3. There are WAY more things to get corrupted on a computer system than tokens. And non-determinism does NOT mean it’s tolerant to faults. Random values are intentionally introduced at the right moment for LLMs.
Nothing in Michigan? The state with the most light houses out of any in the US?
Kind of like… a “hidden reset”…
Chase bank…
No. It’s 100% a design choice by the manufacturer to make them look weird. Even with the benefits of EV packaging, manufacturers chose to make them “different” on purpose, which really put off the vast majority of…
Why is this linking to a merged PR, or a PR at all, and not a status page?
More than just IPv4 priorities, almost all other IPv6 addresses are given higher priority which makes routing between ULAs on an internal network problematic. That draft doc seems to fix multiple problems at once.
A forced migration is basically just making a brand new system. It’s not a “protocol fix”.
And what happens to all those cold wallets where people can recover the secret key or forge signatures for it? They money is just gone, either by thieves or the network disallowing them to be spent.
It helps build a new system, but all existing wallets would be hackable until they migrate. And we expect everyone to have the time and resources to do that? For a “store of value” system? All of my hardware wallets are…
I really hate the “someone will certainly solve this problem!” mentality. You can’t just magically update the protocol to work around the ability of someone to break elliptic curve cryptography. That not how this works.…
Except LLMs that tell the student wrong answers, or the person needing therapy to kill themselves.
It is that trivial. The problem is vendor lock-in and no common, defined way to export/import them securely (which is going to change soon).
I’m not seeing the security issue here. Arbitrary code execution leads to arbitrary code execution? Seems like policies are impossible to enforce in general on what can be executed, so the only recourse is to limit…
> Most PCBs aren’t distributed to consumers as bare PCBs, so this issue rarely appears to end users. In terms of hobby/maker electronics, embedded systems, etc., which the Raspberry Pi falls under, yes they absolutely…
Why the hell is there a line break after every sentence?
No, it’s not a threshold. It’s just how the tech works. It’s a next letter guesser. Put in a different set of letters to start, and it’ll guess the next letters differently.
Absolute bull. The writing style is exactly the same between the “prompt” and “response”. Its faked.
Yes it does work… with an A/B update system. Android systems can do this today. After an orderly shutdown of new software, then it can mark the new stuff as good and not allow older software to boot.
You create an RF shadow, not a black hole.
Harvesting RF ambient noise is not new. Here are some commercial products: https://e-peas.com/product/aem30940/ https://www.nxp.com/docs/en/application-note/AN12365.pdf…
> There was and is absolutely nothing wrong, and quite a lot right, by having the 2FA program completely separate from your password vault. Did you read the article? That's what they say. > For maximum security, you can…
Where's the proof that this works? It's a brute forcing tool with the goal of finding the desired fingerprint, but there's no demonstration of it actually working.
Doubtful once the attack is refined. Their capture requirement of 200 traces is trivially low.
The fuck... I can't believe what I've just read. That's like saying Newton set us back over a hundred years. There was no regression because of Einstein.
3. There are WAY more things to get corrupted on a computer system than tokens. And non-determinism does NOT mean it’s tolerant to faults. Random values are intentionally introduced at the right moment for LLMs.
Nothing in Michigan? The state with the most light houses out of any in the US?
Kind of like… a “hidden reset”…
Chase bank…
No. It’s 100% a design choice by the manufacturer to make them look weird. Even with the benefits of EV packaging, manufacturers chose to make them “different” on purpose, which really put off the vast majority of…
Why is this linking to a merged PR, or a PR at all, and not a status page?
More than just IPv4 priorities, almost all other IPv6 addresses are given higher priority which makes routing between ULAs on an internal network problematic. That draft doc seems to fix multiple problems at once.
A forced migration is basically just making a brand new system. It’s not a “protocol fix”.
And what happens to all those cold wallets where people can recover the secret key or forge signatures for it? They money is just gone, either by thieves or the network disallowing them to be spent.
It helps build a new system, but all existing wallets would be hackable until they migrate. And we expect everyone to have the time and resources to do that? For a “store of value” system? All of my hardware wallets are…
I really hate the “someone will certainly solve this problem!” mentality. You can’t just magically update the protocol to work around the ability of someone to break elliptic curve cryptography. That not how this works.…
Except LLMs that tell the student wrong answers, or the person needing therapy to kill themselves.
It is that trivial. The problem is vendor lock-in and no common, defined way to export/import them securely (which is going to change soon).
I’m not seeing the security issue here. Arbitrary code execution leads to arbitrary code execution? Seems like policies are impossible to enforce in general on what can be executed, so the only recourse is to limit…
> Most PCBs aren’t distributed to consumers as bare PCBs, so this issue rarely appears to end users. In terms of hobby/maker electronics, embedded systems, etc., which the Raspberry Pi falls under, yes they absolutely…
Why the hell is there a line break after every sentence?
No, it’s not a threshold. It’s just how the tech works. It’s a next letter guesser. Put in a different set of letters to start, and it’ll guess the next letters differently.
Absolute bull. The writing style is exactly the same between the “prompt” and “response”. Its faked.
Yes it does work… with an A/B update system. Android systems can do this today. After an orderly shutdown of new software, then it can mark the new stuff as good and not allow older software to boot.
You create an RF shadow, not a black hole.
Harvesting RF ambient noise is not new. Here are some commercial products: https://e-peas.com/product/aem30940/ https://www.nxp.com/docs/en/application-note/AN12365.pdf…
> There was and is absolutely nothing wrong, and quite a lot right, by having the 2FA program completely separate from your password vault. Did you read the article? That's what they say. > For maximum security, you can…
Where's the proof that this works? It's a brute forcing tool with the goal of finding the desired fingerprint, but there's no demonstration of it actually working.
Doubtful once the attack is refined. Their capture requirement of 200 traces is trivially low.
The fuck... I can't believe what I've just read. That's like saying Newton set us back over a hundred years. There was no regression because of Einstein.