I ran into the same problem with Firefox, except viewing it directly works. It turns out the server is using referer checking and I've got referer disabled. Compare the following curl invocations: curl…
I'm having the same problem with Firefox, except that viewing the images directly works. By using the cURL option in the web console, I boiled it down to this: The following works: curl…
There's an issue on the FluxEngine git repo that may be related to this: https://github.com/davidgiven/fluxengine/issues/75 At the end of the thread, David Given reports that some PC floppy drives drop pulses when…
I suppose you could still use a principle of least privilege, e.g. nothing that outputs data to the public can access private repos. Or more generally, you could have an LLM create a snipped in a domain-specific…
> Rovelli is arguing (I think) that we need to fundamentally view consciousness as a natural phenomenon - albeit one that is extremely complex and poorly understood. But you can view consciousness as a natural…
> They get blocked by Recaptcha, I think. I think SV was asking what onion services, which can't really use recaptcha, do to prevent the DDoS storm. And I would imagine the answer is obscurity, since the dark web isn't…
There's a broader law: If it needs to insist on what it is, it probably isn't. E.g. "People's Democratic Republic of Foo".
I'm surprised that the article doesn't mention the peroxidase hypothesis[1]. Has it been disproven? [1] https://tmedweb.tulane.edu/pharmwiki/doku.php/acetaminophen
The problem is that if what "really counts" is too vaguely defined, then it's hard to pin down and argue the point. Virtual memory probably isn't what you meant, but take something like user privilege separation. It's…
IIRC, you could use asymmetric cryptography to derive a site-specific pseudonymous token from the service and your government ID without the service knowing what your government ID is or the government provider knowing…
At some point, I would imagine the distinction between capital and land becomes blurry, though. Economic rent can be had from either if the barrier to competition is high enough. Domain names are a good example, because…
Even if that is true (and I'm not saying it is), practical limits on handling the combinatorial complexity, or variety if you will, severely limits its use. No realistic fist-fighter has the information required or the…
And even that notwithstanding, they could use a solar foci telescope. It's kind of a pain to orient, but it /does/ give you extreme magnification.
But wouldn't that kind of reasoning also say that helicopters are impossible because no flying animal works that way? For a more reasoning-adjacent example, "conventional" chess AIs don't really work like brains do,…
On the other hand, proofs sometimes give you more than you'd expect. A proof that the implementation of a function always returns some value automatically proves that there's no arbitrary code execution, for instance.
I ran into the same problem with Firefox, except viewing it directly works. It turns out the server is using referer checking and I've got referer disabled. Compare the following curl invocations: curl…
I'm having the same problem with Firefox, except that viewing the images directly works. By using the cURL option in the web console, I boiled it down to this: The following works: curl…
There's an issue on the FluxEngine git repo that may be related to this: https://github.com/davidgiven/fluxengine/issues/75 At the end of the thread, David Given reports that some PC floppy drives drop pulses when…
I suppose you could still use a principle of least privilege, e.g. nothing that outputs data to the public can access private repos. Or more generally, you could have an LLM create a snipped in a domain-specific…
> Rovelli is arguing (I think) that we need to fundamentally view consciousness as a natural phenomenon - albeit one that is extremely complex and poorly understood. But you can view consciousness as a natural…
> They get blocked by Recaptcha, I think. I think SV was asking what onion services, which can't really use recaptcha, do to prevent the DDoS storm. And I would imagine the answer is obscurity, since the dark web isn't…
There's a broader law: If it needs to insist on what it is, it probably isn't. E.g. "People's Democratic Republic of Foo".
I'm surprised that the article doesn't mention the peroxidase hypothesis[1]. Has it been disproven? [1] https://tmedweb.tulane.edu/pharmwiki/doku.php/acetaminophen
The problem is that if what "really counts" is too vaguely defined, then it's hard to pin down and argue the point. Virtual memory probably isn't what you meant, but take something like user privilege separation. It's…
IIRC, you could use asymmetric cryptography to derive a site-specific pseudonymous token from the service and your government ID without the service knowing what your government ID is or the government provider knowing…
At some point, I would imagine the distinction between capital and land becomes blurry, though. Economic rent can be had from either if the barrier to competition is high enough. Domain names are a good example, because…
Even if that is true (and I'm not saying it is), practical limits on handling the combinatorial complexity, or variety if you will, severely limits its use. No realistic fist-fighter has the information required or the…
And even that notwithstanding, they could use a solar foci telescope. It's kind of a pain to orient, but it /does/ give you extreme magnification.
But wouldn't that kind of reasoning also say that helicopters are impossible because no flying animal works that way? For a more reasoning-adjacent example, "conventional" chess AIs don't really work like brains do,…
On the other hand, proofs sometimes give you more than you'd expect. A proof that the implementation of a function always returns some value automatically proves that there's no arbitrary code execution, for instance.