To reduce e-waste? Not everything has to be optimised on time or money spend.
> inputs from a deterministic controller. Any claims of "motive" or "behavior" are inappropriate anthropomorphizing of something that will never be more than a mathematical model of things humans do. We talk about the…
But why does that never work the same why for the individual that does a (supposed) crime?
In the Netherlands I visited a nuclear reactor in middle/highschool. Literally something that left such an impression that I still talk about two decades later. Letting kids into places where science and technology…
Not so sure I would want a company that does not see any issues with mass surveillance of my country [1] to have access to critical infrastructure or its source code where I live. [1]…
> Sink broke? Call landlord to fix. Roof leaking? Call landlord to fix Most landlords I've dealt with are an absolute pain to deal with when something breaks. It's often not that easy, maybe in high-cost / luxury…
Having studied in the Netherlands it was somewhat difficult finding a job (10 years ago), and my first job was in Poland at a large Pharma company. I started working there for a wage lower than Dutch minimum wage when I…
Data breaches of average people sell for quite a bit of money, often for phishing. I find it hard to believe no one would be interested in this. Or any other dataset with a hyper targeted demographic.
Yes, and HN isn't a place to submit things that require work from the reader. Or at least that seems to be the consensus by reporting it. Quite disappointing tbh.
[flagged]
ISW confirmed unauthorised edits were made, and fired a staffer over it. Not sure why you feel the need to comment this. Classic lowbrow dismissal https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=4726248
Are items made, located in, and sold from China covered by ITAR?
It seems from the article the LLM also doesn’t understand then commands it uses, as they do things that are not what is described.
China and geopolitical enemies of the US doing horrible things regularly gets hundreds of votes. It’s quite clear that this argument is mainly used to defend the US and it’s allies. Just a single example of Russia,…
Literally could just have someone working at the embassy roleplay on their lunch break in a cafe to generate this evidence.
Thats the same type of thinking conspiracy theorists have, the type you can never disprove.
I still think Lavabit did something a lot of tech companies these days would never do. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lavabit
Notably Mark Rutte in the role of Secretary General of NATO, no longer as Prime Minister of the Netherlands.
Reminder of the HN guidelines for commenting, as the majority of comments just talks about the design of the page at the moment: In Comments Comments should get more thoughtful and substantive, not less, as a topic gets…
Why is it not that interesting? Especially when you see big tech align themselves with whomever is in power at the time? To me as a non American, it’s an absolute cope to argue that its okay when its not due to law when…
I know we are currently very early in the comment section, but I cant help compare and notice the shift in tone and response.
Read the post, they never blocked the activist. They just changed what they replied to a DNS query of an already blocked site to make it harder to detect.
Which will makes any non-US company reconsider using Cloudflare real quick.
Does the US have free beer?!
To reduce e-waste? Not everything has to be optimised on time or money spend.
> inputs from a deterministic controller. Any claims of "motive" or "behavior" are inappropriate anthropomorphizing of something that will never be more than a mathematical model of things humans do. We talk about the…
But why does that never work the same why for the individual that does a (supposed) crime?
In the Netherlands I visited a nuclear reactor in middle/highschool. Literally something that left such an impression that I still talk about two decades later. Letting kids into places where science and technology…
Not so sure I would want a company that does not see any issues with mass surveillance of my country [1] to have access to critical infrastructure or its source code where I live. [1]…
> Sink broke? Call landlord to fix. Roof leaking? Call landlord to fix Most landlords I've dealt with are an absolute pain to deal with when something breaks. It's often not that easy, maybe in high-cost / luxury…
Having studied in the Netherlands it was somewhat difficult finding a job (10 years ago), and my first job was in Poland at a large Pharma company. I started working there for a wage lower than Dutch minimum wage when I…
Data breaches of average people sell for quite a bit of money, often for phishing. I find it hard to believe no one would be interested in this. Or any other dataset with a hyper targeted demographic.
Yes, and HN isn't a place to submit things that require work from the reader. Or at least that seems to be the consensus by reporting it. Quite disappointing tbh.
[flagged]
ISW confirmed unauthorised edits were made, and fired a staffer over it. Not sure why you feel the need to comment this. Classic lowbrow dismissal https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=4726248
Are items made, located in, and sold from China covered by ITAR?
It seems from the article the LLM also doesn’t understand then commands it uses, as they do things that are not what is described.
China and geopolitical enemies of the US doing horrible things regularly gets hundreds of votes. It’s quite clear that this argument is mainly used to defend the US and it’s allies. Just a single example of Russia,…
[flagged]
Literally could just have someone working at the embassy roleplay on their lunch break in a cafe to generate this evidence.
Thats the same type of thinking conspiracy theorists have, the type you can never disprove.
I still think Lavabit did something a lot of tech companies these days would never do. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lavabit
Notably Mark Rutte in the role of Secretary General of NATO, no longer as Prime Minister of the Netherlands.
Reminder of the HN guidelines for commenting, as the majority of comments just talks about the design of the page at the moment: In Comments Comments should get more thoughtful and substantive, not less, as a topic gets…
Why is it not that interesting? Especially when you see big tech align themselves with whomever is in power at the time? To me as a non American, it’s an absolute cope to argue that its okay when its not due to law when…
I know we are currently very early in the comment section, but I cant help compare and notice the shift in tone and response.
Read the post, they never blocked the activist. They just changed what they replied to a DNS query of an already blocked site to make it harder to detect.
Which will makes any non-US company reconsider using Cloudflare real quick.
Does the US have free beer?!