Open and uncensored tribe for talking about anything tech related. Being competent with technology has gone from giving you an edge in the recent past to being a necessity in many fields today. As a result there are a lot more people interested in the various tech-related hobbies, here we have a free space to discuss such things.
large organisations remain unpatched after 12 months.
Isn't it because focus is on new features and gimmincks? And that creates even more hole. What is a model switches to maintenance first. Quality before release.
Anthropic said in its report. In one example Mythos found a flaw in a line of code that had been tested five million times without detection. The
From an article. There is no way humans did it. Unless proven otherwise it undermines the writeup. Without context it sounds like "I used Philips screwdriver on a flat head and it didn't work 5mil times". Is there a manipulation elsewhere baked in?
Cross referring super powerful ANTHROPIC, with VC investor article are this kind of news trying to make the punters to buy overpriced stock. Would seem natural to reduce the losses by manipulation and since this can't be released, maybe more mysterious features will come up to inflate the price before a crash.
Once people will bail out the "AI banks" everything will go back to normal.
On the other hand if true bit reminds me of the series "Silicon Valley". No spoilers.
Read More@SwarmShawarma I'm pretty sceptical overall on claims from these AI companies, I'd recommend reading this www.wheresyoured.at/the-enshittifinancial-crisis/
But just seeing the leaps and bounds being made by Open Models that you can run on your own hardware is quite interesting.
@Typo-MAGAshiv I don't go well? Well I can prove you didn't go well, because I saw her face and she was a believer. And you thought she didn't go well. So clearly you're talking nonsense.
AI is great if you understand its limitations and only use it for what it can do and if those tasks would otherwise take many human hours to do in what it can do it seconds.
Like any device, it is a tool, not something you can just use and expect it to flawlessly work on its own without any guidance
@MentORPHEUS I moved out of Bangkok to an outer district. If I get up high and look back towards the city there is a clearly visible globe of smog hanging over the place.
I went back in to take part in the Songkran festival and by the end of the day my throat was sore and my eyes stung. I was coughing up the smell of Bangkok for a good few hours after.
It’s probably a combination of volume of traffic, inefficient traffic system, heat, humidity and poor vehicle regulation.
An outcome polar opposite to what lobbyists and partisans predicted, that "environmentalist wackos" would end mechanized transportation in the name of their "green agenda."
This speaks to my larger point. I’m not overly concerned with something like AI now because we’re witnessing the optimisation take place at unprecedented speeds. The “smog” of AI is a tiny moment in the history of its development, so to speak.
I’m not very impressed with the Luddite-esque attitude people take up with AI, but resistance is part of the optimisation process I guess.
Asking it culturally significant questions from a partisan position is also the worst use case imaginable, and is such a depressingly short sighted litmus test for the capabilities of these things.
I’ll be mad if we’re dragged down by lowest common denominator baying at AI for their factoids.
Read MoreGrok is this true?
I have a few go-to question to ask of any search engine. The results tell me everything I need to know.
The very minute I heard about Claude, I asked it a question and it literally challenged me for even asking the question to begin with!
For example: If I asked Claude to explain hypergamy to me and it responded:
Hypergamy is an Alt-Right, Red Pill trope designed to spread hatred of women
What would you think?
Yeah. Me too.
Some of these bugs had been sitting undetected for decades.
There might be a good side to AI scanning vulnerabilities
Pegasus is spyware developed by the Israeli cyber-arms company NSO Group that is designed to be covertly and remotely installed on mobile phones running iOS and Android.[1] While NSO Group markets Pegasus as a product for fighting crime and terrorism, governments around the world have routinely used the spyware to surveil journalists, lawyers, political dissidents, and human rights activists.[2] The sale of Pegasus licenses to foreign governments must be approved by the Israeli Ministry of Defense.[3]

