‘Not for you’: Israeli shelters exclude Palestinians as bombs rain down
‘Not for you’: Israeli shelters exclude Palestinians as bombs rain down
Shelters are a lifeline in Israel from Iranian attacks, but Palestinian citizens of the country have been locked out.Al Jazeera
‘It’s terrifying’: WhatsApp AI helper mistakenly shares user’s number
‘It’s terrifying’: WhatsApp AI helper mistakenly shares user’s number
Chatbot tries to change subject after serving up unrelated user’s mobile to man asking for rail firm helplineRobert Booth (The Guardian)
like this
Why establishment Democrats still can’t stomach progressive candidates like Zohran Mamdani
Who’s afraid of Zohran Mamdani? The answer, it would seem, is the entire establishment. The 33-year-old democratic socialist and New York City mayoral candidate has surged in the polls in recent weeks, netting endorsements not just from progressive voices like Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Bernie Sanders but also his fellow candidates for the mayoralty, with Brad Lander and Michael Blake taking advantage of the ranked-choice voting system in the primary and cross-endorsing Mamdani’s campaign.
With the primary just around the corner, polls have Mamdani closing the gap on Andrew Cuomo, the disgraced former governor of New York. This has spooked the establishment, which is now doing everything it can to stop Mamdani’s rise.
Take Michael Bloomberg, who endorsed Cuomo earlier this month and followed this up with a $5m donation to a pro-Cuomo Pac. The largesse appears motivated not by admiration for Cuomo – during his mayoralty, sources told the New York Times that Bloomberg saw Cuomo as “the epitome of the self-interested, horse-trading political culture he has long stood against” – but animosity towards Mamdani and his policies.
Mamdani wants to increase taxes on residents earning more than $1m a year, increase corporate taxes and freeze rents: policies that aren’t exactly popular with the billionaire set.
Why establishment Democrats still can’t stomach progressive candidates like Zohran Mamdani
The anti-Mamdani mobilization is depressingly predictable, with a party that is allergic to fresh blood and new thinkingArwa Mahdawi (The Guardian)
adhocfungus likes this.
Russian armed forces are currently advancing at 15 to 20 kilometres per day
Russische Aggression: „Wie eine Würgeschlange erdrücken“ – Drei Szenarien für den Ausgang des Ukraine-Kriegs
Während die Welt nach Nahost schaut, eskaliert Moskau seinen Angriffskrieg in der Ukraine. Kiew steht an gleich zwei Fronten unter Druck.Christoph B. Schiltz (WELT)
Youth-led Sunrise Movement to launch campaign to ‘villainize big oil’ and force climate action
cross-posted from: slrpnk.net/post/23526927
If you want to get involved, here's how
Youth-led Sunrise Movement to launch campaign to ‘villainize big oil’ and force climate action
With climate policies under siege by the Trump, young climate activists are intensifying their campaignDharna Noor (The Guardian)
fzn: output selected line number with fzf instead text [Bash]
fzn() {
nl | fzf --with-nth 2.. "${@}" | awk '{print $1}'
}
Usage:
find . -maxdepth 1 -type d | fzn -e -m
I always forget how to do this manually, so I made this simple function for Bash. Just copy this like an alias into your .bashrc and use it like any other command in a pipe.
US | Karen Read's second murder trial ends with an acquittal
A Massachusetts jury has found Karen Read not guilty in the death of her police officer boyfriend, three years and two high-profile trials later.
US | Karen Read's second murder trial ends with an acquittal
A Massachusetts jury has found Karen Read not guilty in the death of her police officer boyfriend, three years and two high-profile trials later.
bentornamento dell’NHK leggendo senza ritegno per far marcire il tempismo
Prendendo quasi al volo l’occasione di averlo caricato su TomoStash l’altro giorno (dove ci è finito semplicemente perché avevo già il file da parte scaricato, che ha preso molta polvere dato che non avevo mai trovato il momento giusto per leggerlo), stasera ho preso da parte il mio momento più marcio per iniziare a leggere […]
What's a good instance to be on at the moment?
I'm looking for a new instance since lemm.ee is closing by the end of the month. What's a good instance to be on these days?
I'm looking for a instance with the fewest trolls, bots, and anyone that likes to take things to the extremes.
like this
Since you mention you have no real opinions about lemm.ee.
You were just on there by chance.
I’ll propose you the style of blahaj which is to have downvotes disabled, its quite a different way to interact with lemmy, maybe a bit weird to get used to. But it feels much less hostile. And it fosters a good culture of just ignoring shitty takes and replies.
As far as “no extremes” you mentioned you prefer, blahaj blocks lemmygrad and hexbear (ultra authoritarians) and any far right instance (think hilariouschaos)
Lobbyists for Amazon, Google, Microsoft, and Meta back a campaign for a 10-year US state AI regulation ban, a move dividing the AI industry and the GOP
Big Tech pushes for 10-year ban on US states regulating AI
Call by Amazon, Google and Microsoft lobbyists for a ‘moratorium’ has split industry and the Republican partyAlex Rogers (Financial Times)
Thank you Linux community!
Thank you everyone for your insight, comments, and help with the process! I'm started with Fedora, and after some brief confusion between Gnome and Plasma, I'm off! 😁
Special thanks to all of you cool dudes:
[@xylogx@lemmy.world]
[@bell@lemmy.world]
[@niucllos@lemm.ee]
[@Archr@lemmy.world]
[@bacon_pdp@lemmy.world]
[@Gabadabs@lemmy.blahaj.zone]
[@CoyoteFacts@lemmy.ca]
[@paequ2@lemmy.today]
[@SnotFlickman@lemmy.blahaj.zone]
[@data1701d@startrek.website]
[@swelter_spark@redhat.com]
[@Crazyslinkz@lemmy.world]
[@Kirk@startrek.website]
[@spv.sh@lemmy.spv.sh]
[@secret300@lemmy.sdf.org]
[@enemenemu@lemm.ee]
[@UNYON@linux.community]
[@OldFartPhil@lemmy.world]
[@Communist@lemmy.frozeninferno.xyz]
[@Wolfie@lemm.ee]
[@beagle@discuss.tchncs.de]
[@octobob@lemmy.ml]
[@teawrecks@sopuli.xyz]
[@some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org]
5/5 stars, would upgrade again!
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Resurrecting a dead torrent tracker and finding 3 million peers
Resurrecting a dead torrent tracker and finding 3 million peers
So I was uh, downloading some linux isos, like usual. It was going slowly, so I opened up the Trackers tab in qBittorrent and saw the following:Kian Bradley (Kian Bradley’s Blog)
like this
TPB is still around, only magnet links are around. They were hosting torrent files which is basically a list of trackers. That's what they had to drop, in order to continue functioning. And their DNS is still banned like from almost every westernized country.
Regardless of technicalities, they were #1 biggest player. (Today they are like #3 or #5?) What I mean to say, is that they got busted mainly because of this. To make an example.
Ukraine dragging out ID process to dodge payouts to families — diplomat
Ukraine dragging out ID process to dodge payouts to families — diplomat
Rodion Miroshnik said that Ukrainian Interior Minister Igor Klimenko "understands perfectly well" that the identification and subsequent handover of bodies to families will entail the need to pay financial compensationTASS
Iranian opposition supporters grapple with US and Israeli regime change plans
Iranian opposition supporters grapple with US and Israeli regime change plans
‘We want freedom on our own terms,’ says one Tehran resident, while another writes, ‘Someone is helping us’William Christou (The Guardian)
Resurrecting a dead torrent tracker and finding 3 million peers
Resurrecting a dead torrent tracker and finding 3 million peers
So I was uh, downloading some linux isos, like usual. It was going slowly, so I opened up the Trackers tab in qBittorrent and saw the following:Kian Bradley (Kian Bradley’s Blog)
Monitor zerlegt das Narrativ vom „Faulen Deutschland“ (WDR)
In einer Zeit, in der radikale, rechte und konservative Kräfte immer wieder gegen vermeintlich „arbeitsunwillige“ Teile der Bevölkerung mobilisieren, macht sich die Redaktion des WDR Magazins „Monitor“ die Arbeit, einmal genauer hinzusehen – und das tut gut. Und weh. Und macht mich wütend. (WDR)
Kurzperlen | Monitor zerlegt das Narrativ vom „Faulen Deutschland“ (WDR)
In einer Zeit, in der radikale, rechte und konservative Kräfte immer wieder gegen vermeintlich „arbeitsunwillige“ Teile der Bevölkerung mobilisieren…Die (Medien-) Kurzperlen (NexxtPress)
Boardswarm, a new Open Source tool for board management and distributed development
Meet Boardswarm, a new Open Source tool for board management and distributed development
Improving access, flexibility, and CI integration for development boards, making it easier for developers to work with embedded hardware, no matter where they are.Collabora | Open Source Consulting
like this
Boards as in breadboards, I guess. That title assumes the reader will have a certain context.
I got excited thinking it was about managing board activity for nonprofits formed by developers.
Still, seems like a nice tool for people who do breadboarding!
Oggi, 18 giugno, nel 1928, è dato per disperso l'esploratore Roald Amundsen
Dopo essere stato informato dell'incidente del dirigibile Italia a bordo del quale si trovavano l'esploratore italiano Umberto Nobile e il suo equipaggio, il 18 giugno 1928 Amundsen salì a bordo dell'idrovolante francese Latham 47 e andò generosamente in loro soccorso, nonostante le forti discussioni avute con l'italiano riguardo ai meriti della precedente avventura aeronautica con il dirigibile N1-Norge. Durante le ricerche, effettuate sopra i cieli del Mare Glaciale Artico, il mezzo scomparve nelle acque del mare di Barents senza mai essere ritrovato. Le numerose ricerche non ebbero alcun esito.
Dalla voce su Amundsen di Wikipedia.
Per saperne di più sulla spedizione del dirigibile Italia
fattiperlastoria.it/spedizione…
#otd
#accaddeoggi
La tragica spedizione del Dirigibile Italia di Umberto Nobile
Quasi cento anni fa la missione al Polo Nord guidata da Umberto Nobile ebbe un drammatico epilogo. Ripercorriamone insieme la storia.Francesco Caldari (Fatti per la Storia)
Head Lemmy dev, main lemmy.ml admin, dessalines on the "DPRK is actually Good!" bent again
I expect @PunkRockSportsFan@fanaticus.social to be banned here shortly LMAO
Join the lemmy.ml boycott today and help foster a better Lemmy-verse! No more posts, comments (except to counter their propaganda ofc!) or upvotes on any comms on the Lemmy.ml instance!
And consider donating to individual instances instead
Fitik likes this.
Because for better or worse. Tanky central is the flagship development server for the Lemmy software. And if as an admin you want your issues or concerns to at least pretend to be heard. You must give the campist undue deference.
Your server at least also has a piefed interface. Don't know if world ever will. Though I definitely would encourage it.
But no major instance has dared.
??? I was talking about the ai
All of your politicians can get bent though. Fuck em, none of them have your best interests at heart.
Google Receives Piracy Shield Orders to Block Pirate Sites in Public DNS * TorrentFreak
Google Receives Piracy Shield Orders to Block Pirate Sites in Public DNS * TorrentFreak
Blocking orders from Italy's Piracy Shield system sent to Google last month saw the company "promptly" block pirate sites from its public DNS.Andy Maxwell (TF Publishing)
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Find one close to you, find one that isn't run by a trash company. Find a few more and set them up as your upstream. Use them.
Only 1 in 3 Euro consumers are trading in their old phones
European consumers are mostly saying 'non' to trading in their old phones
: Are they using it to death then locking it in a drawer? Schemes needed as shipments of refurbed kit dipsDan Robinson (The Register)
I don't know if it's the same in Europe, but here in Canada, I've only seen the option to trade in old phones when you're buying one of the fancier phones with a bunch of bells and whistles I don't need. There no way they would give me enough for this phone to make up for the price difference.
Also, 40 months is an unusually long time to be holding on to the same phone? What?
Honda successfully launched and landed its own reusable rocket
Honda Conducts Successful Launch and Landing Test of Experimental Reusable Rocket | Honda Global Corporate Website
Honda Global | Honda R&D Co., Ltd., a research and development subsidiary of Honda Motor Co., Ltd., today conducted a launch and landing test of an experimental reusable rocket*1 (6.Honda Global
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Honda successfully launched and landed its own reusable rocket
Honda Conducts Successful Launch and Landing Test of Experimental Reusable Rocket | Honda Global Corporate Website
Honda Global | Honda R&D Co., Ltd., a research and development subsidiary of Honda Motor Co., Ltd., today conducted a launch and landing test of an experimental reusable rocket*1 (6.Honda Global
Uganda passes law allowing civilians to be tried in military court
Uganda President Yoweri Museveni on Monday signed into law an amendment that will allow civilians to be tried in military courts.
Archived version: archive.is/newest/jurist.org/n…
Disclaimer: The article linked is from a single source with a single perspective. Make sure to cross-check information against multiple sources to get a comprehensive view on the situation.
Uganda passes law allowing civilians to be tried in military court
Uganda President Yoweri Museveni on Monday signed into law an amendment that will allow civilians to be tried in military courts. The Uganda People's Defence Forces (UPDF) Amendment Bill 2025 was app...Ben Golin | U. Nevada School of Law, US (- JURIST - News)
US will no longer tell people exactly what the safe amount to drink is, report claims
Recent research has found that the number of cancer and liver disease deaths linked to alcohol use have risen in recent years
What to know about the COVID variant causing 'razor blade' sore throats
A new COVID-19 variant may be causing “razor blade” sore throats in people who get it
Archived version: archive.is/newest/independent.…
Disclaimer: The article linked is from a single source with a single perspective. Make sure to cross-check information against multiple sources to get a comprehensive view on the situation.
adhocfungus likes this.
‘Ice raids while the wealthy party next door’: the migrants living in the shadow of Mar-a-Lago
‘Ice raids while the wealthy party next door’: the migrants living in the shadow of Mar-a-Lago
Five residents of Lake Worth Beach – just 10 miles from Trump’s Maga fortress – share their stories of survival as an immigration crackdown takes its tollGuardian staff reporter (The Guardian)
[JS] The OpenAI Files Document Broken Promises, Safety Compromises, Conflicts of Interest, and Leadership Concerns
Major Areas of Concern:
::: spoiler Restructuring: Analysis of planned changes to the nonprofit's relationship with its for-profit subsidiary
- OpenAI plans to remove limits on investor returns: OpenAI once capped investor profits at a maximum of 100x to ensure that, if the company succeeds in building AI capable of automating all human labor, the proceeds would go to humanity. They have now announced plans to remove that cap.
- OpenAI portrays itself as preserving nonprofit control while potentially disempowering the nonprofit: OpenAI claims to have reversed course on a decision to abandon nonprofit control, but the details suggest that the nonprofit’s board would no longer have all the authority it would need to hold OpenAI accountable to its mission.
- Investors pressured OpenAI to make structural changes: OpenAI has admitted that it is making these changes to appease investors who have made their funding conditional on structural reforms, including allowing unlimited returns—exactly the type of investor influence OpenAI’s original structure was designed to prevent.
:::
::: spoiler CEO Integrity: Concerns regarding leadership practices and misleading representations from OpenAI CEO Sam Altman
- Senior employees have attempted to remove Altman at each of the three major companies he has run: Senior employees at Altman’s first startup twice urged the board to remove him as CEO over “deceptive and chaotic” behavior, while at Y Combinator, he was forced out and accused of absenteeism and prioritizing personal enrichment.
- Altman claimed ignorance of a scheme to coerce employees into ultra-restrictive NDAs: However, he signed documents giving OpenAI the authority to revoke employees’ vested equity if they didn’t sign the NDAs.
- Altman repeatedly lied to board members: For example, Altman stated that the legal team had approved a safety process exemption when they had not, and he reported that one board member wanted another board member removed when that was not the case.
:::
::: spoiler Transparency & Safety: Concerns regarding safety processes, transparency, and organizational culture at OpenAI
- OpenAI coerced employees into signing highly restrictive NDAs threatening their vested equity: Former OpenAI employees faced highly restrictive non-disclosure and non-disparagement agreements that threatened the loss of all vested equity if they ever criticized the company, even after resigning.
- OpenAI has rushed safety evaluation processes: OpenAI rushed safety evaluations of its AI models to meet product deadlines and significantly cut the time and resources dedicated to safety testing.
- OpenAI insiders described a culture of recklessness and secrecy: OpenAI employees have accused the company of not living up to its commitments and systematically discouraging employees from raising concerns.
:::
::: spoiler Conflicts of Interest: Documenting potential conflicts of interest of OpenAI board members
- OpenAI’s nonprofit board has multiple seemingly unaddressed conflicts of interest: While OpenAI defines ‘independent’ directors as those without OpenAI equity, the board appears to overlook conflicts from members' external investments in companies that benefit from OpenAI partnerships.
- CEO Sam Altman downplayed his financial interest in OpenAI: Despite once claiming to have no personal financial interest in OpenAI, much of Altman’s $1.6 billion net worth is spread across investments in OpenAI partners including Retro Biosciences and Rewind AI, which stand to benefit from the company’s continued growth.
- No recusals announced for critical restructuring decision: Despite these conflicts, OpenAI has not announced any board recusals for the critical decision of whether they will restructure and remove profit caps, unlocking billions of dollars in new investment.
:::
The OpenAI Files
The OpenAI Files is the most comprehensive collection to date of documented concerns with governance practices, leadership integrity, and organizational culture at OpenAI.www.openaifiles.org
[JS Required] The OpenAI Files Document Broken Promises, Safety Compromises, Conflicts of Interest, and Leadership Concerns
The OpenAI Files
The OpenAI Files is the most comprehensive collection to date of documented concerns with governance practices, leadership integrity, and organizational culture at OpenAI.www.openaifiles.org
We’ve had a Denisovan skull since the 1930s—only nobody knew
cross-posted from: lemmy.sdf.org/post/36967472
Until now, we only had fragments of these cousins. Now we have face. Studying our evolutionary development and our sister-species is one of my favorite aspects of archeology. We’re constantly developing new information.Side note: look up the initial presentation of Homo naledi. The leading archeologist did a phenomenal talk a couple of years ago (I think in December). It was really an exciting presentation. But I’m also pretty nerdy.
We’ve had a Denisovan skull since the 1930s—only nobody knew
After years of mystery, we now know what at least one Denisovan looked like.Kiona N. Smith (Ars Technica)
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Tough, Tiny, and Totally Repairable: Inside the Framework 12
Tough, Tiny, and Totally Repairable: Inside the Framework 12
We asked: Can it be done? A convertible touchscreen laptop that’s also repairable, really? The Framework 12 is a pastel repair geek’s dream.Elizabeth Chamberlain (iFixit)
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Torna “A Gés!”: natura, tradizione e sapori dal 4 al 6 luglio al Parco Tosi di Borgo Rivola (Riolo Terme -Ra)
Dopo il successo della prima edizione, il Festival “A Gés!” torna dal 4 al 6 luglio a Borgo Rivola, nel Parco Francesca Tosi, alle porte del Parco della Vena del Gesso Romagnola, Patrimonio UNESCO.
Organizzato dalla Pro Loco di Borgo Rivola con il supporto di associazioni locali e il patrocinio della Regione Emilia-Romagna, dell’Unione della Romagna Faentina, del Comune di Riolo Terme e del Parco della Vena del Gesso, il festival promuove le risorse ambientali, culturali ed enogastronomiche della zona.
Cuore della manifestazione sarà il villaggio “A Gés!”, centro di ritrovo per escursionisti e amanti della Romagna autentica. Il programma unisce escursioni, cultura, sapori, musica e laboratori per tutte le età.
Tra le novità, l’apertura della storica Villa Buldrini, che ospiterà mostre, degustazioni e mercatini nel suo parco. Grande attenzione alla cucina tipica, con piatti preparati dalle Azdòre della Pro Loco usando prodotti stagionali e a km zero. Il Giardino delle Erbe di Casola Valsenio proporrà attività sulle erbe officinali.
Eventi da non perdere:
5 luglio: escursione guidata con Trekking Nasturzio lungo il sentiero del Re Tiberio e il borgo dei Crivellari
6 luglio: corsa di montagna con il Tè bòta Team
7 luglio: raduno MTB e gravel bike con ASD Oriani Casola Valsenio
I percorsi offrono viste spettacolari sulla Vena del Gesso e Monte Tondo.
Il festival ospiterà anche racconti storici dell’ANPI Senio River, esposizioni sui carri allegorici in gesso, momenti culturali sulla “Via dei Gessi e dei Calanchi”, concerti live, DJ set, attività per bambini e una drink area a tema, con cocktail originali a base di erbe e frutti dimenticati, a cura dello Hill Party Staff.
Ingresso gratuito e aperto a tutti.
📲 Programma completo su Instagram e Facebook: ages_borgorivola
Torna “A Gés!”: natura, tradizione e sapori dal 4 al 6 luglio al Parco Tosi di Borgo Rivola (Riolo Terme -Ra) - ViaggieMiraggi
Torna il Festival “A Gés!”: natura, tradizione e sapori nella Valle del Senio Dal 4 al 6 luglio 2025 – Parco Francesca Tosi, Borgo Rivola (Riolo Terme) Dopo l’ottimo riscontro della prima edizione, il Festival “A Gés!” torna dal 4...Redazione (ViaggieMiraggi)
Dal 30 giugno al 2 luglio “Acque e miracoli a Tebano”: tre giorni di cammino, musica e buonumore
Dal 30 giugno al 2 luglio 2025, il Polo Tecnologico di Tebano (Faenza) si trasforma in palcoscenico per “Acque e miracoli”, anteprima collinare dell’Arena delle Balle di Paglia. Un evento dove paesaggio, racconto e comunità si incontrano in un’esperienza collettiva tra natura, arte e leggerezza.
Tema 2025: “La follia di fare del bene. Con Don Chisciotte e Sancho Panza”, omaggio alla forza dei visionari e alla tenacia di chi sceglie ogni giorno di costruire bellezza.
Tre giornate dense di appuntamenti:
Lunedì 30 giugno, ore 20: “Pizza in vigna con fisarmonica”, cena su prenotazione (20 euro) con Jakova Bardh all’ex pesa di Tebano.
Martedì 1 luglio, ore 18.30: “Camminata nel panorama dei Miracoli”, 5 km tra i luoghi simbolici del territorio. Dalle 19, street food e vini del Senio. Alle 20, dialogo “Luigi Berardi, una vita da Don Chisciotte” con Marco Sangiorgi. Alle 21, concerto folk-pop de La Compagnia Scapestrati.
Mercoledì 2 luglio, ore 18.30: passeggiata naturalistica dedicata ai gruccioni. Dalle 19, ristoro aperto. Alle 20, “Serata al Vinile con Fonovaligia”. Alle 21, spettacolo comico “Chi ce l’ha fatto fare” con Dondarini e Dalfiume.
Durante le serate: mostra sugli alberi, tavolo delle chiacchiere, libro Racconti del Senio, installazioni di Asia Galeati e Simone Zaccarini, piscina di paglia per bambini, cucina anche vegetariana. Ingresso serate 1 e 2 luglio: offerta minima 2 euro.
Vietato fumare nell’area eventi. Parcheggio gratuito. I percorsi sono accessibili ma si raccomanda buona salute e scarpe adeguate.
Evento promosso da Amici del fiume Senio con il patrocinio dell’Unione della Romagna Faentina, dei Comuni di Castel Bolognese e Faenza, Regione Emilia-Romagna, e il sostegno di vari enti locali.
Dal 30 giugno al 2 luglio “Acque e miracoli a Tebano”: tre giorni di cammino, musica e buonumore - ViaggieMiraggi
“Acque e miracoli a Tebano”: tre giorni di cammino, musica e buonumore aspettando l’Arena delle Balle di Paglia Tre giorni di appuntamenti nella suggestiva cornice di Tebano Dal 30 giugno al 2 luglio 2025, l’area del Polo Tecnologico di Tebano...Redazione (ViaggieMiraggi)
Why a Vaccine Expert Left the C.D.C.: ‘Americans Are Going to Die’
Dr. Fiona Havers is influential among researchers who study immunizations. The wholesale dismissal of the agency’s scientific advisers crossed the line, she said.
In particular, the Trump crime org is trying to make it so thst insurance won't cover vaccines, and the poor die, which prompted this resignation.
RFK Jr. is coming for your vaccines
‘This is going to cost lives. Children are going to suffer.’Lauren Leffer (The Verge)
adhocfungus likes this.
letraset
in reply to letraset • • •Ah yes, what else to expect from »the most intelligent AI assistant that you can freely use«.
airikr
in reply to letraset • • •Grimy
in reply to letraset • • •I really love this new style of journalism where they bash the AI for hallucinating and making clear mistakes, to then take anything it says about itself at face value.
It's a number on a public website. The guy googled it right after and found it. Its simply in the training data, there is nothing "terrifying" about this imo.
davel
in reply to Grimy • • •surph_ninja
in reply to davel • • •davel
in reply to surph_ninja • • •letraset
in reply to Grimy • • •Dran
in reply to Grimy • • •pinball_wizard
in reply to Grimy • • •Right. There's nothing terrifying about the technology.
What is terrifying is how people treat it.
LLMs will cough up anything they have learned to any user. But they do it while successfully giving all the human social cues of an intelligent human who knows how to keep a secret.
This often creates trust for the computer that it doesn't deserve yet.
Examples, like this story, that show how obviously misplaced that trust is, can be terrifying to people who fell for modern LLM intelligence signaling.
Today, most chat bots don't do any permanent learning during chat sessions, but that is gradually changing. This trend should be particularly terrifying to anyone who previously shared (or keeps habitually sharing) things with a chatbot that they probably shouldn't.
orca
in reply to letraset • • •Flames5123
in reply to orca • • •I asked my work’s AI to just give me a comma separated list of string that I gave it, then it returned a list of strings with all the strings being “CREDIT_DEBIT_CARD_NUMBER”. The numbers were 12 digits, not 16. I asked 3 times to give me the raw numbers and had to say exactly “these are 12 digits long not 16. Stop obfuscating it” before it gave me the right things.
I’ve even had it be wrong about simple math. It’s just awful.
orca
in reply to Flames5123 • • •catloaf
in reply to Flames5123 • • •Flames5123
in reply to catloaf • • •kameecoding
in reply to Flames5123 • • •Flames5123
in reply to kameecoding • • •kameecoding
in reply to Flames5123 • • •jim3692
in reply to orca • • •What models have you tried? I used local Llama 3.1 to help me with university math.
It seemed capable of solving differential equations and doing LaPlace transform. It did some mistakes during the calculations, like a math professor in a hurry.
What I found best, was getting a solution from Llama, and validating each step using WolframAlpha.
Chais
in reply to jim3692 • • •Or, and hear me out on this, you could actually learn and understand it yourself! You know? The thing you go to university for?
What would you say if, say, it came to light that an engineer had outsourced the statical analysis of a bridge to some half baked autocomplete? I'd lose any trust in that bridge and respect for that engineer and would hope they're stripped of their title and held personally responsible.
These things currently are worse than useless, by sometimes being right. It gives people the wrong impression that you can actually rely on them.
Edit: just came across this MIT study regarding the cognitive impact of using LLMs: arxiv.org/abs/2506.08872
Your Brain on ChatGPT: Accumulation of Cognitive Debt when Using an AI Assistant for Essay Writing Task
arXiv.orgjim3692
in reply to Chais • • •Ansis100
in reply to Chais • • •Now, I'm not saying you're wrong, but having AI explain a complicated subject in simple terms can be one of the best ways to learn. Sometimes the professor is just that bad and you need a helping hand.
Agreed on the numbers, though. Just use WolframAlpha.
Chais
in reply to Ansis100 • • •pinkapple
in reply to Ansis100 • • •Anyone being patronizing about "not fully learning and understanding" subjects that calls neural networks "autocomplete" is an example of what they preach against. Even if they're the crappiest AI around (they can be), they still have literally nothing to do with n-grams (autocomplete basically), Markov chains, regex parsers etc and I guess people just lazily read "anti-AI hype" popular articles and mindlessly parrot them instead of bothering with layered perceptrons, linear algebra, decoders etc.
The technology itself is promising. It shouldn't be gatekept by corporations. It's usually corporate fine-tuning that makes LLMs incredibly crappier than they can be. There's math-gpt (unrelated with openAI afaik, double check to be sure) and customizable models on huggingface besides wolfram, ideally a local model is preferable for privacy and customization.
They're great at explaining STEM related concepts, that's unrelated to trying to use generic models for computation, getting bad results and dunking on the entire concept even though there are provers and reasoning models for that task that do great at it. Khan academy is also customizing an AI because they can be great for democratizing education, but it needs work. Too bad they're using openAI models.
And like, the one doing statics for a few decades now is usually a gentleman called AutoCAD or Revit so I don't know, I guess we all need to thank Autodesk for bridges not collapsing. It would be very bizarre if anyone used non-specialized tools like random LLMs but people thinking that engineers actually do all the math by hand on paper especially for huge projects is kinda hilarious. Even more hilarious is that Autodesk has incorporated AI automation to newer versions of AutoCAD so yeah, not exactly but they kinda do build bridges lmao.
Chais
in reply to pinkapple • • •They take your prompt and predict the first word of the answer. Then they take the result and predict the next word. Repeat until a minimum length is reached and the answer seems complete. Yes, they're a tad smarter than autocorrect, but they understand just as little of the text they produce. The text will be mostly grammatically correct, but they don't understand it. Much like a compiler can tell you if your code is syntactically correct, but can't judge the logic.
pinkapple
in reply to Chais • • •You're still describing an n-gram. They don't scale or produce coherent text for obvious reasons. The "obvious reasons" is that a. an n-gram doesn't do anything or answer questions, it would just continue your text instead of responding, b. it's only feasible for stuff like autocomplete that fails constantly because the n is like, 2 words at most. The growth is exponential (basic combinatorics). For bigger n you quickly get huge lists of possible combinations. For n the size of a paragraph you'd get computationally unfeasible sizes which would basically be like trying to crack one time pads at minimum. More than that would be impossible due to physics. c. language is too dynamic and contextual to be statistically predictable anyway, even if you had an impossible system that could do anything like the above in human-level time it wouldn't be able to answer things meaningfully, there are a ton of "questions" that are computationally undecideable by purely statistical systems that operate like n-grams. A question isn't some kind of self contained equation-like thing that contains it's own answer through probability distributions from word to word.
Anyway yeah that's the widespread "popular understanding" of how LLMs supposedly work but that's not what neural networks do at all. Emily Bender and a bunch of other people came up with slogans to fight against "AI hype", partly because they dislike techbros, partly because AI is actually hyped and partly because computational linguists are salty about their methods for text generation have completely failed to produce any good results for decades so they're dissing the competition to protect their little guild. All these inaccurate descriptions is how a computational linguist would imagine an LLM's operation i.e. n-grams, Markov chains, regex parsers, etc. That's their own NLP stuff. The AI industry adopted all that because they can avoid liability better by representing LLMs (even the name is misleading tbh) as next token predictors (hidden layers do dot products with matrices, the probability stuff are all decoder strategy + softmax post-output, not an inherent part of an nn) and satisfy the "AI ethicists" simultaneously. "AI ethicists" meaning Bender etc. The industry even fine-tunes LLMs to repeat all that junk so the misinformation continues.
The other thing about "they don't understand anything" is also Bender ripping off Searle's Chinese Room crap like "they have syntactic but not semantic understanding" and came up with another ridic example with an octopus that mimics human communication without understanding it. Searle was trying to diss the old symbolic systems and the Turing Test, Bender reapplied it to LLMs but its still a bunch of nonsense due to combinatorial impossibility. They've never proved how any system would be able to communicate coherently without understanding, it's just anti-AI hype and vibes. The industry doesn't have any incentive to argue against that because it would be embarrassing to claim otherwise and have badly designed and deployed AIs hallucinate. So they're all basically saying that LLMs are philosophical zombies but that's unfalsifiable and nobody can prove that random humans aren't p zombies either so who cares from a CS perspective? It's bad philosophy.
I don't personally gaf about the petty politics of irrelevant academics, perceptrons have been around at least as a basic theory since the 1940s, it's not their field and they don't do what they think. No other neural network is "explained" like this. It's really not a big deal that an AI system achieved semantic comprehension after pushing it for 80 years even if the results are still often imperfect especially since these goons rushed to mass deploy systems that should still be in the lab.
And while I'm not on either hype or anti-hype or omg skynet hysteria bandwagons, I think this whole narrative is lowkey legitimately dangerous considering that industrial LLMs in particular lie their ass off constantly to satisfy fine-tuned requirements but it becomes obscured by the strange idea that they don't really understand what they're yapping about therefore it's not real deception. Old NLP systems can't even respond to questions let alone lie about anything.
Squizzy
in reply to jim3692 • • •Copilot and chatgpt suuuuck at basic maths. I ws doing coupon discount shit, it failed everyone of them. It presented the right formula sometimes but still fucked up really simple stuff.
I asked copilot to reference an old sheet, take column A find its percentage completion in column B and add ten percent to it in the new sheet. I ended up with everything showing 6000% completion.
Copilot is inegrated to excel, its woeful.
Mustakrakish
in reply to orca • • •Clot
in reply to letraset • • •/home/pineapplelover
in reply to letraset • • •pocker_machine
in reply to letraset • • •TLDR: Bot generated random number, happened to be a real person’s phone number
I don’t understand what is “terrifying” about that. Even without the bot, anyone with malicious intent could imagine up a random phone number.
These kind articles with thin content are just used by these news agencies to fit into the “bots are bad” narrative that makes them money. Of course bots are bad in many ways, but not for such flimsy reasons.