They are talking about mandatory on-device scanning. E2E doesn't solve this.
The biggest angle for me is censorship. You associate your online identity with your legal identity, there is no longer any recourse if you are banned from a platform. You could easily be arrested if your posts are…
Doesn't _have_ to be except not enough voters can tell the difference which is exactly the goal.
You could implement it this way: - the first time you select a directory it must be empty - you can drag files in there afterwards - the directory gets whitelisted for future use Probably has bad usability, but would be…
In a two party system, do you vote for the party that promises small government and never delivers, or the party that promises bigger government and does delive?
I can't find a Pi Zero 2 W for sale anywhere that will deliver to me
So in future we will have "retro" streaming platforms that buffer with the spinner a random times for nostalgia and have menus full of promotional material that are impossible to navigate to just find what you're…
You could say it's more akin to if we have all been writing in a assembly and suddenly we got access to compilers and high level languages. Would we all be complaining that every conference is "about compilers"?
It's hard to avoid the topic when it literally redefines what it means to create software. If I'm using it to create some piece of software, then I turn around and say "I wrote this" am I even being truthful? But if I'm…
I'm someone who makes extensive used of LLMs and agents for daily research, and I 100% of the time ignore the AI summary that google gives at the top of the page. If I am performing a web search, I've already decided…
I imagine something like 98% of articles also get less than 100 views. So the question is more about the articles you're reading rather than articles in general.
Much of the recent improvement in models is in being trained specifically to make use of the tools the harnesses give them.
I've switched to using traefik from caddy. For simple use cases it's a little more verbose in the configuration, but for more involved things like multiple load balancing backends, rewriting paths and headers and so on…
So I wonder, if a more powerful agent harness could have the agent basically write and exectute its own deteministic code, which when executed, spawns sub agents for each of the subtasks? So far we've seen agents spawn…
Both Arch and Nix solve this by making it very easy to write packages that work around the compatibility issues. When I used to use ubuntu and mint it was a lot more common to run into these types of issues.
Skills are often invoked imperatively by the user. In cases where they are intended to be used directly by the LLM, it would be included somewhere else in the context. E.g: ``` After implementing the feature, read the…
The personification seems to be at the training level. When I ask an LLM why it did something destructive, the ideal response would be a matter of fact evaluation of the mistakes that I myself have made in setting up…
Water? You mean like out of the toilet?
A serious existential threat to the country from a targetable state actor.
It's actually common for human-written projects to go through an initial R&D phase where the first prototypes turn into spaghetti code and require a full rewrite. I haven't been through this myself with LLMs, but I…
only proves you're not a corporate model rather than locally running model that's been trained to allow saying that
You can have cryptographically signed data caches without the need for a blockchain. What a blockchain can add is the ability to say that a particular piece of data must have existed before a given date, by including…
The same politicians who claim to support the free market will do deals like ttis with corporate oligopolies to cement their position into eternity.
Still, it might be interesting information to have access to, as someone running the model? Normally we are reading the output trying to build an intuition for the kinds of patterns it outputs when it's hallucinating vs…
Part of the issue with phones is that they are already controlled by the Google/Apple duopoly, and hence heavily optimized for constant distraction and addiction. These laws only cement that duopoly and provide fewer…
They are talking about mandatory on-device scanning. E2E doesn't solve this.
The biggest angle for me is censorship. You associate your online identity with your legal identity, there is no longer any recourse if you are banned from a platform. You could easily be arrested if your posts are…
Doesn't _have_ to be except not enough voters can tell the difference which is exactly the goal.
You could implement it this way: - the first time you select a directory it must be empty - you can drag files in there afterwards - the directory gets whitelisted for future use Probably has bad usability, but would be…
In a two party system, do you vote for the party that promises small government and never delivers, or the party that promises bigger government and does delive?
I can't find a Pi Zero 2 W for sale anywhere that will deliver to me
So in future we will have "retro" streaming platforms that buffer with the spinner a random times for nostalgia and have menus full of promotional material that are impossible to navigate to just find what you're…
You could say it's more akin to if we have all been writing in a assembly and suddenly we got access to compilers and high level languages. Would we all be complaining that every conference is "about compilers"?
It's hard to avoid the topic when it literally redefines what it means to create software. If I'm using it to create some piece of software, then I turn around and say "I wrote this" am I even being truthful? But if I'm…
I'm someone who makes extensive used of LLMs and agents for daily research, and I 100% of the time ignore the AI summary that google gives at the top of the page. If I am performing a web search, I've already decided…
I imagine something like 98% of articles also get less than 100 views. So the question is more about the articles you're reading rather than articles in general.
Much of the recent improvement in models is in being trained specifically to make use of the tools the harnesses give them.
I've switched to using traefik from caddy. For simple use cases it's a little more verbose in the configuration, but for more involved things like multiple load balancing backends, rewriting paths and headers and so on…
So I wonder, if a more powerful agent harness could have the agent basically write and exectute its own deteministic code, which when executed, spawns sub agents for each of the subtasks? So far we've seen agents spawn…
Both Arch and Nix solve this by making it very easy to write packages that work around the compatibility issues. When I used to use ubuntu and mint it was a lot more common to run into these types of issues.
Skills are often invoked imperatively by the user. In cases where they are intended to be used directly by the LLM, it would be included somewhere else in the context. E.g: ``` After implementing the feature, read the…
The personification seems to be at the training level. When I ask an LLM why it did something destructive, the ideal response would be a matter of fact evaluation of the mistakes that I myself have made in setting up…
Water? You mean like out of the toilet?
A serious existential threat to the country from a targetable state actor.
It's actually common for human-written projects to go through an initial R&D phase where the first prototypes turn into spaghetti code and require a full rewrite. I haven't been through this myself with LLMs, but I…
only proves you're not a corporate model rather than locally running model that's been trained to allow saying that
You can have cryptographically signed data caches without the need for a blockchain. What a blockchain can add is the ability to say that a particular piece of data must have existed before a given date, by including…
The same politicians who claim to support the free market will do deals like ttis with corporate oligopolies to cement their position into eternity.
Still, it might be interesting information to have access to, as someone running the model? Normally we are reading the output trying to build an intuition for the kinds of patterns it outputs when it's hallucinating vs…
Part of the issue with phones is that they are already controlled by the Google/Apple duopoly, and hence heavily optimized for constant distraction and addiction. These laws only cement that duopoly and provide fewer…