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Comment Re:AI is much better as an aid (Score 1) 185

AI works well if you know what you are doing and you use it to take away the tedium. Say coding a 500-line routine that you know how to code, know what it should do and have the ability to tell a shit result from a good one.

Where I come from cost of coding is irrelevant. The only cost that matters is the liability incurred by the codes existence.

This is like a Doctor telling a nurse exactly what drug to administer. If you are going to use it actually diagnose the problem and come up with solutions , current LLM models are pretty shit. It's too bad most people who are using LLMs think it can replace actual domain-specific knowledge just because LLMs can fake it so well.

This actually seems much closer to telling a nurse to fabricate the drug before administering it.

Submission + - Border Patrol monitors drivers, detains those with 'suspicious' travel patterns (apnews.com)

schwit1 writes: The U.S. Border Patrol is monitoring millions of American drivers nationwide in a secretive program to identify and detain people whose travel patterns it deems suspicious, The Associated Press has found.

The predictive intelligence program has resulted in people being stopped, searched and in some cases arrested. A network of cameras scans and records vehicle license plate information, and an algorithm flags vehicles deemed suspicious based on where they came from, where they were going and which route they took. Federal agents in turn may then flag local law enforcement.

Suddenly, drivers find themselves pulled over — often for reasons cited such as speeding, failure to signal, the wrong window tint or even a dangling air freshener blocking the view. They are then aggressively questioned and searched, with no inkling that the roads they drove put them on law enforcement’s radar.

Once limited to policing the nation’s boundaries, the Border Patrol has built a surveillance system stretching into the country’s interior that can monitor ordinary Americans’ daily actions and connections for anomalies instead of simply targeting wanted suspects. Started about a decade ago to fight illegal border-related activities and the trafficking of both drugs and people, it has expanded over the past five years.

Comment Re:The dogs internal docs are out there. Read them (Score 1) 39

Ah. So your solution is to preemptively surrender. You know, just in case actually resisting fascism in any way might upset the fascists. I never did understand why so many German Jews supported Hitler. But then you come along and make it all clear.

That's an extremely odd way of saying you didn't understand a word I wrote. Was it the word 'nefarious' that threw you? That typically isn't aligned with positive thought.

Let me spell it out more thoroughly: The bad actors would see this as a benefit so that they can justify creating heavy-armor / more formidable versions of the same thing, probably with better offensive weaponry involved.

If you still see that as some sort of "I surrender" call, then I don't know what to tell you. Putting words in my mouth tends to rub me all kinds of the wrong way, and in no way at all did I imply surrender.

Comment Re:Obvious answer (Score 0) 185

If you can't trust if for simple things like that, it's then a QC nightmare when you try to trust it for important code or design

A thought just occurred to me... could Microsoft relying more and more on AI-generated code explain some of the increasing enshittification of Windows? And Microsoft execs asking AI to tell them what new 'features' to add to Windows account for most of the rest?

They may use AI to accelerate the enshitification, but it's ultimately the company decision makers that decided to expend more effort on forced features no one asked for rather than focusing on security and providing an OS that stays out of the user's way as people have been requesting.

Comment Re:Writing on the wall? (Score 5, Informative) 185

Why aren't more execs listening to voice of customer feedback? Who asked for an AI button on the keyboard? Despite the "Advancements" it is still a cheap party trick. Get over yourself.

There's the real question, isn't it? At one point, companies were attempting to provide customers with what they wanted, or at the very least, what they said they wanted. Now, especially in tech circles, companies are altering existing products and creating new products that end users are screaming bloody murder angry over, and telling us we should love it. It's more than just bad marketing, it's outright hostility toward customers. And then this motherfucker comes along and asks why we're not impressed when they keep shoveling shit at us we don't want, we've told them we don't want, we keep giving them "backlash over, and they're selling as a way to replace us all at our jobs and in large segments of what we do outside of our jobs as well.

Fuck this guy sideways. Sick to god damned death of the tech leadership not just being out of touch with the userbase, but outright hostile toward us and then surprised when we don't worship their every hostile move.

Comment Re:Electric Trucker (Score 1) 74

In the US, you can drive 800 km as see little more than asphalt and coyotes between the beginning and end

Bullshit. I live in the western US and have regularly driven through some of the least-populated areas of the country, but I've never seen an area you can go 500 miles without encountering any infrastructure. You might be able to accomplish it if you take careful note of where the truck stops are and go out of your way to avoid them, but on any realistic route you'll encounter truck stops -- if not towns -- at least every 150 miles.

As for charging infrastructure, if you stay on the interstates I don't think there's anywhere in the country you can go more than 100 miles without finding a Tesla Supercharger. Those aren't designed for truck charging, but this demonstrates that building out the infrastructure isn't that hard.

Comment Re:Sounds a lot like... (Score 0) 20

"It doesn't take much imagination to understand why Proctorio is a nightmare for students,"

Hmmm. Proctorio..... sounds a lot like Proctologist, but many times more painful.

Proctorio sounds like alt-dimension Cornholio. Can you imagine if those two met up?

I AM CORNHOLIO! I NEED TP FOR MY BUNGHOLE!

I AM PROCTOIO! I NEED LUBRICANT FOR MY FIST!

ARE YOU THREATENING ME?

TP WON'T SAVE YOU NOW!

Comment Re: Real Patriots don't mess with AI (Score 0) 36

Ever noticed how the fictional TV shows in Idiocracy, often incoherent nonsense that people can't stop watching, are basically the same as the AI slop we have today?

We're not going to be fighting an robot army, like in The Terminator or The Matrix, but a destruction of our humanity from within and of our own making.

It's already happening. Our online world started breaking down minds well before the algorithms started shoveling political shit at us in favor of one candidate or another, usually whichever one increased engagement / enragement. If we hadn't let our minds begin to soften, we would have seen through the ever increasing cloud of bullshit surrounding online discourse and seen the ways it is manipulated to provide a few more pennies to the companies behind the technology that allowed that discourse to take place. Arguing with strangers, where some came into a conversation with the best of intentions, and some came in specifically to fuck with people, left people in a semi-shellshocked state of not knowing which part of which argument was real, and which part was completely fictional. As time has moved on, we're now at a point where no two people really believe in the same version of reality, and the divide between us continues to widen. We've let the algorithms dictate public discourse. First via online discourse, and then by letting "news" stations grab headlines from that online discourse, even when those stations know full good and well that their reaching their hands into a festering septic system and pulling out massive wads of half-rotted shit.

The "war" against the machines was lost a little bit at a time. And nobody seems at all interested in pulling us back a bit from that loss and reassessing. In fact, it seems we're rushing ever faster toward the very thing that's causing us to fall apart.

Comment Re: Lets ask the studio exectcutives.... (Score 1) 35

When real movies have Starbucks cups in a medieval scene, are you as critical? Or do you hold AI to a doubly high standard?

Game of Thrones wasn't a movie, it was a television show where the creators gave up on the concept part way through and then bum-rushed the finish line. But, to your point, *EVERYBODY* was critical of that, including the people that were actually involved in the scene.

Comment Re:Alternate headline (Score 5, Interesting) 73

"Whitehouse prepares document to force yet another fight in the Supreme Court."

These day's it's quite obvious that the only line in the constitution that any republican has ever read is the 2nd Amendement. And even then they didn't read it properly.

They certainly seem to have completely missed Article I. You know, the part that says that the legislature makes the laws? Even if you think restricting AI regulation to the federal government is a good idea, the right way to do it isn't with an executive order to set up a DOJ task force aimed at litigating state AI regulations out of existence based on complex legal theories about interstate commerce. The right way is for Congress to pass a law barring states from regulating AI. This is simpler, cheaper and should invoke public debate about the issue, which is how things are supposed to be done in constitutional republics.

I don't even think Trump is taking this route because he and his advisors don't believe they have the votes for it. I think they're doing it this way because they don't even consider governing through legislation rather than through executive power. Granted that Congress is fairly dysfunctional, but they actually can and do make laws... and the way to fix the dysfunction is to work the system.

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