[Opinion] AI finds errors in 90% of Wikipedia's best articles
For one month beginning on October 5, I ran an experiment: Every day, I asked ChatGPT 5 (more precisely, its "Extended Thinking" version) to find an error in "Today's featured article". In 28 of these 31 featured articles (90%), ChatGPT identified what I considered a valid error, often several. I have so far corrected 35 such errors.
RRF Caserta. Cronache Africane. Rapimento studentesse Colpi di Stato Narcostati Economia
Epstein email exchanges planned strategy, edits and reported progress
Related: "I have been asked by Jeffrey Epstein ..."
This article uses Jeffrey Epstein's emails (which were recently released by the U.S. House Oversight Committee) to follow up on a Signpost article from March 2020 about Epstein. These emails are not part of the Epstein files, which are required by Epstein Files Transparency Act to be released by the DOJ within 30 days of passage of the act, i.e. by around December 19.
like this
Technology reshared this.
[LTT] Building a Computer with the CREATOR of Linux! - Linus Torvalds Collab PC
- YouTube
Profitez des vidéos et de la musique que vous aimez, mettez en ligne des contenus originaux, et partagez-les avec vos amis, vos proches et le monde entier.www.youtube.com
Technology reshared this.
Anthropic claims Chinese state-sponsored hackers used Claude Code to access data from and leave backdoors in over 30 companies using AI-automated cyberattacks
AI firm claims Chinese spies used its tech to automate cyber attacks
The company claimed in a blog post this was the "first reported AI-orchestrated cyber espionage campaign".Joe Tidy (BBC News)
India orders smartphone makers to preload state-owned cyber safety app
India's telecoms ministry has privately asked smartphone makers to preload all new devices with a state-owned cyber security app that cannot be deleted, a government order showed
like this
Technology reshared this.
Turns out, the Government is just another company now.
South Korea police say 120,000 home cameras hacked for 'sexploitation' footage
South Korea police say 120,000 home cameras hacked for 'sexploitation' footage
The cameras were located in private homes, karaoke rooms, a Pilates studio and a gynaecologist's clinic.Gavin Butler (BBC News)
like this
How do streaming sites work? Not the "official" the other 'free' ones
Technology reshared this.
blog.velocix.com/cdn-leeching-…
CDN Leeching: the hidden threat undermining streaming performance & profits
CDN leeching is draining streaming performance and profits. Explore strategies to detect, prevent, and reduce its impact.blog.velocix.com
Social and Organizational Talks at FOSDEM 2026
Hey, all. One thing that’s different this year about the Social Web Devroom at FOSDEM 2026 is that we’re going to include talks about the organizational and social aspects of rolling out Open Source Fediverse software for individuals and communities. Last year, we focused pretty heavily on technical talks from the principle developers of FLOSS packages. This year, we want to make sure the other aspects of Fediverse growth and improvement are covered, too.
Consequently, the guidance for last year’s event, which was focused on how to make a great technical presentation, might seem a little outdated. But on reviewing it, I’ve found that it still has good advice for social and organizational talks. Just like software developers, community builders see problems and construct solutions for them. The solutions aren’t just about writing code, though; more often they involve bringing people together, assembling off-the-shelf tools, and making processes and rules for interaction.
Talks about Open Source software to implement ActivityPub and build the social web are still welcome, of course. We’re just expanding a bit to cover the human aspects of the Fediverse as well.
I’m looking forward to having the interesting discussions about bringing people together to make the Social Web. If you haven’t already, please consider submitting a talk to pretalx.fosdem.org/fosdem-2026…. Select “Social Web” from the “Track” dropdown, and include the length of your talk (8/25/50) in the submission notes. The deadline is December 1, 2025, so get them in as soon as possible!
California immunization leader blasts FDA vaccine chief’s unsupported claim of child deaths
This post uses a gift link which requires some people to register to access it.
Not posting an archive.is link to bypass the paywall because Hearst has lawyers which don't like that.
CA immunization leader blasts FDA official’s child-death claim
California's immunization leader blasts FDA vaccine chief’s unsupported claim of child deaths, calling it 'reckless'Ko Lyn Cheang (San Francisco Chronicle)
GitHub to Codeberg: my experience
GitHub → Codeberg: my experience
In which I talk about the process involved in switching forges, and how well that went.ISSOtm's warehouse
adhocfungus likes this.
UN Ditches Google for Taking Form Submissions, Opts for an Open Source Solution Instead
UN Ditches Google for Taking Form Submissions, Opts for an Open Source Solution Instead
The United Nations opts for an open source alternative to Google Forms.Sourav Rudra (It's FOSS)
like this
Technology reshared this.
You Want Microservices, but Do You Need Them?
You Want Microservices—But Do You Need Them? | Docker
Before you default to microservices, weigh hidden costs and consider a modular monolith or SOA. Learn when Docker delivers consistency and scale—without sprawl.Manish Hatwalne (Docker)
like this
Yes.
abc.net.au/news/2025-10-28/ven…
ABC News
ABC News provides the latest news and headlines in Australia and around the world.Elissa Steedman (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)
RRF Caserta. Sport. Basket serie B. San Severo 75 Juve Caserta 85
Amazon’s AI ‘Banana Fish’ Dubs Are Hilariously, Inexcusably Bad
They are also AI dubbing show that already have a dub:
xcancel.com/Pikagreg/status/19…
like this
Technology reshared this.
They’re pretty bad outside of English-Chinese actually.
Voice-to-voice is all relatively new, and it sucks if it’s not all integrated (eg feeding a voice model plain text so it loses the original tone, emotion, cadence and such).
And… honestly, the only models I can think of that'd be good at this are Chinese. Or Japanese finetunes of Chinese models. Amazon certainly has some stupid policy where they aren’t allowed to use them (even with zero security risk since they’re open weights).
Afghan accused of shooting 2 National Guard members was part of CIA-backed unit whose veterans have struggled in the U.S.
Afghan accused of shooting 2 National Guard members was part of CIA-backed unit whose veterans have struggled in the U.S.
Rahmanullah Lakanwal was a member of a “Zero Unit,” an elite squad of Afghans who have faced hardships in the U.S. due to visa and employment issues.Dan De Luce (NBC News)
Building the PERFECT Linux PC with Linus Torvalds
- YouTube
Profitez des vidéos et de la musique que vous aimez, mettez en ligne des contenus originaux, et partagez-les avec vos amis, vos proches et le monde entier.www.youtube.com
like this
Technology reshared this.
Fatti e non...
Sì, ma, il mondo non va male solo per via di piccoli atti negativi di ognuno, ma anche perché gli atti negativi di alcuni vengono premiati al punto di portare quegli alcuni ai vertici del potere
Un minimo di teoria lì può servire, visto che quel potere si contrasta solo con un'azione coordinata e unita delle persone comuni
Don't throw away your old PC—it makes a better NAS than anything you can buy
Don't throw away your old PC—it makes a better NAS than anything you can buy
Doing it yourself is way more cost effective.Nick Lewis (How-To Geek)
like this
Technology reshared this.
The moment the Windows installer detected it, a blue screen ended the installation.
But a Linux installation worked and afterwards it was even possible to disable the damaged hardware permanently.
The laptop still runs without further problems.
Don't throw away your old PC
Literally first-world problems, right? There's absolutely no need to tell that to someone that don't live on a rich country. Old gear always finds some use or is sold/donated away.
Le Forze di Difesa Israeliane vietano i telefoni Android: gli iPhone ora sono "obbligatori"
Le Forze di Difesa Israeliane vietano i telefoni Android: gli iPhone ora sono "obbligatori"
Aggiornato il 30 novembre con un nuovo attacco informatico che prende di mira gli smartphone israeliani.
Ecco, questo è interessante. Poche settimane dopo la campagna di Google per promuovere Android come più sicuro di iPhone, la battaglia degli smartphone ha preso una piega improvvisa. L'esercito israeliano ha deciso di vietare i telefoni Android agli ufficiali superiori, per motivi di sicurezza.
La notizia è stata diffusa dalla radio dell'esercito israeliano e ripresa dal Jerusalem Post. "Secondo l'ordine previsto, ai comandanti dal grado di tenente colonnello in su sarà consentito utilizzare solo iPhone per le comunicazioni ufficiali. Secondo il rapporto, questa misura mira a ridurre il rischio di intrusioni nei telefoni degli ufficiali superiori".
IDF bans Androids for senior officers, mandates iPhones | The Jerusalem Post
A new directive would restrict IDF-issued devices to iPhones for lieutenant colonels, reducing the risk of intrusions for senior officers.The Jerusalem Post | JPost.com
like this
DRAM prices are spiking, but I don't trust the industry's reasons why
DRAM prices are spiking, but I don't trust the industry's reasons why
There are a lot of reasons to be skeptical.Adam Conway (XDA)
like this
Technology reshared this.
The NAND market is an effective monopoly that has been caught price fixing in the past. They desperately want to keep prices as high as they can so they tightly control supply to prevent having any excess product. This screws everyone over as soon as there's a spike in demand that they failed to account for.
Instead of just keeping a consistent supply and allowing prices to drop from competition, we end up with a price rollercoaster that peaks every few years then crashes back down again. The severity is just higher than usual due to the higher demand from data centers.
The market desperately needs a new player that just consistently creates supply instead of playing stupid games, but the barrier to entry is too high.
like this
like this
Fifteen Years Together and Her Tone Still Hits Like a Chalkboard
So yesterday I’m just trying to run a simple errand at the local store. This place is pet friendly, which is the only reason I tolerate it, so I had my dog with me. He’s the friendly one in the family, obviously.
And who’s standing there at her job like a plot twist I didn’t ask for?
My ex-wife. Fifteen-plus years of history wrapped in one human speedbump.
She spots my dog and suddenly she’s all sunshine, petting him like we didn’t survive a whole era together. My dog loves it, because he’s a dog and he’s smart enough not to get emotionally involved. Meanwhile, I’m standing there doing my usual routine: stay pleasant, stay tolerable, don’t let the annoyance leak out of my face.
My current wife talked to her more than I did, which is probably for the best. I kept it tight. Didn’t say much. Didn’t need to. I was just trying to get through the moment without my eye twitching.
But here’s the part that hit me like a bad flashback:
After all those years, her tone still grates on me. It’s unreal. It’s that chalkboard-scrape sound that makes your molars hurt. It’s that dial-up internet scream from the 90s, the one that made the whole house vibrate before you could connect for five minutes of slow loading misery. Somehow her voice still has that frequency that goes straight to the spine.
It wasn’t emotional. It wasn’t dramatic. It wasn’t even awkward.
It was just… noisy. Not loud, just that same old tone that reminds me exactly why life is better now.
We walked out. My wife and I joked about it. My dog? He just wanted more scratches. Must be nice.
Anyway, that’s how my quiet shopping trip turned into an unexpected reunion with the soundtrack of my past. Life really does throw curveballs, even the annoying ones.
Tech-tinkering geocacher who questions everything and dodges people on a purpose. Introverted agnostic, punk at heart, and a self-taught dev who learned things the hard way because nothing else ever sticks.
Eric Foltin
Geocacher / Pessimist / Agnostic / Introvert / Archivist / Punker / Self-Taught DevEric Foltin
Datacenters in space are a terrible, horrible, no good idea.
Datacenters in space are a terrible, horrible, no good idea.
There is a rush for AI companies to team up with space launch/satellite companies to build datacenters in space. TL;DR: It's not going to work.Taranis
like this
Reticulum: Unstoppable Networks for The People - markqvist's talk at 38C3
Reticulum: Unstoppable Networks for The People
Reticulum is a cryptography-based networking stack for building local and wide-area networks with readily available hardware. Reticulum c...media.ccc.de
Sunday, November 30, 2025
Share
The Kyiv Independent [unofficial]
We are looking for 500 supporters of the truth and independent press. Can we count you in?
Olga Rudenko, editor-in-chief
at the Kyiv Independent
Russia’s war against Ukraine
High-rise residential building on fire in Vyshhorod, Kyiv Oblast, following a Russian drone attack on Nov. 30 (DSNS Poltava / Facebook)
1 killed, 11 injured in Russian drone attack on Kyiv Oblast. One person was killed and 11 people were injured in Vyshhorod district as Russia launched a drone attack on Kyiv Oblast overnight on Nov. 30.
Americans showing ‘constructive approach’ in peace talks, Zelensky says as Ukrainian delegates arrive in US. Ukrainian officials will meet with Marco Rubio, Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner in Florida on Nov. 30. Zelensky said a final agreement could be ready “in the coming days.”
Zelensky’s ex-chief of staff Yermak says he’s ‘going to the front’ after resigning amid corruption probe. Former Presidential Office head Andriy Yermak said he intends to go to the front line after resigning from his post amid a major corruption investigation, the New York Post reported on Nov. 28, citing a letter he sent the outlet.
‘Successful’ Ukrainian naval drone strike disables 2 Russian shadow fleet tankers, source says. The operation targeted ships that, according to the source, could have transported nearly $70 million worth of oil and helped Moscow bypass international sanctions.
Ukraine attacks one of southern Russia’s largest oil refineries, sparks fire.
Ukraine’s military targeted the Afipsky Oil Refinery in Krasnodar Krai — one of southern Russia’s largest refineries — overnight on Nov. 29, the General Staff of the Ukrainian Armed Forces reported.
Your contribution helps keep the Kyiv Independent going. Become a member today.
‘Half of Kyiv without electricity’ — 2 killed, 38 injured in ‘serious‘ Russian attack on capital. Russia launched a mass missile and drone attack against Kyiv overnight on Nov. 29, killing two people and injuring 38 others, including a child, Ukraine’s State Emergency Service reported.
Russian drone violated Moldovan airspace during 10-hour attack on Kyiv, Chisinau says. Russian drones violated Moldova’s airspace during Moscow’s mass overnight attack against Kyiv, Moldovan President Maia Sandu said on Nov. 29.
‘Time to update’ Ukraine’s defense documents, Zelensky says after meeting top military, intelligence officials. President Volodymyr Zelensky met with Defense Minister Denys Shmyhal and military intelligence chief Kyrylo Budanov on Nov. 29 and ordered a revision of Ukraine’s core defense documents.
Drone attack forces oil terminal in Russia’s Novorossiysk to halt all loading operations. Naval drones struck the Caspian Pipeline Consortium’s marine terminal in the Russian port city of Novorossiysk on Nov. 29, forcing the facility to suspend oil shipments, the company said.
Learn more
Five ways to keep Ukraine in your news feed
The world increasingly turns its attention to Russia’s war against Ukraine only when a new round of peace negotiations begins. Here on the ground, however, the war doesn’t slow down between those waves of talks.
Photo: Lisa Litvinenko/The Kyiv Independent
Independent journalism is never easy, and it’s even harder in wartime
Yet we can do it without paywalls, billionaires, or compromise — because of our community. Help us reach 25,000 members by the end of 2025.
International response
Russian victory would cost Europe twice as much as supporting Ukraine, study finds. A Russian military victory in Ukraine would cost Europe twice as much as a Ukrainian victory, according to a new study by Corisk and the Norwegian Institute of International Affairs published on Nov. 25.
Zelensky, Macron to hold talks on ‘durable peace’ in Paris Dec. 1.
The leaders will discuss “the conditions of a just and durable peace” in Ukraine, according to French President Emmanuel Macron’s office.
In other news
Russia declares Human Rights Watch an ‘undesirable organization’. Russia’s Ministry of Justice designated Human Rights Watch an “undesirable organization” on Nov. 28, effectively banning the group from operating in the country.
Daughter of former South African president resigns from parliament amid investigation into Russian military recruitment scheme. Duduzile Zuma-Sambudla, the daughter of former South African President Jacob Zuma, resigned from parliament after being accused of helping lure 17 South African men to fight for the Russian military in Ukraine, her party announced on Nov. 29.
This newsletter is open for sponsorship. Boost your brand’s visibility by reaching thousands of engaged subscribers. Click here for more details.
Today’s Ukraine Daily was brought to you by Lucy Pakhnyuk, Dmytro Basmat, Yuliia Taradiuk, Tim Zadorozhnyy, Sonya Bandouil, and Abbey Fenbert.
If you’re enjoying this newsletter, consider joining our membership program. Start supporting independent journalism today.
Share
Vom Nischenthema zur Technologiepolitik: #cnetz gibt sich neuen Sound – Jarzombek skizziert den „Deutschland-Stack“
Im Konrad-Adenauer-Haus in Berlin vollzieht das cnetz an diesem Wochenende einen Kurswechsel – programmatisch wie stilistisch. Zum Auftakt der Jahreshauptversammlung kündigte Sprecher Prof. Jörg Müller-Lietzkow an, das Netzwerk wolle „wieder lauter“ werden, sich stärker einmischen und einen eigenen Sound in der Digitalpolitik etablieren. Netzpolitik, so seine Botschaft, sei die Debatte von gestern. Künftig gehe es um Digitalpolitik als Technologiepolitik – und darum, wie Deutschland seine digitale Infrastruktur, seine Souveränität und seine Innovationsfähigkeit neu ordnet.
cnetz will zurück in den Maschinenraum der Politik
Müller-Lietzkow ließ keinen Zweifel daran, dass sich das Netzwerk nach einer Phase relativer Funkstille neu positionieren will. Viele hätten in den vergangenen Jahren gefragt, warum man so wenig vom cnetz höre, erzählte er. Die Antwort: Die Zeit der leisen Hintergrundarbeit sei vorbei, nun solle aus dem Netzwerk wieder eine hörbare Stimme werden – auch dann, wenn dies in Berlin nicht jedem gefalle.
Der Anspruch ist hoch: Weg von Detailstreitigkeiten über Uploadfilter (schöne Grüße in Richtung von Axel Voss) oder einzelne Social-Media-Regeln, hin zu den großen Linien der Technologiepolitik – technologische Souveränität, digitale Infrastruktur, KI-Einsatz im Staat, europäische Plattform-Ökonomie. Der Begriff Netzpolitik wird von Müller-Lietzkow fast demonstrativ zur historischen Kategorie erklärt. Wer heute über Digitalisierung spreche, müsse in Systemen denken: Stack, Datenräume, Cloud, KI-Agenten, Genehmigungsprozesse.
„Ohne cnetz hätte es dieses Ministerium nicht gegeben“
Der zweite Schwerpunkt des Tages: die Rolle des cnetz beim Aufbau des neuen Bundesministeriums für Digitales und Staatsmodernisierung. Thomas Jarzombek, Parlamentarischer Staatssekretär im Haus von Kersten Wildberger, zeichnete die Linie explizit nach.
Er würdigte das Netzwerk als „Stachel im Fleisch“ der Union: Ohne den kontinuierlichen Druck und die inhaltlichen Impulse aus dem cnetz, so Jarzombek, hätte es das eigenständige Digitalministerium in dieser Form nicht gegeben. Das sei mehr als eine Höflichkeitsfloskel – Jarzombek verwies auf die lange gemeinsame Vorgeschichte: vom frühen „digitalpolitischen Verein“ bis zu Strategiedebatten in der Merkel-Ära.
Mit dem neuen Ministerium verbinde sich nun ein Paradigmenwechsel: weg von verstreuten Zuständigkeiten und blockierenden Ressort-Egoismen, hin zu einer Instanz, die Standards setzen, IT-Projekte bündeln und Prioritäten definieren könne.
Der Deutschland-Stack als digitale Grundinfrastruktur
Den inhaltlichen Kern seiner Rede widmete Jarzombek dem „Deutschland-Stack“ – einer digitalen Grundinfrastruktur für Verwaltung und Wirtschaft. Ziel sei es, eine durchgängige Architektur zu schaffen, in der zentrale Prinzipien wie „APIs first“, Wiederverwendung von Komponenten, einheitliche Datenformate und Portabilität von Anfang an mitgedacht würden.
Drei Elemente hob er besonders hervor:
- E-Wallet für digitale Identitäten: Die bisherige eID auf dem Personalausweis werde von einer alltagstauglichen Wallet abgelöst, die Bürgerinnen und Bürger für Verwaltungsprozesse ebenso nutzen könnten wie Unternehmen für Authentifizierung und Signaturen. Die Nutzung soll niedrigschwelliger werden – aber technisch so robust, dass Verwaltung und Wirtschaft darauf aufbauen können.
- Registermodernisierung: Anstatt Bürger und Unternehmen immer wieder die gleichen Daten beizubringen, sollen Register miteinander sprechen. Anträge – vom BAföG bis zu Fachverfahren in der Verwaltung – sollen künftig automatisiert prüfen können, ob die Voraussetzungen erfüllt sind.
- KI-gestützte Großvorhabensteuerung: Als Schaufensterprojekt nannte Jarzombek die geplante Genehmigungsplattform, die mit Hilfe von KI-Agenten Großprojekte wie Brücken, Bahntrassen, Stromtrassen oder die Wasserstoff-Infrastruktur begleitet. Heute dauerten Planfeststellungsverfahren fünf bis acht Jahre – die erste Version der Plattform solle diese Zeit perspektivisch halbieren.
KI-Agenten gegen den deutschen Genehmigungsstau
Besonders konkret wurde Jarzombek bei der Genehmigungsplattform. Über 100 Millionen Euro stelle der Bund bereit, um im Wettbewerb Lösungen zu entwickeln, die ganze Genehmigungsprozesse Ende-zu-Ende digital abbilden.
Antragsunterlagen mit bis zu 20 Aktenordnern sollen zunächst automatisiert auf Vollständigkeit und Widersprüche geprüft werden. Die Plattform markiert den Sachbearbeitern, wo Gutachten und Antragsbestandteile nicht zusammenpassen – allein dieser Schritt könne mehrere Monate Verfahren sparen.
Noch deutlicher wird das Potenzial bei der Bürgerbeteiligung: Tausende oder gar Hunderttausende Einwendungen, bislang als Papierflut in die Behörden getragen, könnten in wenigen Stunden digital erfasst, clustert und nach Argumentationsmustern strukturiert werden. Das System liefert nicht nur eine Übersicht, welche Argumente wie oft vorgebracht werden, sondern auch Vorlagen für die juristische Auswertung und eine automatische Generierung des Planfeststellungsbeschlusses.
Das Versprechen ist ambitioniert: Der deutsche Genehmigungsstau soll nicht länger mit mehr Personal, sondern mit mehr Algorithmus bekämpft werden – ohne die politische Verantwortung aus der Hand zu geben.
Sonderwege unter Druck
Jarzombek kündigte einen Zustimmungsvorbehalt an: Künftig sollen alle Ressorts ihre großen IT-Projekte beim Digitalministerium anmelden und abstimmen müssen.
Die Logik dahinter: Statt unterschiedlich gestrickter Fachverfahren, Portale und Plattformen sollen wiederverwendbare Bausteine entstehen, die bundesweit funktionieren.
In der Diskussion klang durch, was kaum jemand offen ausspricht: Wer sich dem Stack entzieht, riskiert, technologisch und organisatorisch abgehängt zu werden.
Digitale Souveränität: mehr als Symbolpolitik
Ein weiterer roter Faden der Tagung in der CDU-Bundesgeschäftsstelle war die Frage nach digitaler Souveränität. Jarzombek beschrieb, wie sehr Deutschland und Europa von US-Cloud-Anbietern und Plattformen abhängig seien – und wie schwer es europäischen Herausforderern falle, in öffentlichen Ausschreibungen überhaupt als ernsthafte Option wahrgenommen zu werden.
Die Devise: keine Abschottung, kein plumper Protektionismus, aber eine bewusste Stärkung europäischer Anbieter und Architekturen. Das Wirtschaftsargument liegt auf der Hand: Wenn Wertschöpfung künftig vor allem über Software und Services statt über Hardware erzielt wird, entscheidet die Plattformfrage über künftigen Wohlstand.
Dazu gehört auch, Regulierung so zu gestalten, dass sie Innovation ermöglicht statt verhindert – etwa über den „Digital Omnibus“, mit dem Datenschutz- und KI-Regeln für kleine und mittlere Unternehmen handhabbarer werden sollen.
Ein Netzwerk meldet sich zurück
Am Ende steht ein doppeltes Signal: Das cnetz meldet sich als politischer Akteur zurück – mit dem Anspruch, technologiepolitische Debatten nicht nur zu kommentieren, sondern aktiv zu prägen. Und das Digitalministerium setzt mit Deutschland-Stack, Genehmigungsplattform und E-Wallet eine Agenda, die deutlich über Symbolpolitik hinausgeht.
Für Unternehmen, Verwaltungen und Länder bedeutet das: Die Komfortzone der „Pilotprojekte“ ist vorbei. Wer jetzt nicht beginnt, sich in diese Architektur einzufügen – technisch, organisatorisch und mental –, wird sich in wenigen Jahren in einer Parallelwelt wiederfinden, in der alte Sonderwege sehr realen Standortnachteil bedeuten.
Der neue Sound, den cnetz für sich reklamiert, ist damit zugleich ein Stresstest für die digitale Republik: Ob aus den wohlklingenden Ankündigungen belastbare Infrastruktur wird, entscheidet sich nicht in Talkrunden, sondern in Vergabestellen, Fachverfahren und Genehmigungsbehörden – genau dort, wo der Deutschland-Stack ansetzen soll.
Windows drive letters are not limited to A-Z
Windows drive letters are not limited to A-Z - ryanliptak.com
If you want €:\, you can have it, sort ofwww.ryanliptak.com
Technology reshared this.
Remember these soldiers filmed 3 days ago murdering two surrendered palestinians ? Ben-Gvir just promoted their officer
From this source, the soldiers were interrogated for 5 hours, and were then released without conditions. Their weapons were not confiscated, and they returned to their unit.
And if Israel doesn't want "terrorists", then they simply have to accept the Oslo agreements, they could have been at peace even before the 90s if they weren't so selfish and greedy(, they don't care about al-Aqsa for example). Sadistic abusers playing the victims.
mecaforpeace.org/one-palestini…
Ben-Gvir promotes officer whose soldiers shot dead surrendered Palestinians
A day after Border Police officers shot two Palestinians dead after they had raised their hands, National Security Minister Ben-Gvir visited their unit's base to 'strengthen and hug heroic fighters' and announce the promotion of their commanderJosh Breiner (Haaretz)
like this
like this
eta Platforms har förbjudit politisk reklam på sina sociala medier som exempelvis Facebook, Instagram och Threads. Alphabet har förbjudit det i alla sina kanaler som exempelvis Google och Youtube. Information från Valmyndigheten omfattas också av förbudet när det gäller Metas sociala medier. Det innebär att det är svårare för Valmyndigheten att infoformera om valet nästa år.
Forpasis Rob Moerbeek, vivanta institucio
Rob Moerbeek eklaboris en la Centra Oficejo de UEA en Roterdamo en 1969. Ĉiuj, kiuj iam vizitis la oficejon, certe konas kaj memoras lian senpretendan afablecon. Lia lasta labortago tie estis la 7-a de novembro 2025. Tri semajnojn poste li forpasis en la aĝo de 89 jaroj.
Datacenters in space are a terrible, horrible, no good idea.
Datacenters in space are a terrible, horrible, no good idea.
There is a rush for AI companies to team up with space launch/satellite companies to build datacenters in space. TL;DR: It's not going to work.Taranis
like this
Technology reshared this.
presente dell’octo di fine ’25 tra tormenti e riflessioni integralmente cosmiche
Stanotte ho proprio stabilito un nuovissimo record negativo, andando a letto alle 2 e mezza e… addormentandomi alle 4 e passa o qualcosa del genere; perché stanotte, come quella dell’altro giorno, ero maledettamente tormentata e ultimamente con me non c’è proprio versi a riguardo… Nella trappola del pensare involontariamente anziché riuscire a prendere sonno, però, […]
octospacc.altervista.org/2025/…
presente dell'octo di fine '25 tra tormenti e riflessioni integralmente cosmiche - fritto misto di octospacc
Stanotte ho proprio stabilito un nuovissimo record negativo, andando a letto alle 2 e mezza e... addormentandomi alle 4 e passa o qualcosa del genere; perché sminioctt (fritto misto di octospacc)
The human cost of renewables: Why Australia should build solar here
cross-posted from: lemmy.sdf.org/post/46467998
With the renewable energy transition underway in Australia, the higher than expected uptake of solar panels has human rights groups concerned about links to Uyghur forced labour in the supply chain. As Australia looks into developing its own solar panel industry, rights groups say government and industry should work to ensure the clean energy transition isn't at the cost of freedom.[...]
Without a domestic supply chain, though, Australia is importing around 90 per cent of its solar panels from China.
Ramila Chanisheff, President of the Australian Uyghur Tangritagh Women's Association, says her people are being forced to make them.
“We know that the biggest industry that is complicit in Uyghur forced labour is the solar industry or the wind turbine industry or the EV vehicles.”
Since 2016, the Chinese government has reportedly kidnapped and detained millions of Uyghur people in the Xinjiang province, known to its indigenous Uyghur population as East Turkistan.
In what was officially described as an effort to combat extremism, around one million members of the majority Muslim Uyghur minority were sent to so-called re-education centres between 2017 and 2019.
Evidence and testimony from ex-detainees reveals torture and political indoctrination, forced sterilisation and drugging, as well as food deprivation to punish those who showed resistance.
An official Chinese government report published in November 2020 documents the “placement” of 2.6 million minority citizens in farms and factories within the Uyghur Region and across the country through state-sponsored initiatives.
[...]
“We do have credible evidence and Uyghur who have spoken about their family members who've been taken into the concentration camps, which have with research, and that's come out that they are turned into labour camps. All those Uyghur reserve being put into forced labour within East Turkistan or Xinjiang and or being trafficked to mainland China to do the work.”
[...]
Australia has poured billions into solar power and green manufacturing and the Australian Renewable Energy Agency is currently funding feasibility studies for new domestic polysilicon production facilities.
But for now, with a few small exceptions, Australia still imports most of its solar panels from China.
Fuzz Kitto is the co-founder of Be Slavery Free, which works to raise awareness and end modern slavery.
“The conflict between climate and human rights commitment has led investors to feel that they've got no choice but to invest in companies sourcing, or connected to, the Xinjiang region despite the human rights abuses that are there. And even though the experts say that there's enough outside of that region to supply the United States, Europe and leading countries in their needs for solar produced electricity, it is certainly not being transparent about where these are coming from. In fact, quite opaque sometimes and a lot of greenwashing.”
[...]
To make solar panels you need solar-grade polysilicon, which is made from silica sand produced from quartz.
China manufactures around 95 per cent of the global supply of polysilicon, much of it made in factories with links to forced Uyghur labour.
According to the Australian Mining Review, Australia is the largest silica sand exporter in the Asia-Pacific region, with most of our exports going to Chinese markets.
[...]
Fuzz Kitto says we should be making it here.
“I think one of the great difficulties is that people think that there are no alternatives and now there are a growing amount of that. The thing is that in Xinjiang there are the sands that produce the polysilicon. So to produce poly silicons, basically you need cheap electricity and you need sands of that quality. We do have sands of that quality in Australia, not quite of the standard of Xinjiang. In fact, we export sand to China for the making of polysilicons, which is just incredible. Why we are not producing an industry in Australia of making them is beyond us.”
[...]
UEA ne sukcesis vendi sian domon
La planata vendo de la Centra Oficejo de UEA ĝis nun ne efektiviĝis, ĉar la aĉetonto ne sukcesis pagi la garantiaĵon. UEA tamen esperas, ke la vendokontrakto povos esti subskribita post la jarŝanĝo. Plu mankas plano por la estonteco de la libroservo.
Companies swamped by 3,000 hours of paperwork to tap EU climate funds
Companies swamped by 3,000 hours of paperwork to tap EU climate funds
Of the €7.1bn awarded from the bloc’s flagship innovation programme for clean tech, only 5% has been paid outAlice Hancock (Financial Times)
thisisbutaname likes this.
Reticulum: Unstoppable Networks for The People - markqvist's talk at 38C3
Reticulum: Unstoppable Networks for The People
Reticulum is a cryptography-based networking stack for building local and wide-area networks with readily available hardware. Reticulum c...media.ccc.de
Technology reshared this.
Power surge: law changes could soon bring balcony solar to millions across US | Tweaks to state laws mean many Americans will be able to benefit from small, simple plug-in solar panels
Balcony solar panels are now widespread in countries such as Germany – where more than 1m homes have them – but have until now been stymied in the US by state regulations. This is set to change, with lawmakers in New York and Pennsylvania filing bills to join Utah in adopting permission for the panels, with Vermont, Maryland and New Hampshire set to follow suit soon.
Power surge: law changes could soon bring balcony solar to millions across US
Tweaks to state laws mean many Americans will be able to benefit from small, simple plug-in solar panelsOliver Milman (The Guardian)
Many Fighting Climate Change Worry They Are Losing the Information War
Shifting politics, intensive lobbying and surging disinformation online have undermined international efforts to respond to the threat.
like this
You're right
I'm very much in the left camp and I do fear its too late. I fear that in the next 5 decades, millions if not billions will die and that we might actually face a societal collapse
Governments don't give a shit about climate, they're too dumb
Companies don't give a shit about climate because their owners direct the actions and they only care about money
So how exactly should I be positive and have a "let's go fix this!" attitude?
I'm tired, really really tired
So how exactly should I be positive and have a "let's go fix this!" attitude?
Fix what ? The civilization hell bent on destroying the biosphere and collapsing civilization ?
Climate change is the answer, just try not to not be at the front of the queue, try not to make it worse with your actions and how you vote and enjoy life as best you can. That's about all a sane person can do.
nationalobserver.com/2024/06/1…
Rees bluntly states, “the human enterprise is effectively subsuming the ecosphere” and “wide-spread societal collapse cannot be averted — collapse is not a problem to be solved, but rather the final stage of a cycle to be endured.”
Sri Lanka’s capital hit by floods as cyclone death toll nears 200
The climate crisis has affected storm patterns, including the duration and intensity of the season, leading to heavier rainfall, flash flooding and stronger wind gusts.
Sri Lanka’s capital hit by floods as cyclone death toll nears 200
Hundreds of people still missing after heavy rain and mudslides in country’s deadliest natural disaster for yearsGuardian staff reporter (The Guardian)
like this
Glitch leaves most public toilets at Tokyo's Haneda Airport unable to flush
Turkey condemns Ukrainian strikes on Russian oil tankers off Black Sea coast
The Turkish Foreign Ministry spokesman has condemned Ukrainian drone attacks on two Russian “shadow fleet” oil tankers in the Black Sea
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.
Tropical storm deaths top 600 in South-east Asia; over 4 million people affected
Relief efforts for tens of thousands of displaced people continued over the weekend.
Archived version: archive.is/newest/straitstimes…
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.
Tropical storm deaths top 600 in South-east Asia; over 4 million people affected
Relief efforts for tens of thousands of displaced people continued over the weekend. Read more at straitstimes.com.ST
UK | Thousands rally in London to mark International Day of Solidarity with Palestinians
Thousands of people marched through central London on Saturday to mark the International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian people, calling for an end to Israel’s occupation and for the UK to halt arms sales to Israel, Anadolu reports.
Archived version: archive.is/newest/middleeastmo…
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.
dukemirage
in reply to King • • •like this
fistac0rpse, FaceDeer, Get_Off_My_WLAN, Lasslinthar e KaRunChiy like this.
anamethatisnt
in reply to dukemirage • • •I find that an extremely simplified way of finding out whether the use of an LLM is good or not is whether the output from it is used as a finished product or not. Here the human uses it to identify possible errors and then verify the LLM output before acting and the use of AI isn't mentioned at all for the corrections.
The only danger I see is that errors the LLM didn't find will continue to go undiscovered, but they probably would be undiscovered without the use of the LLM too.
like this
fistac0rpse, FaceDeer, goldenbug, Get_Off_My_WLAN, Lasslinthar, missingno e KaRunChiy like this.
porcoesphino
in reply to anamethatisnt • • •I think the first part you wrote is a bit hard to parse but I think this is related:
I think the problematic part of most genAI use cases is validation at the end. If you're doing something that has a large amount of exploration but a small amount of validation, like this, then it's useful.
A friend was using it to learn the linux command line, that can be framed as having a single command at the end that you copy, paste and validate. That isn't perfect because the explanation could still be off and it wouldn't be validated but I think it's still a better use case than most.
If you're asking for the grand unifying theory of gravity then:
- validation isn't built into the task (so you're unlikely to do it with time).
- validation could be as time intensive as the task (so there is no efficiency gain if you validate).
- its beyond your ability to validate so if it says nice things about you then a subset of people will decide the tool is amazing.
like this
Australis13, Get_Off_My_WLAN e missingno like this.
anamethatisnt
in reply to porcoesphino • • •Yeah, my morning brain was trying to say that when it is used as a tool by someone that can validate the output and act upon it then it's often good. When it is used by someone who can't, or won't, validate the output and simply uses it as the finished product then it usually isn't any good.
Regarding your friend learning to use the terminal I'd still recommend validating the output before using it.
If it's asking genAI about flags for ls then sure no big deal, but if a genAI ends up switching around sda and sdb in your dd command resulting in a wiped drive you only got yourself to blame for not checking the manual.
like this
Get_Off_My_WLAN e missingno like this.
shiroininja
in reply to anamethatisnt • • •Or it flags something as an error falsely and the human has so much faith in the system that it must be correct, and either wastes time finding the solution or bends reality to “correct” it in a human form of hallucinating bs. Especially dangerous if saying there is an error supports the individual’s personal beliefs
Edit:
I’ll call it “AI-induced confirmation bias” cousin to AI-induced psychosis.
passepartout
in reply to dukemirage • • •like this
goldenbug likes this.
LastYearsIrritant
in reply to passepartout • • •architect
in reply to passepartout • • •ordnance_qf_17_pounder
in reply to dukemirage • • •like this
Get_Off_My_WLAN likes this.
dukemirage
in reply to ordnance_qf_17_pounder • • •earthworm
in reply to dukemirage • • •like this
Zier likes this.
Treczoks
in reply to dukemirage • • •buffing_lecturer
in reply to Treczoks • • •This is an interesting idea:
File:Symbol declined.svg - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.orgarchitect
in reply to Treczoks • • •So… the same as most employees but cheaper.
People here are above average and overestimate the vast majority of humanity.
De Lancre
in reply to dukemirage • • •Wait, you mean using Large Language Model that created to parse walls of text, to parse walls of text, is a legit use?
Those kids at openai would've been very upset if they could read.
dukemirage
in reply to De Lancre • • •lightnsfw
in reply to De Lancre • • •Stefan_S_from_H
in reply to King • • •like this
massive_bereavement, goldenbug, tiredofsametab, Get_Off_My_WLAN, KaRunChiy e fif-t like this.
amateurcrastinator
in reply to Stefan_S_from_H • • •s
in reply to Stefan_S_from_H • • •like this
KaRunChiy likes this.
Ace
in reply to Stefan_S_from_H • • •If you read the post it's actually quite a good method. Having an LLM flag potential errors and then reviewing them manually as a human is actually quite productive.
I've done exactly that on a project that relies on user-submitted content; moderating submissions at even a moderate scale is hard, but having an llm look through for me is easy. I can then check through anything it flags and manually moderate. Neither the accuracy nor precision is perfect, but it's high enough to be useful so it's a low-effort way to find a decent number of the thing you're looking for. In my case I was looking for abusive submissions from untrusted users; in the OP author's case they were looking for errors. I'm quite sure this method would never find all errors, and as per the article the "errors" it flags aren't always correct either. But the effort:reward ratio is high on a task that would otherwise be unfeasible.
measures of observational error
Contributors to Wikimedia projects (Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.)like this
Get_Off_My_WLAN, Azathoth, Lasslinthar e KaRunChiy like this.
Echo Dot
in reply to Ace • • •Ace
in reply to Echo Dot • • •It isn't doing anything automatically; it isn't moderating for me. It's just flagging submissions for human review. "Hey, maybe have a look at this one". So if it falsely flags something it shouldn't, which is common, I simply ignore it. And as I said, that error rate is moderate, and although I haven't checked the numbers of the error rate, it's still successful enough to be quite useful.
acosmichippo
in reply to Stefan_S_from_H • • •pulsewidth
in reply to acosmichippo • • •And the featured articles are usually quite large. As an example, today's featured article is on a type of crab - the article is over 3,700 words with 129 references and 30-something books in the bibliography.
It's not particularly unreasonable or unsurprising to be able to find a single error amongst articles that complex.
kepix
in reply to King • • •like this
Get_Off_My_WLAN e KaRunChiy like this.
x00z
in reply to kepix • • •The tool doesn't just check the text for errors it would know of. It can also check sources, compare articles, and find inconsistencies within the article itself.
There's a list of the problems it found that often explains where it got the correct information from.
helpImTrappedOnline
in reply to King • • •The first edit was undoing a vandalism that persisted for 5 years. Someone changed the number of floors a building had from 67, to 70.
A friendly reminder to only use Wikipedia as a summary/reference aggregate for serious research.
This is a cool tool for checking these sorts of things, run everything through the LLM to flag errors and go after them like a wack-a-mole game instead of a hidden object game.
like this
Drusas, Lasslinthar e KaRunChiy like this.
mika_mika
in reply to helpImTrappedOnline • • •GeneralEmergency
in reply to King • • •No surprise.
Wikipedia ain't the bastion of facts that lemmites make them out to be.
It's a mess of personal fiefdoms run by people with way too much time on their hands and an ego to match.
naeap
in reply to GeneralEmergency • • •GeneralEmergency
in reply to naeap • • •I know this is sarcasm, but in case people don't know.
Oh Jesus Christ no. At least Wikipedia has some form of oversight from multiple sources and people.
pulsewidth
in reply to GeneralEmergency • • •Disagree, Wikipedia is a pretty reliable bastion of facts due to its editorial demands for citations and rigorous style guides etc.
Can you point out any of these personal fiefdoms so we can see what you're referring to?
crypt0cler1c
in reply to King • • •TheBlackLounge
in reply to crypt0cler1c • • •kalkulat
in reply to King • • •Finding inconsistencies is not so hard. Pointing them out might be a -little- useful. But resolving them based on trustworthy sources can be a -lot- harder. Most science papers require privileged access. Many news stories may have been grounded in old, mistaken histories ... if not on outright guesses, distortions or even lies. (The older the history, the worse.)
And, since LLMs are usually incapable of citing sources for their own (often batshit) claims any -- where will 'the right answers' come from? I've seen LLMs, when questioned again, apologize that their previous answers were wrong.
architect
in reply to kalkulat • • •jacksilver
in reply to architect • • •kalkulat
in reply to architect • • •To quote ChatGPT:
"Large Language Models (LLMs) like ChatGPT cannot accurately cite sources because they do not have access to the internet and often generate fabricated references. This limitation is common across many LLMs, making them unreliable for tasks that require precise source citation."
It also mentions Claude. Without a cite, of course.
Reliable information must be provided by a source with a reputation for accuracy ... trustworthy. Else it's little more than a rumor. Of course, to reveal a source is to reveal having read that source ... which might leave the provider open to a copyright lawsuit.
Echo Dot
in reply to King • • •The problem is a lot of this is almost impossible to actually verify. After all if an article says a skyscraper has 70 stories even people working in the building may not be able to necessarily verify that.
I have worked in a building where the elevator only went to every other floor, and I must have been in that building for at least 3 months before I noticed because the ground floor obviously had access and the floor I worked on just happened to do have an elevator so it never occurred to me that there may be other floors not listed.
For something the size of a 63 (or whatever it actually was) story building it's not really visually apparent from the outside either, you'd really have to put in the effort to count the windows. Plus often times the facade looks like more stories so even counting the windows doesn't necessarily give you an accurate answer not that anyone would necessarily have the inclination to do so. So yeah, I'm not surprised that errors like that exist.
More to the point the bigger issue is can the AI actually prove that it is correct. In the article there was contradictory information in official sources so how does the AI know which one was the right one? Could somebody be employed to go check? Presumably even the building management don't know the article is incorrect otherwise they would have been inclined to fix it.
Gonzako
in reply to King • • •chronicledmonocle
in reply to King • • •Congrats. You just burned down 4 trees in the rainforest for every article you had an LLM analyze.
LLMs can be incredibly useful, but everybody forgets how much of an environmental nightmare this shit is.
Kellenved
in reply to chronicledmonocle • • •GooseFinger
in reply to chronicledmonocle • • •Had to look up Chat GPT's energy usage because you made me curious.
Seems like Open AI claims Chat GPT 4o uses about 0.34 Wh per "query." This is apparently consistent with third party estimates. The average Google search is about 0.03 Wh, for reference.
Issue is, "query" isn't defined, and it's possible this figure is the energy consumption of the GPUs alone, omitting additional sources that comprise the full picture (energy conversion loss, cooling, infrastructure, etc.). It's also unclear if this figure was obtained during model training, or during normal use.
I also briefly saw that Chat GPT 5 uses between 18-40 Wh per query, so 100x more than GPT 4o. The OP used GPT 5.
It sounds like the energy consumption is relatively bad no matter how it's spun, but consider that it replaces other forms of compute and reduces workload for people, and the net energy tradeoff may not be that bad. Consider the task from the OP - how much longer/how many more people would it take to accomplish the same result that GPT 5 and the lone author accomplished? I bet the net energy difference isn't that far from zero.
Here's the article I found: towardsdatascience.com/lets-an…
Let’s Analyze OpenAI’s Claims About ChatGPT Energy Use | Towards Data Science
Kasper Groes Albin Ludvigsen (Towards Data Science)REDACTED
in reply to GooseFinger • • •Frigger
in reply to REDACTED • • •GooseFinger
in reply to REDACTED • • •A setup with one monitor and a computer with a 5090 will draw about 1 kW under load. That's 7 kWh per week if the average is 1 hour a day.
So that's about:
- 233k Google searches
- 20k GPT 4o queries
- 175 GPT 5 queries
w3dd1e
in reply to King • • •This headline is a bit misleading. The article also says that only 2/3 of the errors GPT found were verified errors (according to the author).
Tollana1234567
in reply to King • • •selokichtli
in reply to King • • •