Wrong way round. Should be "Is Your Agent Reality-Ready?" (Hint: no)
Just be aware of the risks! https://security.stackexchange.com/questions/38128/what-are-...
It's interesting that the focus is just on open source licenses. If one can strip licenses from source code using LLMs, then surely a Microsoft employee could do the same with the Windows source code!
> The core issue is that hackers can steal the "identity" of internet customers at scale That's on one end, right? There's also the other end: as a user connecting to the network, currently one is subscribing to…
Works for static content and databases, but I don't think it works for applications where there is by necessity only one destination that can't be replicated (e.g. a door lock).
Maybe that's the case, but it seems like this conclusion is based on the current architecture of the internet. Maybe there are ways of changing it that mean these issues are not a thing!
What would the Internet's architecture have to look like for DDOS'ing to be a thing of the past, and therefore Cloudflare to not be needed? I know there are solutions like IPFS out there for doing…
Yep, after spending a few years with gitlab pipelines, my company started migrating over to dagger roughly mid-2024. We moved to dagger to get replicable local pipeline runs, escape the gitlab DSL, and get the enormous…
Wrong way round. Should be "Is Your Agent Reality-Ready?" (Hint: no)
Just be aware of the risks! https://security.stackexchange.com/questions/38128/what-are-...
It's interesting that the focus is just on open source licenses. If one can strip licenses from source code using LLMs, then surely a Microsoft employee could do the same with the Windows source code!
> The core issue is that hackers can steal the "identity" of internet customers at scale That's on one end, right? There's also the other end: as a user connecting to the network, currently one is subscribing to…
Works for static content and databases, but I don't think it works for applications where there is by necessity only one destination that can't be replicated (e.g. a door lock).
Maybe that's the case, but it seems like this conclusion is based on the current architecture of the internet. Maybe there are ways of changing it that mean these issues are not a thing!
What would the Internet's architecture have to look like for DDOS'ing to be a thing of the past, and therefore Cloudflare to not be needed? I know there are solutions like IPFS out there for doing…
Yep, after spending a few years with gitlab pipelines, my company started migrating over to dagger roughly mid-2024. We moved to dagger to get replicable local pipeline runs, escape the gitlab DSL, and get the enormous…