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Comment Sounds awful. (Score 4, Insightful) 36

Since AI tools can handle most routine coding tasks, the company’s junior software developers now spend less time on that and more time working with customers. In the HR department, entry-level staffers now spend time intervening when HR chatbots fall short, correcting output and talking to managers as needed, rather than fielding every question themselves.

It certainly sounds like IBM wants people to fix broken shit code that AI barfs out. I'm sure that won't have any native long-term consequences or anything. /s

Submission + - EPA to Kill Off Stop-Start Systems (caranddriver.com) 2

sinij writes:

Out of all of the features that come installed in modern vehicles, automatic stop-start technology ranks right near the bottom of the list for most buyers. Environmental Protection Agency administrator Lee Zeldin has been open about his disdain for the ostensibly fuel-saving setup, going as far as to say he would eliminate it.

I absolutely hate Start-Stop systems, specifically shopped for a car without one. More so, the only reason it exists is because having it produced mileage credit. Yes, not the actual gas savings, but a credit on a test. In actual use, the start-stop system does not produce measurable fuel savings. This is because in circumstances where people actual idle — warmup in the winter, AC when waiting in the car in the extreme heat, etc. this system would not be active.

Submission + - Gallup will no longer track presidential approval ratings after nearly 90 years (usatoday.com)

joshuark writes: Gallup will soon no longer measure presidential approval, the analytics firm confirmed on Feb. 11.

Founded by George Gallup in 1935, the Washington, DC-based management company began tracking the president's job performance 88 years ago. A statistician and founder of the American Institute of Public Opinion, Gallup first sent pollsters across the United States during the Depression era to ask people whether they approved or disapproved of how the nation's commander-in-chief was handling his job.

Starting in 2026, the firm told USA TODAY, Gallup will no longer publish "favorability ratings of political figures," a decision it said "reflects an evolution in how Gallup focuses its public research and thought leadership."

The change is part of "a broader, ongoing effort to align all of Gallup’s public work with its mission," the company wrote. Gallup said the ratings are now "widely produced, aggregated and interpreted, and no longer represent an area where Gallup can make its most distinctive contribution." The company wrote: "Our commitment is to long-term, methodologically sound research on issues and conditions that shape people’s lives."

https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

Comment The important part. (Score 1) 1

Many Linux users rely less on traditional antivirus programs and more on system design, package management, permissions, and careful software sources. The fact that Linux adoption is rising in a security focused survey suggests that this model is resonating. It also reinforces the idea that security is not just about installing a program. It is about trust in the entire stack.

This is really what matters. Some people know that Windows is a house of cards that needs AV to merely mitigate risk.

Comment Correlation != Causation (Score 0) 108

Just a reminder that this is a correlation study. It does not mean that ingesting caffeine will reduce your chance of dementia in the same way that the reduction of pirates has not caused climate change.

It could simply be that people who can afford to spend money on niceties like coffee can afford food and avoid homelessness. Homelessness is highly correlated with death and dementia but that doesn't mean the house itself is preventing dementia.

Comment Re:Prosecute what? (Score 1) 66

has no obligation to even know the law, as Republican Chad Leonard definitely proved he didn't.

This does seem to explain why he retired in 2022 and possibly County Attorney Matt Schultz in the future.

Schultz said. "I am putting the public on notice that if this situation arises again in the future, I will prosecute to the fullest extent of the law. ... The County does not admit liability and does not agree that it has any fault in this case.”

Sounds like a surefire way to get pentesters to refuse you as a customer.

Comment Re:A starting point. (Score 1) 3

we are becoming so dependent on this technology that all society is getting reshaped in a way that will become basically impossible to not rely on AI for everything.

That's pretty much the core desire of every product, to become essential. I have personally found out that society assumes that you have a smartphone, and as someone that does not have a smartphone, that's annoying. However, for the most part there has been a way around these issues but sometimes it just means you can't use a shitty product (which saves me from dealing with a lot of shitty products). The only part of social media that has become mandatory (as I have experienced from not having social media accounts) seems to be LinkedIn if you are looking for a job in the STEM field.

By comparison, the only area where I see AI is becoming super dependent is search engines and customer service. Enshitification has made search engines rather useless (suspiciously after the release of their AI products) which is why you have to use an AI agent to find niche information that I could otherwise find. That said, customer service has always been trying to filter out as many absolute idiots as possible ("you have to plug the computer in, moron!"), so it's no surprise that AI checks that box. Companies with no human support are ones you shouldn't buy stuff from, but people are stupid and short-sighted, so it should be no surprise that they will leap to buy the latest crap without looking at anything beside it being shiny and new.

I'm far less worried about dependency than I am about the environmental impact of AI. Right now, the ROI of using AI doesn't seem to be panning out for most companies and unless that changes then the AI bubble will pop. If businesses set themselves up to fail without AI then they should all fail when they can't afford to use AI.

Submission + - Carmakers Rush to Remove Chinese Code Under New Federal Rules (wsj.com)

schwit1 writes: The U.S. bans Chinese software in connected cars starting March 17, forcing automakers to purge code fast.

New U.S. rules will soon ban Chinese software in vehicle systems that connect to the cloud, part of an effort to prevent cameras, microphones and GPS tracking in cars from being exploited by foreign adversaries.

The move is “one of the most consequential and complex auto regulations in decades,” according to Hilary Cain, head of policy at trade group the Alliance for Automotive Innovation. “It requires a deep examination of supply chains and aggressive compliance timelines.”

Comment Seems like hype. (Score 4, Insightful) 28

From TFA:

RHIC’s end is meant to mark the beginning of something even greater. Its successor, the Electron-Ion Collider (EIC), is slated for construction over the next decade. That project will utilize much of RHIC’s infrastructure, replacing one of its ion rings with a new ring for cycling electrons.

So yes, it's shutting down... to make another collider.

What is important is that scientists were able to use it to learn something new. Without any obvious new things we can learn using it, they are rebuilding it to be something from which we can learn new things.

Comment A starting point. (Score 1) 3

I would say that Euria is a starting point, a place from which they are just beginning to break into presenting an alternative to American "Big Tech's" AI models. That said, there is lots of work to be done as simply using a CCP approved model is... not great.

2. We cannot trust open-source models: even the self-hosted ones can exhibit subtle bias which we might not be able to obviously detect

This is 100% correct and it's also a problem with 100% of AI models. Even if it's completely unintentional, all AI models have biases. As a result of claims of under-representation and skewed perspectives, more research is going into detecting biases than ever before. However, that is not enough. What we need is for AI to be trained to present information in a neutral manner even when it's using a biased source of information, which is a difficult thing to do as it needs to have enough internal knowledge about every topic to recognize bias. It's a hard problem.

3. AI is the ultimate addiction, an addiction at a civilization scale, so vast and powerful that social media pales in comparison.

I wouldn't call it an addiction so much as a tool. However, just like a human friend, you can become overly reliant on it but the difference is that AI won't get annoyed with you and object to this behavior. There are some approaches to fixing this but as long as the interface is not designed to create a dependency then this is more of a user problem.

Comment Re:Real vulnerabilities? (Score 4, Informative) 62

and each one was validated by either a member of Anthropic's team or an outside security researcher

1. What's the breakdown between the two - how many validated by each?
2. What was the previous relationship between the "outside security researcher" and Anthropic, if any?

If you read the linked blog post in TFA, it's pretty clear that it was merely a matter of manpower and shouldn't be viewed as suspicious.

To ensure that Claude hadn’t hallucinated bugs (i.e., invented problems that don’t exist, a problem that increasingly is placing an undue burden on open source developers), we validated every bug extensively before reporting it. We focused on searching for memory corruption vulnerabilities, because they can be validated with relative ease. Unlike logic errors where the program remains functional, memory corruption vulnerabilities are easy to identify by monitoring the program for crashes and running tools like address sanitizers to catch non-crashing memory errors. But because not all inputs that cause a program to crash are high severity vulnerabilities, we then had Claude critique, de-duplicate, and re-prioritize the crashes that remain. Finally, for our initial round of findings, our own security researchers validated each vulnerability and wrote patches by hand. As the volume of findings grew, we brought in external (human) security researchers to help with validation and patch development. Our intent here was to meaningfully assist human maintainers in handling our reports, so the process optimized for reducing false positives. In parallel, we are accelerating our efforts to automate patch development to reliably remediate bugs as we find them.

Comment Good approach. (Score 2) 83

industry’s transition toward a dual-chemistry ecosystem, where sodium-ion and lithium-ion batteries complement each other to meet diverse customer needs,

While you normally get less range from sodium-ion, it balances out the low-temperature discharge problem. As such, while you sacrifice peak range, you get a more stable stable year-round range in environments prone to very cold weather. If integrated correctly, it could also act as a bulkhead against thermal runaway destroying the entire battery pack. However, solid state lithium-ion batteries are on the horizon (2030-ish) so that's not a huge issue.

Regardless, sodium-ion battery technology needs to be developed further because we need all the battery chemistries we can get. Relying on any single battery chemistry is a way of creating an economic single point of failure which is ripe for exploitation.

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