Aatube

joined 1 year ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] Aatube@kbin.melroy.org 3 points 10 hours ago

In other news, Big Tech uses Chinese labor, and the water in the Pacific tastes is too salty to replace tap water

[–] Aatube@kbin.melroy.org 1 points 10 hours ago (1 children)

nixos has the largest amount of packages

[–] Aatube@kbin.melroy.org 1 points 10 hours ago (1 children)

the projects don't have to e hosted on github

[–] Aatube@kbin.melroy.org 1 points 10 hours ago

there's a tool called wakatime that many editors offer† as an extension, and you have to write a blog post every 10 hours, which the organizers will review along with the projects mentioned

† meaning it's on the editor's extension marketplace

 

prizes include 11 hours for the Smolhaj, 5 hours for a 128gb thumb drive, 3 hours for Geometry Dash, and 21 hours for 6 months of Mullvad. like i said it's just like a rewards program lol

[–] Aatube@kbin.melroy.org 2 points 19 hours ago (1 children)

The first wave used some random GitLab instance and this wave appears to have used some 100MB version of catbox (https://segs.lol/). Both had deleted the payload files when I tried to obtain them

[–] Aatube@kbin.melroy.org 20 points 19 hours ago (1 children)

if you didn't install google-chrome-stable yesterday*

The real package used to be called google-chrome-stable many moon ago.

[–] Aatube@kbin.melroy.org 2 points 21 hours ago

you can't order foreign entities to change especially if you've banned them already

[–] Aatube@kbin.melroy.org 36 points 1 day ago (2 children)

However, the 2023 trial overseen by US District Judge James Donato revealed a pattern of scheming on Google's part to prevent the distribution of alternative app stores on Android phones. While Android devices do allow sideloading of apps, and the platform is open source, Google's scale and partnerships with OEMs made it a de facto monopoly. This led the court to impose extensive remedies that could remake the mobile app ecosystem.

in the linked article on the 2023 trial:

At the time, Google was quick to point out that the ability to sideload apps on Android meant Epic hadn't been completely barred from distributing Fortnite on the platform (as it had been on iOS). "The open Android ecosystem lets developers distribute apps through multiple app stores," Google said in 2020. "While Fortnite remains available on Android, we can no longer make it available on Play because it violates our policies. However, we welcome the opportunity to continue our discussions with Epic and bring Fortnite back to Google Play."

By April 2020, Epic had returned to the Google Play store, accusing Google of imposing a number of important limits on its sideloaded software. As the company said at the time:

Google puts software downloadable outside of Google Play at a disadvantage, through technical and business measures such as scary, repetitive security pop-ups for downloaded and updated software, restrictive manufacturer and carrier agreements and dealings, Google public relations characterizing third-party software sources as malware, and new efforts such as Google Play Protect to outright block software obtained outside the Google Play store.

[–] Aatube@kbin.melroy.org 7 points 1 day ago (2 children)

on what? there's a gazillion chinese android app stores already, which makes chinese android phones need a ton more ram to compensate for all the update notification etc. services clogging up the backend

[–] Aatube@kbin.melroy.org 14 points 3 days ago

One is definitely racist.

[–] Aatube@kbin.melroy.org 4 points 3 days ago

plus the idea that the country might be gone in two months

[–] Aatube@kbin.melroy.org 13 points 4 days ago

The CAPTCHA is question is Cloudflare Turnstile, which slowly ramps up a different assortment of invisible challenges while not tracking your mouse movement or cross-site activity.

If a bot can find all images with crosswalks in grainy photos faster than we can, surely it can check a box as well. Bots definitely can check a box, and they can even mimic the erratic path of human mouse movement while doing so. For Turnstile, the actual act of checking a box isn’t important, it’s the background data we’re analyzing while the box is checked that matters. We find and stop bots by running a series of in-browser tests, checking browser characteristics, native browser APIs, and asking the browser to pass lightweight tests (ex: proof-of-work tests, proof-of-space tests) to prove that it’s an actual browser.

 

marking it for deletion strongly reflects ignorance of the topic

 

On Monday, a developer using the popular AI-powered code editor Cursor noticed something strange: Switching between machines instantly logged them out, breaking a common workflow for programmers who use multiple devices. When the user contacted Cursor support, an agent named "Sam" told them it was expected behavior under a new policy. But no such policy existed, and Sam was a bot. The AI model made the policy up, sparking a wave of complaints and cancellation threats documented on Hacker News and Reddit.

 

generative AI literally makes me feel like a boomer. people start talking about how it can be good to help you brainstorm ideas and i’m like oh you’re letting a computer do the hard work and thinking for you???

—nonbinaryelphaba

headspace-hotel

There are many difficult things that were replaced with technology, and it wasn't a bad thing. Washing machine replaces washing clothes by hand. Nothing wrong with that. Spinning wheel replaces drop spindle. Nothing wrong with that.

Generative AI replaces thinking. The ability to think for yourself will always be important. People that want to control and oppress you want to limit your ability to think for yourself as much as possible, but continuing to practice it allows you to resist them.

mikkeneko

"This tool replaces thinking," is a technology problem we (humans) have faced before. It's a snark that I've seen pro-AI contenders take as well: I bet these same people would have complained about calculators! And books!

Well. They did, at the time.

We have records from centuries – even millennia back – of scholars at the time complaining that these new-fangled "books" were turning their students lazy; why, they can barely recite any poems in their entirety any more! And there are people still alive today who remember life before widely available calculators, and some of them complained – then and now – that bringing them into schools dealt a ruinous blow to math education, and now these young people don't even know how to use a slide-rule.

And the thing is:

They weren't wrong.

The human brain can, when called on, perform incredible feats of memorization. Bards and skalds of old could memorize and recite poems and epics that were thousands of lines long. This is a skill that is largely lost to most of the population. It's not needed any more, and so it is not practiced.

There is a definite generational gap, between the people who were trained on slide-rules and reckoning and the generation that was taught on calculators. There came a year, when that first generation grew up and entered the workforce, when you suddenly started encountering grown adults who could not do math – not even the very basic arithmetic needed to count down from one hundred. I would go into a shop, buy an item for sixteen dollars, give the cashier a twenty and a one because I want a fiver back, and have them stare at the money in incomprehension – what do? They don't know how to subtract sixteen from twenty-one. They don't know how to calculate a fifteen-percent tip. They did not exercise the parts of their brain that handle this, because they always had a calculator to do it for them.

Nowadays, newer point-of-sale machines compensate for this; they will automatically calculate and dispense the change, no subtraction necessary on the part of the operator. Nowadays everyone carries a phone, and every phone carries a calculator, so if you need to do these calculations, the tool is right there. As more and more transactions go electronic and card, and cash fades further and further out of daily life, these situations happen less and less; it's not a problem that most people can't do math (until it is.)

The people who complained that these tools-that-replace-thinking would reduce the ability of the broad population to exercise these cognitive skills weren't wrong. It's simply that, as the pace of life changed, the environment changed so that in day-to-day life these skills were largely unnecessary.

So.

Isn't this, ChatGPT and Generative AI, just the latest in a long series of tool-replaces-thought that has, broadly, worked out well for us? What's different about this?

Well, two things are different.

  1. In the previous instances of tool-replaces-thinking, the cognitive skill that it replaced was a discrete and, on a day-to-day basis, unnecessary outlay of energy. Most people don't need to memorize thousands of lines of poetry, or anything else for that matter. Most people don't need to do more than cursory levels of math on a day to day basis.

This, however, is different. The cognitive skill that is being obsoleted here is more than "how to write essay" or "identify what is the capital of Rhode Island." It encompasses the entire field of being able to generate new thoughts; of being able to consider and analyze new information; of being able to follow logical trains to their conclusions; of being able to order your thoughts to construct rational arguments; or indeed of being able to express yourself in any structured way. These cognitive tools are not occasional use; they are every day, all the time.

  1. In the previous instances of tool-replaces-thinking, the tool was good at what it did.

Calculators may have replaced reckoning, but calculators are also pretty good at what they do. The calculator will, as long as you give the right input, give the right answer. ChatGPT cannot be relied on to do this. ChatGPT will tell you, confidently and unhesitantly and dangerously, that 2+2=5, and it will not care that it is wrong.

Books may have replaced memorization, and books certainly could be wrong; but a fact, once in a book, is pretty stable and steady. There is not a risk that the Guy Who Owns All The Encylopedias might wake up one day and decide – to pick a purely hypothetical example – that the Gulf of Mexico is called something else, and suddenly all the encyclopedias say that.

Generative AI fails on both these counts. It fails on every count. It's inaccurate, it's unethical, it's unreliable, it's wrong.


I remember some time ago seeing someone say (it was a video about medieval footwear, actually) that "humans have a great energy-saving system: if we can be lazy about something, we are."

This is not a ethical judgment about humans; this is how life works. Animals – including humans – will not do something the hard way if they can do it the easy way; this basic principle of conservation of resources is universal and morally neutral. Cognition is biologically expensive, and though our environment is not what it once was, every person still goes through every day choosing what is valuable enough to expend resources on and what is not.

Because of this, I don't know if there is any solution, here. I think pushing back against the downhill flush of the-easy-way-out is a battle both uphill and against the tide.

So I'll just close with this warning, instead:

Generative AI is a tool that cannot be trusted. Do not use it to replace thought.

calamity-cain

i've been waiting for a more nuanced take on generative AI and it's finally here

haveasnickerss

I'm forever thankful that even though I grew up in the calculator era I was taught and encouraged at school to do math by hand. I only started using the calculator for more complex math and physics. Otherwise, use your brain it's there for a reason.

Although an AI can be useful, it does not replace thinking. Critical thinking is so important, and it helps with basic problem solving. It's something that is getting lost and it's a basic survival skill. It's happening bc I've seen it. People would look at me like I've grown a second head, like I was a know it all genius, with mystical powers just bc I gave a simple solution to a problem. And they weren't complicated problems, just everyday problems, with easy solutions that you just needed to pause and think for two seconds to find them.

Also, as it was said before, AI gives you wrong answers. It does not care. It will lie to your face.

Doing things with AI gives you no source no credibility, it's the "easy lazy" way. But you don't learn. It deeply hurts me to see kids today using chatgpt to do their homework. It doesn't work like that. They won't be able to do basic things if they don't learn to think and make an effort from early age.

If AI is used correctly it can become a good useful tool, mostly to save time, but it's difficult to find the balance.

I'll admit that I've used AI for schoolwork, but never to do my work for me. Never to write for me. I've used to narrow my search field (like once I was doing an investigation work and I asked chatgpt for authors and books about that specific subject- bc it was very specific and I had no clue where to start looking, so asking it for books and then reading said books and using them for my research, so I actually had sources and could compare authors and opinions was a responsible and good way to use the AI)

 

This year, they’re down roughly 20 percent. Jeff Asher, a crime analyst who helps run the index, said 2025 is on track to have the lowest murder rate since 1960, when the FBI began keeping reliable records.

 

the latest incident has led to more questions for the MTA and police, who so far have not said why this keeps happening. [...] Some riders have theorized that it could be a runaway string from local kite fighting contests

 

Why stop there? Ouija coding takes the "science" and the "computer" out of computer science. —@kbal@fedia.io, 2025

 

This Squid O Monolith game is not related to nor has been endorsed by Squid Game. It told me to copy and paste to social media 'I just played this music video game for @squidbanduk's new (2023) album, "O Monolith" and finished with 51 coins and 11 deaths! https://undergrowth.squidband.uk/ #Squid #OMonolith'

 

Bed sharing tends to be unpopular and contentious in the United States. But in many Asian countries, the question is often not whether to do it, but when to stop.

 

Bed sharing tends to be unpopular and contentious in the United States. But in many Asian countries, the question is often not whether to do it, but when to stop.

 

The Moon is made of green cheese.

or, an editor's personal recounting of a painful conversation

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