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Also, Anthropic will maintain and use data in user identified form if the law does not prohibit such privacy intrusion. At least this is a valid interpretation imho; note the absence of "explicitly" as adverb for "permitted":

  «Where data is de-identified, Anthropic will maintain and use this information in its de-identified form, and will not attempt to re-identify such information, except as permitted by law.»

I think you got the `900*9` wrong if you talk about experienced downtime. If you calculate discrete minutes

(900*4,5+100*1)/1000 = 4,15 min

(Unless you manage to inform the user since how long the website has been down already.)

This could be made more accurate if we calculate it over seconds, which would drive the experienced downtime even lower!


It's 100*10*4.5 inside, you're summing 100*9+100*8+...+100*1.

So 4.6min, i.e. 4:36


  > It's getting better, and Linux does have the advantage of having some powerful primitives to exploit, but the desktop suites come from a totally different world,

When opening the printer configuration page in the KDE configuration panel, I was pleasantly surprised to see it's process runs wrapped inside a bwrap session. Cups is a bit of old and dangerous; I'm glad they sealed that off inside a sandbox. If you ask me, I would make this approach the standard for any software. The configuration panel for fonts doesn't need network access, so at least `bwrap --unshare-net`

> doing their due diligence (and more)

Do you know how? This sounds like an unpractical high amount of time consuming task.


It really isn't, made a short tutorial just for you (and other's): https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48518704

  > And what if upstream is problematic? 
That would be the same problem for official packages. Unless I am mistaken, the difference between maintainers for the official repos versus AUR, is that the former is a trusted/vetted person. But afaik, they also just package upstream software. I doubt they will read through tons of commits to see if there might be anything nefarious there.

It would be better if software would be forced to have something like a very advanced manifest file, with requested permissions. Malware has to eventually communicate with endpoints, so a declared whitelist of endpoints should definitely be part of such a manifest. Some wrapper program could set up a namespaces that allows just what is requested. Any software that requires `endpoints = [.*]` would make it obvious to the user that it is a really dangerous piece of software. Your code editor should not ship like that.

The first thing I can think of in this direction is flatpak, but that is really coarse grained, with defaults that are very lax. Also flatpak-like solutions do not expose an api to the wrapped application, which is both a pro and a con (a con when you consider installing application plugins requiring further permissions).


1. Neoliberal doctrine: government=waste, company=efficient, let's privatize.

2. The ruling party for over a decade is the VVD, a Republican Party with training wheels, with Tea Party like spinoffs in varying degrees over rabid idiocy. The VVD heavily depend on a small network of big donors and as such are strongly nudged to source the policy advice from those networks. The IT backbone of those government agencies are thus run by big corporate IT shops, which is also politically convenient as you can shrug of responsibility when it turns out there is some light between the theory and the practice of the neoliberal doctrine.


True. But the reaction also depends on how much money the leverage is worth and how much Solvinity has to offer here.


  > much more compelling than those found in the various "manifestos" which come out of Silicon Valley.
Whenever I hear these "tech overlords", I am always baffled at the total lack of culture, the absence of taste, the empty visions and the implied complete subjugation of humans to ideals of "efficiency" or "quick and easy". Maybe they would have been more interesting people if they had been brought up in beautiful towns and cities, if they had lived in a rich cultural environment instead of being raised as consumer of cheap and flashy pop culture. Maybe we should tax bad architecture, it gives me headaches but others might incur heavier damage.

As an aside, at least Trump is drawn to the grandeur of high culture from historical times, but he also doesn't understand a jota about aesthetics, and so the White House gets turned into a tacky gypsy-style abomination with one dollar ornaments.


We lost the “liberal education” (not the political one, but the “freeing” classical one) and it’s starting to show.

When you compare the robber barons to Google and Meta it’s kind of embarrassing- they build massive empires of iron horses screaming across the world and covered cities in magnificent buildings (stations, libraries, etc). G&M built an empire of advertising and … not much else?


Indeed. The current crop doesn't have an idea for what they hoard their billions, it's just...emptiness. I propose we explain the tech's attachment to Accelerationism as a profound boredom and lack of purpose. "What does it mean to be human"--they don't value that question. Peter Thiel got interviewed a month or two ago, and he could not be brought to say that he sees value in preserving humanity. He would rather turn himself into a robotic contraption to extend his life.

When power fears death, some strange things happens.

EDIT: link to the interview with Thiel <https://xcancel.com/rcbregman/status/2036113528126394834#m>


I’m reminded (and apropos as the Pope quoted him) of Tolkien’s description of the “eternal life” the Ring gives to mortals, and how it’s … not so desirable in the end.


Indeed It's far more necessary that the utter dregs of humanity (e.g. Peter Thiel) eventually die of old age. Or put another way the damage of mortality killing good people is more than offset by the good of it killing the worst people with the most power. Because in the end it's probably not going to be your sweet mother who will get to live forever, it'll be people like Peter Thiel. No thanks, for the good of our species.


“Those who used the Nine Rings became mighty in their day, kings, sorcerers, and warriors of old. They obtained glory and great wealth, yet it turned to their downfall. They had, as it seemed, unending life, yet life became unendurable to them. They could walk, if they would, unseen by all eyes in this world beneath the sun, and they could see things in worlds invisible to mortal men; but too often they beheld only the phantoms and delusions of Sauron. And one by one, sooner or later, according to their native strength and to the good or evil of their wills in the beginning, they fell under the thraldom of the ring that they bore and of the domination of the One which was Sauron's. And they became forever invisible save to him that wore the Ruling Ring, and they entered into the realm of shadows. The Nazgûl were they, the Ringwraiths, the Úlairi, the Enemy's most terrible servants; darkness went with them, and they cried with the voices of death.” - from the Silmarillion but it’s echoed in LotR also. And even Bilbo complains of being “butter spread over too much bread”.


This is why I like the term "Dragon Sickness." There's seemingly only innate compulsion and no real human thought behind the hoarding. It becomes its own end. I cynically lament that it's human nature for billionaires to exist but if that is true, couldn't they at least be more entertaining about it? Bezos and Musk could be bleeding each other dry to get to the next star system by now.


Google makes phones and phones are somewhat good. Better search had some value for humanity. Meta has no redeeming qualities or achievements, other than helping Trump get into office and defeat Iran.


People become tech-overloads because they are blind to these sorts of beauties - and that'd be fine if it wasn't for the fact that we have collectively allowed these people to come to power and have fallen for their empty promises of freedom and liberation.


  > why not? i'm sure they can jump into the hustle.
Not so quick. Critical difference is the relationship between enterprises and the state. In China, the state owns the enterprise, in one way or another. High costs of memory is a threat to the established Chinese electronics manufacturers. The Chinese state can optimize returns at a higher level than the one some petty chip manufacturer operates at, especially if doing so means it could gain coercive geopolitical strength, aka blackmailing.


I mean kind of? Industry and politics are always cohorts. China has structural differences but new entrance to commodities and defensives are almost exclusively price sensitive offers. If say, Singapore or even a firm in Ohio tried to enter the market for global play, they'd undercut as a strategy

Except... Maybe they don't need to. Demand is outstripping supply right now. Competing on availability may be sufficient

You can easily see this on a mini-macro scale with popular restaurants. Often a restaurant with an equivalent menu and prices will open nearly adjacent to a very popular place and can sustain itself simply because you don't have to wait an unacceptable length of time to be seated


I am not the author, but he has been training/tuning? a model that produces text that mimics the source material in a more natural way. So getting the LLMs to produce less bland and boring LLMisms, according to the following up blog post.


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