ricecake

joined 2 years ago
[–] [email protected] 5 points 18 hours ago

LLMs are prediction tools. What it will produce is a corpus that doesn't use certain phrases, or will use others more heavily, but will have the same aggregate statistical "shape".

It'll also be preposterously hard for them to work out, since the data it was trained on always has someone eventually disagreeing with the racist fascist bullshit they'll get it to focus on. Eventually it'll start saying things that contradict whatever it was supposed to be saying, because statistically eventually some manner of contrary opinion is voiced.
They won't be able to check the entire corpus for weird stuff like that, or delights like MLK speeches being rewriten to be anti-integration, so the next version will have the same basic information, but passed through a filter that makes it sound like a drunk incel talking about asian women.

[–] [email protected] 31 points 1 day ago (4 children)

Is the implication that we shouldn't be upset about bombing Iran because they're also doing other awful things?

Whenever they do anything people seem so eager to claim that it's just a distraction from whatever it was that was just happening, which itself was also just a distraction.
I've seen literally everything mentioned hear described as a distraction meant to draw your attention from something else.

Maybe, just maybe , none of it's a distraction, they don't care what you care about or notice because it won't change what they do and they're just absolutely awful people working their way down their terrible agenda.

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

Some of your emphasis is a little backwards. In the cloud computing environment, Amazon is bigger than Microsoft, and windows isn't even particularly significant. Azure primarily provides Linux infrastructure instead of Windows. AWS is bigger in the government cloud sector than Microsoft.

For servers, Linux is hands down the os of choice. It's just not even close. Where Microsoft has an edge is in business software, like Excel, word, desktop OS and exchange. Needing windows server administrators for stuff like that is a pain when you already have Linux people for the rest of your stuff which is why it gets outsourced so often. It's not central to the business so no sense in investing in people for it.

Microsoft isn't dominating the commercial computing sector, they're dominating the office it sector, which is a cost center for businesses. They're trailing badly in the revenue generation service sphere. That's why they've been shifting towards offering their own hosting for their services, so you can reduce costs but keep paying them. Increased interoperability between windows and Linux from a developer standpoint to drive people towards buying their Linux hosting from them, because you can use vscode to push your software to GitHub and automatically deploy to azure when build and test passes.
Being on the cost side of the ledger is a risk for them, so they're trying to move to the revenue side, where windows just doesn't have the grip.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 1 day ago

I'm not sure it's a partnership. It looks and reads like the standard authorized data sharing setup. Anyone can configure that. It uses an open protocol that's standardized, let's users control the information shared with explicit consent and is basically what you want out of any entity that holds all your crap. The only thing it's really lacking is a standard protocol for sharing the actual data.

Linux distributions have it.

Microsoft using Google's public documented API is a long way from a partnership.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 days ago

Don't get me wrong, it should be illegal to do a preemptive nuclear strike, it just sadly isn't.

It might not be feasible for the entire chain to have the information needed to make that call, but there is definitely someone in military authority positioned to know if it's defensive or offensive, and that person should be both allowed and obligated to refuse the order if it's an offensive strike.

Morality and the law may not be equivalent, but it would certainly be more convenient if they were closer.

[–] [email protected] 10 points 2 days ago (5 children)

Upfront: it should be obvious that no sane person wants us to drop a nuke or thinks there's any connotation of "okay" to any aspect of it.

Why do you think it would be an illegal order? There are very clear rules on what makes an order legal or not and, horribly, attacking a nation that poses no real threat isn't on the list. What nations we attack is a policy matter, and the rules are very clear that the military doesn't get a say in policy.
Explicitly targeting civilians for a strike on a city is where the line would be. Targeting something else in the city and deciding the civilians are acceptable collateral damage is right on the line. Legally, it's entirely unambiguously evil morally.

There are checks that keep the president from unilaterally launching a nuke. Unfortunately, the intent of those is to ensure the president is legally competent and actually the president, not to ensure he's wise or rational.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harold_Hering

The system has been explicitly designed to minimize the risk of conscience preventing a launch. Issue training orders where the firing crews have no idea if it's real or not. Keep them on two week rotations where they don't have access to the outside world so they wouldn't know. Specifically select for people who will follow the order because it's validcand legal, without considering the greater context. People who are legitimately confused but ultimately unconcerned with protests against them specifically doing what they do, including clergy from their own religion. (Actual story of an ICBM operators reaction to nuns protesting and attempting to block access to the missile site he was stationed at)

There is no doubt in my mind that if the order were given and the VP and cabinet didn't remove him, that the order would be followed.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 3 days ago

Fell. They fall out of windows. Usually after shooting themselves in the back of the head.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 3 days ago

... You seem to be forgetting about the difference between the width of the projectile and the actual force that it imparts.

A 5.56 round is comparable width, but it's also moving significantly faster due to the "it's a rifle round do I really need to explain this?" factor. It was designed and selected with criteria like "can enter a steel military helmet at 500 yards".
Less recoil at high rates of fire with equivalent lethality are other criteria.

A rifle having ease of use doesn't somehow make it safer than one that's harder to maintain. I'm honestly not even sure what you're thinking with that point. In your mind is a flintlock more dangerous because it's tricky to use?

Yes, it's a small bore military rifle designed with military lethality criteria with the requirement of easy operation and high accuracy at increased rates of fire.

What do you get out of trying to pretend there's no real difference between a pistol and a rifle?

[–] [email protected] 2 points 3 days ago

This is entirely it. A corporation can't care about people, but the people in the corporation can.

Business interests have forced a lot of companies to avoid doing things that would offend the right, lest they pull government contracts for appearing to support people.
The people in the businesses who give a shit aren't going to expend energy defending something that ultimately doesn't matter, like the logo being rainbow colored.

The company I work for is one of the ones that didn't change it's logo, and it was explicitly communicated to be because it would risk stupid amounts of money from government contracts.

More efforts were put into things that actually matter. Instead of eliminating DEI, it was relabeled EEOC compliance and left unchanged, without much fanfare. ("Jen is transitioning from head of our DEI office to leading our office of EEOC compliance. Her responsibilities and reports remain the same"). Our benefits were quietly extended to cover a few more cases for relocation assistance to "cover new sources of employee relocation interest". Travel expenses related to reproductive healthcare became covered by the health plan, as well as for gender identity related care.

The company is a heartless profit seeking beast. The people in them have the ability to find a way to do the right thing while appeasing the beast, but it takes effort to push for things so they just don't push for the symbolic gestures.

It's shitty, and I have to imagine that it kinda stings to have token support deemed non-viable, but the world is also shit right now. :(

[–] [email protected] 9 points 3 days ago

Multiple people is significantly more force than even a knife.

Proportional force means the force must be proportional to the threat, not to the force the other person is using. If someone threatens death with their hands, you can use deadly force to defend against a deadly threat.

One would be reasonable in concluding that masked people trying to force you or someone else into a van is an imminent threat of death, great bodily harm or sexual assault.

You can't use deadly force to defend against harassment, or theft because that's disproportionate.

[–] [email protected] 18 points 3 days ago (1 children)

Well, there actually wouldn't be a much larger explosion, that's just not how nukes work.
A nuclear explosion is an incredibly delicate process, and the material just won't go critical because there's another detonation nearby. It's not like dropping a bomb on a dynamite warehouse. There's not a great analogy for what it is like though. Expecting a satellite launch to happen because you blew up a tank of rocket fuel next to it? Not quite there.

Additional contamination from onsite material is a different matter. Most nukes detonate above their target since that maximizes damage, but it also reduces fallout. There would, however, be vaporized material that would be sucked into the air by the vacuum created by the detonation. It's not clear if the presence of radioactive material would make it significantly worse than the general "radioactive dust and molten sand" that would normally be sent into the air.

In general, if you nuke something there's going to be radioactive issues afterwards, and you shouldn't do it. Adding a nuclear facility to the mix is kinda just throwing rocks at the windows on 9/11.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 4 days ago

In general I agree. There are some people though who are definite sources of singular complexity making the world a worse place.
If trump were to die, I don't think it would suddenly end the insanity of the American right wing, just remove a little disorder from it.
However, people like Musk and Thiel are different. They have a preposterous amount of resources that they're directly using to try to push the insanity. The things that made them want to do that will still be there, but if they're gone then the resources they bring to the insanity are also gone, since the people who replace them just wouldn't care in the same way.

 

crochet fox drinking hot tea, cinematic still, Technicolor, Super Panavision 70

Not quite what I was going for, but super cute regardless.

 

Went camping in northern Michigan this week and I was quite popular with the local biting flies.
Delightfully, I found this local food samaritan doing their part to save me, and they were gracious enough to show off a little for the camera.

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submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

Been having fun trying to generate images that look like "good" CGI, but broken somehow in a more realistic looking way.

 

Made with the Krita AI generation plugin.

 

digital illustration of a male character in bright and saturated colors with playful and fun expression, created in 2D style, perfect for social media sharing. Rendered in high-resolution 10-megapixel 2K resolution with a cel-shaded comic book style , paisley Steps: 50, Sampler: Heun, CFG scale: 13, Seed: 1649780875, Size: 768x768, Model hash: 99fd5c4b6f, Model: seekArtMEGA_mega20, ControlNet Enabled: True, ControlNet Preprocessor: lineart_coarse, ControlNet Model: control_v11p_sd15_lineart [43d4be0d], ControlNet Weight: 1, ControlNet Starting Step: 0, ControlNet Ending Step: 1, ControlNet Resize Mode: Crop and Resize, ControlNet Pixel Perfect: True, ControlNet Control Mode: Balanced, ControlNet Preprocessor Parameters: "(512, 64, 64)"

If you take a picture of yourself in from the shoulders up, like in the picture, while standing in front of a blank but lightly textured wall it seems to work best.

 

He's not nearly as chubby as he looks.

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