Few people can do actually do that effectively.
Anybody in business who uses the word "partner" in its current sense plots at heart to add the "toxic".
I am absolutely baffled at the idea that LLMs mean you need less automated verification of correctness.
Nobody has tried to limit knowledge of chemistry or physics unless it was directly about doing something illegal, to the point of basically being a detailed recipe. Usually not even then. And when they have tried…
Hey, that scorpion stung me!
Can you substantiate your certainty with anything other than the public statements of people whose job it is to lie about things like that?
> every country on Earth spies on the rest, It's entirely possible an EU country did this; they're only vaguely guessing Belarus or whoever. In most countries, it's a big deal if the spies are caught spying on the…
How is it that any NSO employee is still able to travel outside Israel without getting arrested? Seems like they're involved in criminal conspiracies in like half the countries in the world.
> Why would Craigslist stop Flock-related posts from going through? The only answer I can think of is something along the lines of a National Security Letter. That's because you lack imagination. 99 percent chance they…
But actual protocols are so last century. You might have to think ahead for fifteen minutes because the design has to be staaaa-a-ble. It's haa-a-ard! And you can't sell out to somebody who'll change it and have an exit…
[dead]
There are a few online bullying rings. A few people get struck by lightning. ... and information isn't really the question. Not that there's actually any good definition for "social media".
> Or you have a child who is questioning their sexual orientation or identity and is targeted by an online bullying ring. It is far more common for that child to be targeted by parents, and maybe by people they know in…
"Landmark" review by an advocacy group. Not a good review, either.
Um, the nginx binary would have to be in the hands of hundreds of thousands of server operators. And the set of server operators is rich in the kind of person who would attack it. Not to mention the huge number of leaks…
I'm a bit confused. In my world, "I own it" means it's running on hardware physically in my control, by default physically in my possession, and nobody can turn off my account...
I don't think such regulation should be restricted to AI. "Google-style B2C blanket bans" routinely ruin people's livelihoods in other ways, including, of course, when Google does it. There are way too many companies…
I use OpenRouter all the time on an account for which I never supplied a phone number, email address, or anything of the kind. Maybe that was because I used an Ethereum wallet to authenticate, and paid in cryptocurrency…
> Not sure where this icy, thunderstorm-prone city where it's either walk or drive with nothing in between is, but it's certainly pretty far outside my experience. Montreal. I think there've been three thunderstorms in…
There's this weird "bicyclist viewpoint" where the only acknowledged possible purpose of leaving your house appears to be to get your body to a different point within a relatively small area. Personally, if I go…
Actually not as much point now. The reason to regulate in maybe 2000 or so was that staying with IPv4 led to NAT. NAT led to it being impossible for users to receive incoming connections. Inability to receive incoming…
Right. Which is why this is not a choice businesses should be allowed to make.
No, it ought to generate a compilation error unless the compiler can prove that the pointer isn't null. ... but that only works if you design properly from day one.
> They can use the streets proper if they want to. How about no? They'll block traffic there, too.
Nope. The burden is on whoever wants to restrict people. If you want a new restriction, the burden is on you. If you want to keep an existing restriction, the burden is still on you.
Few people can do actually do that effectively.
Anybody in business who uses the word "partner" in its current sense plots at heart to add the "toxic".
I am absolutely baffled at the idea that LLMs mean you need less automated verification of correctness.
Nobody has tried to limit knowledge of chemistry or physics unless it was directly about doing something illegal, to the point of basically being a detailed recipe. Usually not even then. And when they have tried…
Hey, that scorpion stung me!
Can you substantiate your certainty with anything other than the public statements of people whose job it is to lie about things like that?
> every country on Earth spies on the rest, It's entirely possible an EU country did this; they're only vaguely guessing Belarus or whoever. In most countries, it's a big deal if the spies are caught spying on the…
How is it that any NSO employee is still able to travel outside Israel without getting arrested? Seems like they're involved in criminal conspiracies in like half the countries in the world.
> Why would Craigslist stop Flock-related posts from going through? The only answer I can think of is something along the lines of a National Security Letter. That's because you lack imagination. 99 percent chance they…
But actual protocols are so last century. You might have to think ahead for fifteen minutes because the design has to be staaaa-a-ble. It's haa-a-ard! And you can't sell out to somebody who'll change it and have an exit…
[dead]
There are a few online bullying rings. A few people get struck by lightning. ... and information isn't really the question. Not that there's actually any good definition for "social media".
> Or you have a child who is questioning their sexual orientation or identity and is targeted by an online bullying ring. It is far more common for that child to be targeted by parents, and maybe by people they know in…
"Landmark" review by an advocacy group. Not a good review, either.
Um, the nginx binary would have to be in the hands of hundreds of thousands of server operators. And the set of server operators is rich in the kind of person who would attack it. Not to mention the huge number of leaks…
I'm a bit confused. In my world, "I own it" means it's running on hardware physically in my control, by default physically in my possession, and nobody can turn off my account...
I don't think such regulation should be restricted to AI. "Google-style B2C blanket bans" routinely ruin people's livelihoods in other ways, including, of course, when Google does it. There are way too many companies…
I use OpenRouter all the time on an account for which I never supplied a phone number, email address, or anything of the kind. Maybe that was because I used an Ethereum wallet to authenticate, and paid in cryptocurrency…
> Not sure where this icy, thunderstorm-prone city where it's either walk or drive with nothing in between is, but it's certainly pretty far outside my experience. Montreal. I think there've been three thunderstorms in…
There's this weird "bicyclist viewpoint" where the only acknowledged possible purpose of leaving your house appears to be to get your body to a different point within a relatively small area. Personally, if I go…
Actually not as much point now. The reason to regulate in maybe 2000 or so was that staying with IPv4 led to NAT. NAT led to it being impossible for users to receive incoming connections. Inability to receive incoming…
Right. Which is why this is not a choice businesses should be allowed to make.
No, it ought to generate a compilation error unless the compiler can prove that the pointer isn't null. ... but that only works if you design properly from day one.
> They can use the streets proper if they want to. How about no? They'll block traffic there, too.
Nope. The burden is on whoever wants to restrict people. If you want a new restriction, the burden is on you. If you want to keep an existing restriction, the burden is still on you.