This will just result in cities making one way streets, blocking roads, or removing turns, because raw traffic throughput is rarely the only goal. My city already has some signs and traffic signals trying to prevent…
You've probably done most of the work if you've already made that jump, as that's often the hardest transition.
> it is just vaguely connected things being vibe-coded in parallel. That does sound like what would tend to happen if they used their own product exclusively.
The sociopaths tend to rise to the top in any industry, unfortunately.
This is, of course, an ad. It's written as-if their AI detection is flawless, but that seems unlikely. They have this in this article: > our latest AI detection model, which achieves a 0.01% false positive rate But,…
> Right out the gate: the numbers must be sorted. I was somewhat pained by this, as this is an interview question I've gotten, and I clearly annoyed the interviewer by knowing this isn't true, and you can avoid a full…
Making bad assumptions about data seems more likely than deliberate malice. If you A/B test different designs, and you see a huge increase in "interactions" with some design, you'll tend to assume that's a positive…
It's an old problem: https://gizmodo.com/british-cops-want-to-use-ai-to-spot-porn... I've been fairly convinced a lot of social media bans, where people are genuinely confused about the bans, are just automatic…
Plenty of successful companies that didn't have a great UI, and plenty of failures that did.
If someone buys an overpriced shampoo, it only negatively affects them, but the are costs to overall society if people suffer health issues, addiction, etc. In the past, a lot of people unknowingly ended up addicted to…
> Papa Johns’ “Empty Fridge” campaign ran from late April through last weekend on NBCU streaming supply such as Peacock, NBC Sports and NBCU content across streaming distributors. While it’s too soon to digest the…
They didn't want a mock because it might behave differently: > or to replace it with a mock, which only behaves like Redis until your code relies on something the mock implements differently. But, then, what they built…
They probably just set up some AI tool to make posts automatically. A quick search shows things like this: https://apaya.com/lp/linkedin
> At the time, he said, executives were "super optimistic" about tools like Claude Code from AI startup Anthropic. Some guy in sales at Anthropic has a new yacht though.
Good. It's purely positive if they take losses from investing in companies engaging in fraud, as it'll encourage them not to do that.
They do have a bouncing ball of about the right size in the beta. I was thinking basketball though.
> Finally, and in parallel to this, the Commission should build a new relationship with the US. It is a hard pill to swallow: whether we like it or not, in the medium term, Europe will depend on American compute and…
As a general concept, this seems fine, but in this case they seem to be paying people a cash reward for ignoring management priorities: > The ticket sits in a backlog behind feature work because feature work has…
People who work in marketing do not seem particularly concerned with accuracy, or even just making logical sense.
That was unusually bad. I actually had to give up on it from the nuisance.
I was in a class where around 12% of the class got caught directly copying a journal assignment. I'm sure more went undetected. AI has made it easier, but it's in the same magnitude. Edit: typo
These articles consistently fail to acknowledge students were cheating in large numbers prior to these AI tools being available. It was certainly not difficult to cheat at a "closed book" take home exam before.
> There's no need to overthink this. I agree, but for a completely different reason. A lot of executives simply chase trends. This was another trend they copied from each other. No reason to imagine they carefully…
You have no opinion about the bill, but then clearly imply it'll be bad. Sure.
Before maybe you had to deal with someone hiring schetchy consultants once in a while, but now the managers have a limitless well of dubious answers to draw on at any time.
This will just result in cities making one way streets, blocking roads, or removing turns, because raw traffic throughput is rarely the only goal. My city already has some signs and traffic signals trying to prevent…
You've probably done most of the work if you've already made that jump, as that's often the hardest transition.
> it is just vaguely connected things being vibe-coded in parallel. That does sound like what would tend to happen if they used their own product exclusively.
The sociopaths tend to rise to the top in any industry, unfortunately.
This is, of course, an ad. It's written as-if their AI detection is flawless, but that seems unlikely. They have this in this article: > our latest AI detection model, which achieves a 0.01% false positive rate But,…
> Right out the gate: the numbers must be sorted. I was somewhat pained by this, as this is an interview question I've gotten, and I clearly annoyed the interviewer by knowing this isn't true, and you can avoid a full…
Making bad assumptions about data seems more likely than deliberate malice. If you A/B test different designs, and you see a huge increase in "interactions" with some design, you'll tend to assume that's a positive…
It's an old problem: https://gizmodo.com/british-cops-want-to-use-ai-to-spot-porn... I've been fairly convinced a lot of social media bans, where people are genuinely confused about the bans, are just automatic…
Plenty of successful companies that didn't have a great UI, and plenty of failures that did.
If someone buys an overpriced shampoo, it only negatively affects them, but the are costs to overall society if people suffer health issues, addiction, etc. In the past, a lot of people unknowingly ended up addicted to…
> Papa Johns’ “Empty Fridge” campaign ran from late April through last weekend on NBCU streaming supply such as Peacock, NBC Sports and NBCU content across streaming distributors. While it’s too soon to digest the…
They didn't want a mock because it might behave differently: > or to replace it with a mock, which only behaves like Redis until your code relies on something the mock implements differently. But, then, what they built…
They probably just set up some AI tool to make posts automatically. A quick search shows things like this: https://apaya.com/lp/linkedin
> At the time, he said, executives were "super optimistic" about tools like Claude Code from AI startup Anthropic. Some guy in sales at Anthropic has a new yacht though.
Good. It's purely positive if they take losses from investing in companies engaging in fraud, as it'll encourage them not to do that.
They do have a bouncing ball of about the right size in the beta. I was thinking basketball though.
> Finally, and in parallel to this, the Commission should build a new relationship with the US. It is a hard pill to swallow: whether we like it or not, in the medium term, Europe will depend on American compute and…
As a general concept, this seems fine, but in this case they seem to be paying people a cash reward for ignoring management priorities: > The ticket sits in a backlog behind feature work because feature work has…
People who work in marketing do not seem particularly concerned with accuracy, or even just making logical sense.
That was unusually bad. I actually had to give up on it from the nuisance.
I was in a class where around 12% of the class got caught directly copying a journal assignment. I'm sure more went undetected. AI has made it easier, but it's in the same magnitude. Edit: typo
These articles consistently fail to acknowledge students were cheating in large numbers prior to these AI tools being available. It was certainly not difficult to cheat at a "closed book" take home exam before.
> There's no need to overthink this. I agree, but for a completely different reason. A lot of executives simply chase trends. This was another trend they copied from each other. No reason to imagine they carefully…
You have no opinion about the bill, but then clearly imply it'll be bad. Sure.
Before maybe you had to deal with someone hiring schetchy consultants once in a while, but now the managers have a limitless well of dubious answers to draw on at any time.