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Comment Re:It's not going to crash (Score 1) 106

First, the US government has bailed out the US auto industry repeatedly:
1. 1979, Chrysler bailout, 1.5bn, plus looser credit and trade protections that benefited Ford in particular and helped it avoid formal insolvency
2. 2008/9, GM & Chrysler bailouts, 60bn+, plus regulatory flexibility, Fed credit facilities, and supplier rescue programs that benefited Ford in particular
3. 2020, credit and payroll support, 10s bns+, plus Fed corporate-bond purchasing programs, which kept credit markets open (Ford raised $8 billion through bond sales in April 2020 thanks to that liquidity), payroll tax deferrals, and supplier support programs

Second, I’m not trying to claim the US government *controls* the US auto industry, I’m saying that the US auto industry has been *more dependent* on the US government for bailouts than the Chinese auto industry has been on the Chinese government. These are not equivalent statements, and you’ve just chosen the most fuckwitted interpretation you possibly could, of what I said, to make yourself feel better, instead of engaging with what I said substantively

Third, You’ve actually built not one, but *two* strawmen into that oil wars point.

Firstly, I didn’t say *only* U.S.-made cars used oil. My point was that U.S. geopolitical and military actions to secure Gulf oil flows directly supported the petroleum-based economy as a whole, in which the American auto industry was a core pillar. Keeping global oil plentiful and cheap has been a recurring strategic objective since at least the 1980 Carter Doctrine, which *explicitly stated* that the U.S. would use force if necessary to protect Persian Gulf energy supplies. That policy underpinned decades of intervention, including the 1987 Operation Earnest Will (reflagging Kuwaiti tankers) and the 1991 Gulf War, both designed to ensure oil supply stability.

Secondly, I never said the Gulf War was *only* about oil. Wars are always multi-causal: regional stability, alliances, deterrence, and economic interests. But to deny that oil was a central factor in the Gulf War is to ignore the historical record: policymakers and analysts at the time openly cited the need to protect energy markets and the “free flow of oil at reasonable prices” as a national security priority.

The point stands: the U.S. has repeatedly used military force to secure oil supplies that sustain its economic model — a model built around cheap energy and high automobile dependence. Recognising that link isn’t reductionist; it’s just historically accurate. If you want to challenge it, you’ll need to address the evidence rather than arguments I didn’t actually make.

Comment Re:Isn't this the idea? (Score 1) 100

Only the legitimate and quality ones. The author of curl [github.com] has been receiving a variety of reports that were generated by AI, none of which are legitimate.

That's a strawman argument. We're not talking about Curl. Curl's dev's took a different approach to what was going on and specifically determined they aren't legitimate and took no action. On the other hand FFMPEG devs looked at it and ... fixed the bugs.

So by what metric do you determine that this isn't legitimate and quality? The FFMPEG devs seemingly deemed it worth their time to take action after analysing the case.

Comment Re:Fixing CVE Slop? (Score 1) 100

Again, whoever read this "slop" decided that there was sufficient reason to then proceed to fix the bug. Why call it "slop"? If you felt the need to fix something then by definition it provided you with valuable information.

I agree Google should invest more in open source and that AI tools are creating newer and higher workloads, but right now it doesn't look like the work is worthless - based on the actions of the very team complaining about it.

Comment Re:90 days, huh? (Score 1) 100

Except that's the case for many bugs across many pieces of software. That doesn't make the bug less severe, it just makes the likelihood of being affected lower.

It's also one of the cases for depreciating and removing old code, precisely because someone somewhere will be running with it on by default. You say "included by default" and I ask "by whom"? I must have some 20 copies of the FFMPEG libs on my computer with all the different software packages that include them using compiler flags unknown to me and out of my control.

Comment Re:The Gema is a pesky bunch. (Score 1) 37

They're still stuck in the steam age of media technology

The problem is not Gema, it's that the legal system is stuck in the 50s and 60s and doesn't have written logical precedent for the kind of thing AI does. Gema are just a bunch of dicks, but the problem is currently the legal system *sometimes* agrees with them. That's the thing that needs to be addressed.

Comment Re:Use the existing rules. (Score 1) 37

Hearing a song is not copyright infringement.

Memorizing lyrics is not copyright infringement.

While you're absolutely right, the current state of copyright law and technology is at a disconnect. We're in a world where we need to convince people of such analogies (and even here on Slashdot the idea of hearing and memorizing isn't clear (I'm in the AI doesn't memorize department, it doesn't store an original copy), so that analogies start applying in a legal context.

What we need is for laws to actually exists which address this curious situation of a computer "learning" from what it sees or hears. Currently we don't have any which is producing wildly inconsistent outcomes across the legal field.

Comment Re:It's not going to crash (Score 4, Interesting) 106

Are you fucking kidding?

Tell me this: which government has actually funded bailouts of car companies repeatedly over the past 40 years: the Chinese or the US? The Chinese government has been clear for years that it wants a thriving EV sector and that requires consolidation in the coming years.

The projection is just off the charts.

It is the *US* auto industry that has been propped up forever by the US government, including fighting literal wars to keep the gas flowing.

Comment Re:Wishful Thinking (Score 1) 106

This is absolutely spot on. It's a shitty take from the Atlantic on a story that has been around for at least five years: the aggressive competition of the Chinese EV market, which is going to see some company failures in the years ahead. As opposed to the American way of bail outs. The notion that there is falling demand for Chinese EVs is absolutely a little lullaby that complacent US rich guys like to sing to themselves, but it bears no resemblance to the truth.

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