joshcodes

joined 2 years ago
[–] joshcodes@programming.dev 30 points 11 months ago (5 children)

Studied AI at uni. I'm also a cyber security professional. AI can be hacked or tricked into exposing training data. Therefore your claim about it disposing of the training material is totally wrong.

Ask your search engine of choice what happened when Gippity was asked to print the word "book" indefinitely. Answer: it printed training material after printing the word book a couple hundred times.

Also my main tutor in uni was a neuroscientist. Dude straight up told us that the current AI was only capable of accurately modelling something as complex as a dragon fly. For larger organisms it is nowhere near an accurate recreation of a brain. There are complexities in our brain chemistry that simply aren't accounted for in a statistical inference model and definitely not in the current gpt models.

[–] joshcodes@programming.dev 9 points 11 months ago

I saw this, said wtf, left this post and it was 2 down...

[–] joshcodes@programming.dev 15 points 11 months ago

So reading up on the evolution of whales for arguments sake has me realising all dolphins and whales are (as mentioned) from the same family.

Your traditional whale fits into "Baleen Whales (Mysticeti)" which have "soft, hair like structures on the upper mouth" and there are 16 species and 3 families.

Meanwhile there are also "Toothed Whales (Odontceti)" with 76 species and 10 families. They are smaller, actively hunt and almost always live in pods.

The most surprising thing I've learned is that the Baleen Whales typically have two blow holes...??? Also they do not echolocate but they do sing/chat.

So almost all your traditional large whales fit into the Baleen category and the traditional dolphin fits into the Toothed category. So there are key differences between them, but the overall family is whale.

This is a dumb argument huh

[–] joshcodes@programming.dev 6 points 11 months ago (1 children)

Dolphins are whales with teeth, a distinction that makes them just slightly not whales

[–] joshcodes@programming.dev 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)
[–] joshcodes@programming.dev 2 points 1 year ago

Unfortunately there is a huge difference between shouldn't and wouldn't. I really hope in this case they don't. But yeah, american consumer law is a strange and stupid place. I'm more and more appreciative I don't live there every day.

[–] joshcodes@programming.dev 2 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Well, he's deranged. There's some terrifying repercussions for the US if he manages to win. You shouldn't even be able to suggest someone legally has to buy a product or service

[–] joshcodes@programming.dev 6 points 1 year ago (5 children)

Help, I just woke up. What does this relate to?

[–] joshcodes@programming.dev 3 points 1 year ago

Yeah like if it even partially functions as intended, it is not a brick. I once attempted flashing firmware to a motherboard, only for my power to go out midway through. Kaput, $200 down the drain, I no longer had an electronic device, I had the world's most expensive paperweight.

[–] joshcodes@programming.dev 1 points 1 year ago

All goof, enjoy your alternatives!

[–] joshcodes@programming.dev 1 points 1 year ago (2 children)

I've read your update but try Terminator. You use alt + arrow keys to navigate multiple on screen terminals, create new ones with ctrl+e/o and its my favourite. I highly recommend giving it a try!

[–] joshcodes@programming.dev 1 points 1 year ago

I'm thinking data entry for threat hunters, and integrations with our other platforms apis but I couldn't say anything specific. SSDs are a good shout, I might have tried setting it up with hdds if you hadn't said.

Did you find it easier to add connectors in seperate docker containers or within the main octi container?

It feels like there's a pretty high ceiling for this platform and the data you can generate. Do you find it easy to create good data? Do you have any habits?

I'm pretty keen to learn so feel free to answer what you can.

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