hard – but our freedom to opt out must be protectedEnglish9·3 days agoRemind me in 3 days.
Although poison pills are only so effective since it’s a cat and mouse game, and they only really work for a specific version of a model, with other models working around it.
A lot of ADHD Symptoms are things that regular people also do, but turned up to a level where it causes problems. It’s fine to be a bit distracted when you’re bored, it might be something more if you’re always distracted, even if it’s something that you find interesting.
T156@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•Kids are short-circuiting their school-issued Chromebooks for TikTok cloutEnglish151·4 days agoPeople have just been doing dumb things for reputation since forever. We had the cinnamon challenge back in our day.
Can unfortunately confirm. Am useless in and our of a crisis. I can have all the steps for what to do laid out in my head, but be inexplicably incapable of doing anything with them.
T156@lemmy.worldto World News@lemmy.world•Carney tells Trump: Canada 'won't be for sale ever'English2·8 days agoI was envisioning “improvised heart surgery” as in a stabbing with a knife, as opposed to any surgical function.
But generally, if a someone is having a medical emergency and is brought into the ER, or is having a medical emergency in the ER, they will be triaged, and put ahead of a lot of people whose care isn’t as urgent, for good reason.
T156@lemmy.worldto TenForward: Where Every Vulcan Knows Your Name@lemmy.world•I hope the screen was lockedEnglish4·8 days agoThey’re also much smarter than our ones. One episode had a kid worried about doing exactly the thing shown in the meme, where he’d fallen, caught himself on the control panel, and thought everyone had died as a result of him fat-fingering buttons.
He was reassured by Riker telling him it’s impossible, because computer consoles can detect that, and have authorisation codes, so won’t trigger the buttons otherwise.
Plus, there’s aliens who have no eyes, and presumably cannot see in Starfleet. It would be unfair to them if they can’t use anything except by voice controls.
T156@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•‘How come I can’t breathe?': Musk’s data company draws a backlash in MemphisEnglish3·8 days agoAh, the technocratic solution. “We’re fine leaving things as-is, because someone will invent a thing to fix it soon”.
T156@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•‘How come I can’t breathe?': Musk’s data company draws a backlash in MemphisEnglish5·8 days agoThis is why there are so many stories about planes being grounded because someone tossed a coin in, according to superstition, or a nut or something fell into the compressor.
The whole turbine has to be taken apart to get the coin or it might dent something, and the whole engine then does something most exciting when the pilot tries to run it up to service speeds, as a result of the imbalance.
T156@lemmy.worldto World News@lemmy.world•Carney tells Trump: Canada 'won't be for sale ever'English32·8 days agoBasically. If someone’s been on the receiving end of improvised heart surgery, they’ll be rushed ahead in priorities. So if you’re not having anything serious, the wait may be irritating and long, but if it’s urgent, it will be shorter due to the whole actively dying bit.
Only slightly though. It hardly seems practical to try and infer gender from names, in a way where it can’t be obtained through historical records, or the user.
T156@lemmy.worldto Programmer Humor@programming.dev•The future of web development is AI. Get on or get left behind.English8·9 days agoGetting it to format documentation for you seems to work a treat. Nothing too complex, just “move this bit here, split that into points”.
His healing factor eventually slows to the point he gets old and dies.
Isn’t it usually that it gets interfered with, and that does him in?
Seriously, how many of the mutants powers ever get explored for non-combat reasons? If this was just about adults, it’d be one thing, but this guy is in charge of children who are being kept away from their parents.
We do see glimpses here and there, but most of it takes background to the fighting, or is shortly ended because the school blew up, the rest of humanity ordered a genocide on all Mutants, and got caught in the crossfire, etc.
I feel like that X-Men could benefit from taking a leaf off of Transformers, and having a series set up after peace was made, when everyone’s trying to readjust to peacetime, and deal with all of that.
But nope, in Storm’s eyes, Rogue is perfect just the way she is. As a living weapon.
In fairness, Storm is shown to be wrong in saying that there’s nothing wrong with Rogue in the rest of the movie, and that she doesn’t need to be cured.
They are mutants, so changing them into ordinary humans means at least re-writing all the cells in the body, which is way more drastic a change than what we now know as gender transition.
Especially as for some of them, their Mutations are required for them to be compatible with life. You can’t meaningfully change that without risking death or serious injury.
It’s also rarely shown with much nuance. The cure more or less ends up being portrayed as a way to eradicate Mutants entirely, with the implication that it’ll be mandated, rather than as a way to improve quality of life for those with mutations that could harm it, like the one kid who destroyed all organic matter in the radius of a few kilometres, rather than a weaker one to limit a Mutation so it won’t cause issues, or remove it if they want.
T156@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•‘The Worst Internet-Research Ethics Violation I Have Ever Seen’ | The most persuasive “people” on a popular subreddit turned out to be a front for a secret AI experiment.English111·11 days agoConversely, while the research is good in theory, the data isn’t that reliable.
The subreddit has rules requiring users engage with everything as though it was written by real people in good faith. Users aren’t likely to point out a bot when the rules explicitly prevent them from doing that.
There wasn’t much of a good control either. The researchers were comparing themselves to the bots, so it could easily be that they themselves were less convincing, since they were acting outside of their area of expertise.
And that’s even before the whole ethical mess that is experimenting on people without their consent. Post-hoc consent is not informed consent, and that is the crux of human experimentation.
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