JayDee

joined 2 years ago
[–] [email protected] 14 points 1 year ago (5 children)

Everyone.

As opposed to disciplinary action carried out by a central authority, rule breakers just get slapped by every community member in a revolving door fashion.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I think a good solution would to just have that script autogenerated by the flatpak, honestly.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago (4 children)

Well, I come to the comments in good faith to hear perspectives and try and learn something. I had no aim of turning it into a debate.

It is frustrating when seeing what looks like could be an eye opening dialogue having that dialogue never materialize because neither party actually brings anything but insults to the table. You might as well not even comment at that point IMO.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

This is what I was looking for! Thank you. You can get more mileage out of this work by linking this comment in the future.

Currently on break, I've decided to just form the comment I've been formulating into a blog post which I'll link when I've finished. I appreciate the patience.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 1 year ago (2 children)

You're correct, so far I've mainly laid out just personal theory and anecdote. I will hunt down some sources and would appreciate it if you do the same. You've now had 4 comments to do so and still have abstained from doing so.

I am gonna have to come back to this, since I have work coming up. I will edit this when I can and will DM you when I've come back to it.

[–] [email protected] -1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (4 children)

Very fast response time, cool.

The only source you've provided so far is a hand-wave at a collection of governments - and multiple companies that have been explicitly known for being terrible for the worker - and an argument of theory from Marx in 1872. you've made a claim that central planning achieved these things, please actually cite the sources you've read.

Meanwhile, not sure what obfuscation has to do with central planning.

When you have people who specialize in politics working in a office space dictating what industrial workers do on the ground, the game of telephone often makes the higher ups make decisions that are actively counter-productive to progress and efficiency. As a factory worker who's safety standards and work procedures are dictated by people who don't even step onto the floor, this is a constant issue.

As an alternative, I think a centralized group helping formulate a general goal with success criteria, then leaving the rest of the planning to the actual workforces, is better for the worker and can actually end up more efficient in the right conditions.

EDIT:Modified the first part to make it clear that I mean Walmart and Amazon have been notoriously bad to their workforces, and that I'm not commenting on the countries.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 1 year ago (12 children)

Your comment does not promote actual discussion and I'd like you to do better, please.

Your comment is only refuting an argument and then supporting that refutal with an ad hominem attack, rather than actually providing a supporting argument.

I as a layman would also actually like to know why you believe that the critique of centralization is 'not based in reality'.

My prior understanding is that any time you obfuscate the management of a project from the workers of the project - regardless of the method of obfuscation (layers of management, distance, language barriers, subterfuge) or the project type - you inevitably end up with out-of-touch individuals directing.

Please tell me why this is an out of touch understanding of why centralization is an issue.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I've read up on all the voting systems and I think your take is incorrect. I want to be clear that both are better than FPTP and I politically support RCV more often because it is more well-known, because IT is actually the one with all the PR, not STAR voting. RCV does not get pitched because it is the ultimately best choice - it gets pitched because it's the most well-known from PR. Meanwhile it's mostly math geeks talking about STAR voting.

With that out of the way, RCV has issues that STAR voting does not.

Ranked choice deals with bizarre issues which makes it finicky in various cases. Because of how ranked choice works, during any round, parties with the most candidates end up with their votes most split, which can actually lead to candidates being eliminated early despite them having more overall support than other candidates. Ultimately this means the party with the most candidates actually gives its voting base the least amount of voting power. You can also have various cases where a third party candidate with very little majority support can flat out win elections through the premature elimination case. On top of this, your vote can often not be counted in RCV, called ballot exhaustion. This occurs if your top vote is eliminated after your other choices, leading to your ballot having no other candidates for your vote to go to.

I could also go into Arrow's Impossibility 'theorem' but it ends up not being useful to the overall conversation IMO.

Meanwhile, exhaustive testing has shown there is currently no known way to game STAR voting. The idea that voters picking extremes have more power in a STAR voting system is misguided. They cannot sway the space, they only make the mistake of essentially destroying their own nuance. What this does is it flattens the overall distribution curve - which does nothing major to actual results. If two candidates were the most likely to win, then they will still be spikes in the distribution and will proceed to runoff. If another candidate is less popular than the other two but still has a following, they will also still show up in the distribution the same - they will also not win and thus them not being in the runoff will not matter. It ultimately does not affect the end results of the election. The only edge case it deals with is equal votes at runoff, which is an edge case so unlikely that it shouldn't even be considered possible.

You can go ahead and even try to break it.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (2 children)

Fuck all that. STAR voting for presidents.

Edit: want more details, see my other comment

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

There is often a very limited market for underperforming hardware, which is how RISC-V chips will be starting out. There is a large amount of accumulated knowledge about, and workflow to accommodate, already established ISAs.

Due to most companies being publicly traded, taking risks is much less common, since a drop in profits could see a massive portion of the company's funds get pulled, or more likely the CEO being yanked by the board. So they play it safe and choose already established architectures.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

I never claimed that the current software didn’t use machine learning

This is not AI.

This is your straight statement, and your only argument was saying it was done before AI was used in it. That's a poor argument. That's like arguing that self driving isn't AI because remote control car piloting existed.

Automated image manipulation vs having 100s of hours in Photoshop. That's AI vs what came before. Inputting a source file and getting a manipulated file after some amount of time, vs hours of meticulous work trying to get minor details right.

If we want to compare oldschool manipulation vs AI Manipulation, then yes, fakes now are on par with the insane skill of some image doctoring artists - you're just looking for different things - but it's at an exponentially lower cost than hiring a professional. Compare AI to itself, though? It's night and day. Early AI manipulation was atrocious. And modern AI manipulation is only going to get better. That is all due to breakthroughs in AI. imagine what the hell will happen when Sora becomes usable by anyone.

Machine learning has taken an originally hard thing to do and made it cheap and easy. Now, any schmuck can pump out doctored footage in an afternoon. That's why the AI porn is big- you can pay dirt cheap and give the model photos of any random woman and it'll make porn of them - and that fact has turned it into a much more viable business model than before, that's currently creating massive amounts of non consensual porn fakes- exponentially more than before.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago (3 children)

You are pulling a no true Scotsman fallacy here. AI has always been a somewhat vague term, and it's explicitly a buzzword in today's systems.

This AI front has also been taking the current form for more than a decade, but it wasn't a public topic until now, because it was terrible up until now.

The relevant things is that AI is automating a normally human-centric practice via extensive training on a data model. All systems I've mentioned utilize that machine learning practice at some point in their process.

The statement about the deepfakes is just patently incorrect on your part. It is a trained model which takes an input, and outputs a manipulated output based on its training. That's enough to meet the criteria. Before it was fairly difficult and almost immediately identifiable as AI manipulated. It's now popular because it's gotten good enough to not be immediately noticeable, done fairly easily, and is at the point where it can be mostly automated.

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