The thing is you don't know that it's got actual future usefulness. You might think or hypothesize that it does, but for various reasons it may turn out to be a dead-end. Almost every endeavour has non-zero potential…
Deep, paradigm-shifting research often needs decades of deep thought and experimentation, which will not yield weekly, monthly or even annual demonstrations of usefulness to customers or shareholders. She writes as a VC…
Instant turn-off, couldn't finish it. The moment I sense this style, now, I have to close the tab
It doesn't do that though. Understand. That's not how LLMs work.
Mu.
She is indeed some sort of wizard
Huh? The bot can communicate with me freely as it sees fit. A "conversation" in telegram parlance is not time-limited, it's ongoing once established, so no it's not only inbound. It can awaken and ping me whenever it…
Once a conversation with a user is established, telegram bots can bleep away at you. Mine pings me whenever it puts a PR up, and when it's done responding to code reviews etc.
Compared to what? What's your baseline for how much a user-interaction-required XSS vulnerability should be worth?
It's actually pretty on-par for most bug bounties. They used the same exploit on a few programs and got $11k total which ain't bad return on time.
There's generally no grey market for XSS vulns. The people buying operationalized exploits generally want things that they can aim very specifically to achieve an outcome against a particular target, without that target…
I've seen code persist a long time because it is unmaintainable gloop that takes forever to understand and nobody is brave enough to rebuild it. So no, I don't think persistence-through-time is a good metric. Probably…
Or do people stop changing their minds because they're worn down, their brains no longer as capable of making space and joy for new ideas? Which these stem cells, if they pan out, very specifically fix
Not really - that 1GB is the seed for a procedural generation mechanism that has been finely tuned to its unfolding in an environment over 4 billion years. DNA is the ultimate demoscene exe
A bunch of us in the rest of the world are making great strides in reducing our greenhouse gas emissions without it tanking our economies. Australia is, per-capita, one of the worst offenders and we're on track to reach…
YT's skateboard introduces the telescopic contact smartwheels pretty early on as a Courier essential. I don't recall Hiro's motorcycle being much a part of the story, it might also have had the smartwheels but isn't…
I would love mailing lists to be a thing again, but the experience of using email is just so bad for me. The sheer amount of unsubscribing I have to do to make it usable - not even taking spam into account - makes email…
I tried to order - looks like you're not shipping to Australia? Any plans there?
To some extent? But then we have lobby groups, PACs, regulatory capture and astroturf campaigns that have proven to be quite successful techniques to subvert the political process. I'd argue that those techniques put us…
I think "assume good faith" has to be taken as something of a Prisoner's Dilemma proposition. You don't want to be a dove, and keep assuming good faith when it hurts. Assume good faith initially because it least has a…
Where are you getting this theory that there was an impact event that.killed off both the megafauna and the Clovis people's off? Everything (credible) I'm able to find suggests/theorises that the Clovis differentiated…
The perception of the possibility of the perception of industrial espionage is usually enough to get a lawyer choked up in cases like this - I wasn't saying there WAS industrial espionage, just that there might have…
> CFAA isn't going away There's some pretty concerted efforts in play to at least have it updated and tempered, which could have legs. I don't hold much hope it'll go away but I do think some of these efforts to have it…
Lots of people suggesting that either company was out of line here, but like, CFAA is still a thing (assuming OP is in the USA) and it's still got gnarly teeth. Let alone the possibility of industrial espionage…
Yeah, lick that boot! > Tens if not hundreds of thousands of people go to prison each year in the US and don't feel the need to kill themselves Plenty do, and plenty die while they're in prison. This is not a rational…
The thing is you don't know that it's got actual future usefulness. You might think or hypothesize that it does, but for various reasons it may turn out to be a dead-end. Almost every endeavour has non-zero potential…
Deep, paradigm-shifting research often needs decades of deep thought and experimentation, which will not yield weekly, monthly or even annual demonstrations of usefulness to customers or shareholders. She writes as a VC…
Instant turn-off, couldn't finish it. The moment I sense this style, now, I have to close the tab
It doesn't do that though. Understand. That's not how LLMs work.
Mu.
She is indeed some sort of wizard
Huh? The bot can communicate with me freely as it sees fit. A "conversation" in telegram parlance is not time-limited, it's ongoing once established, so no it's not only inbound. It can awaken and ping me whenever it…
Once a conversation with a user is established, telegram bots can bleep away at you. Mine pings me whenever it puts a PR up, and when it's done responding to code reviews etc.
Compared to what? What's your baseline for how much a user-interaction-required XSS vulnerability should be worth?
It's actually pretty on-par for most bug bounties. They used the same exploit on a few programs and got $11k total which ain't bad return on time.
There's generally no grey market for XSS vulns. The people buying operationalized exploits generally want things that they can aim very specifically to achieve an outcome against a particular target, without that target…
I've seen code persist a long time because it is unmaintainable gloop that takes forever to understand and nobody is brave enough to rebuild it. So no, I don't think persistence-through-time is a good metric. Probably…
Or do people stop changing their minds because they're worn down, their brains no longer as capable of making space and joy for new ideas? Which these stem cells, if they pan out, very specifically fix
Not really - that 1GB is the seed for a procedural generation mechanism that has been finely tuned to its unfolding in an environment over 4 billion years. DNA is the ultimate demoscene exe
A bunch of us in the rest of the world are making great strides in reducing our greenhouse gas emissions without it tanking our economies. Australia is, per-capita, one of the worst offenders and we're on track to reach…
YT's skateboard introduces the telescopic contact smartwheels pretty early on as a Courier essential. I don't recall Hiro's motorcycle being much a part of the story, it might also have had the smartwheels but isn't…
I would love mailing lists to be a thing again, but the experience of using email is just so bad for me. The sheer amount of unsubscribing I have to do to make it usable - not even taking spam into account - makes email…
I tried to order - looks like you're not shipping to Australia? Any plans there?
To some extent? But then we have lobby groups, PACs, regulatory capture and astroturf campaigns that have proven to be quite successful techniques to subvert the political process. I'd argue that those techniques put us…
I think "assume good faith" has to be taken as something of a Prisoner's Dilemma proposition. You don't want to be a dove, and keep assuming good faith when it hurts. Assume good faith initially because it least has a…
Where are you getting this theory that there was an impact event that.killed off both the megafauna and the Clovis people's off? Everything (credible) I'm able to find suggests/theorises that the Clovis differentiated…
The perception of the possibility of the perception of industrial espionage is usually enough to get a lawyer choked up in cases like this - I wasn't saying there WAS industrial espionage, just that there might have…
> CFAA isn't going away There's some pretty concerted efforts in play to at least have it updated and tempered, which could have legs. I don't hold much hope it'll go away but I do think some of these efforts to have it…
Lots of people suggesting that either company was out of line here, but like, CFAA is still a thing (assuming OP is in the USA) and it's still got gnarly teeth. Let alone the possibility of industrial espionage…
Yeah, lick that boot! > Tens if not hundreds of thousands of people go to prison each year in the US and don't feel the need to kill themselves Plenty do, and plenty die while they're in prison. This is not a rational…