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Comment Re:They shat in their bed (Score 1) 53

There may be a conflict of interest with Google directing traffic to websites that show ads.

Google's ranking algorithm downgrades sites where content is dominated by ads, so I think the dynamic here is the other way around: Recipe sites layered on huge numbers of ads in order to generate revenue, which caused their search ranking to drop, so then they had to go all-in on SEO to fool the ranking algorithm into raising their visibility.

Comment Don't rely on such accounts (Score 1) 51

Same for Microsoft or Google. If you need to depend on their accounts, chances are you will get shafted at some time. Hence do not let that need arise. Yes, that is difficult. But they can throw you out for basically any reason and you can do nothing.

In a similar fashion, lots of YouTube-dependent creators have gotten stabbed by Meta recently. The whole thing is broken and there needs to be legal recourse and penalties for platforms that get this large.

Submission + - Most Parked Domains Now Serving Malicious Content (krebsonsecurity.com)

An anonymous reader writes: Direct navigation — the act of visiting a website by manually typing a domain name in a web browser — has never been riskier: A new study finds the vast majority of “parked” domains — mostly expired or dormant domain names, or common misspellings of popular websites — are now configured to redirect visitors to sites that foist scams and malware. When Internet users try to visit expired domain names or accidentally navigate to a lookalike “typosquatting” domain, they are typically brought to a placeholder page at a domain parking company that tries to monetize the wayward traffic by displaying links to a number of third-party websites that have paid to have their links shown.

A decade ago, ending up at one of these parked domains came with a relatively small chance of being redirected to a malicious destination: In 2014, researchers found (PDF) that parked domains redirected users to malicious sites less than five percent of the time — regardless of whether the visitor clicked on any links at the parked page. But in a series of experiments over the past few months, researchers at the security firm Infoblox say they discovered the situation is now reversed, and that malicious content is by far the norm now for parked websites.

Comment Re:Meanwhile, in the US... (Score 1) 146

Tesla and others are just tossing the old batteries to those 3 companies doing the recycling at a loss thus far. They're not made to factor in and bear the cost of recycling when they sell a car

I think it would be profitable to grow ICE fuel though, cheaper than prospecting, drilling, pumping and global distribution of petrol. Just tanks, maybe heaters that could be solar in some regions, the cheapest food possible for living things, and boring separation techniques that can be done with 19th century level tech.

Comment Re: Thanks AI'ssholes (Score 1) 47

Are you consulting or have business making something I'll be buying? The costs of your tool would be tiny amount of your business or consulting profits and an expense to write off in taxes, negligible effect on what others would have to pay.

Really, it's not typical business that will suffer the most in the next 2 years; most can even wait it out for their employeee machines since most are just doing rote office work.

Comment Re:former ASML engineers? (Score 1) 143

you're hililarous, USA doesn't even have such machines, we buy them.

People can work for whomever the fuck they want, they don't need your approval or U.S. government orange clown approval or pants pooper Joe approval.

China thinks long term, USA waits for next beep of phone for text or social media post.

Comment Re:Doing to ASML what they did to Nortel (Score 1) 143

you're funny, thinking copying tech means "stolen"

You use all kind of copied tech every day, including from Chinese civilization. It's all fair game and how the human race advanced.

Notice they at least are making advanced lithography machines and going to refine them, while USA is a buyer. We don't make any at all.

Comment Re:No difference between data and instructions (Score 1) 77

The problem of LLMs is that they do not make a difference between data to be processed and instructions how to process the data.

The goal (not yet achieved, obviously) is to build AI that can learn how to interact with humans the way humans do, not to build machines that need carefully-curated data and instructions. We've had those for three quarters of a century now.

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