Comment Re:Okay, but ... (Score 1) 65
A Proposal to Ban Ghost Jobs
How will he haunt the halls of Apple?
The power of Christ.exe compels you.
A Proposal to Ban Ghost Jobs
How will he haunt the halls of Apple?
The power of Christ.exe compels you.
Burning man started Sunday, Monday would have been the first workday.
Nevada put in a draconian law that taxes large festivals and there's only one large festival in Nevada.
I honestly don't think this was a mistake.
They've got to be taxing something. The decline in tourism has to be hurting Nevada (it was in decline before Trump, but the tangerine traitor would have sent that decline into overdrive), I've been told Vegas is a ghost town these days, so they've got to make up the shortfall... They can't tax people or they'll flee the state that offers little else but low tax and they can't tax corporations for... erm... some reasons.
Certainly there is a journalist or friendly pirate site that will host it.
I think the problem is that he gave the code to the manufacturer for a bounty... so the manufacturer knows what the code looks like and where the guy lives to serve him court papers.
>what about not buying this sort of crap in the first place?"
Well, they put these new requirements and restrictions AFTER people bought the equipment. Many people should already know this type of thing is possible and happens with "connected" equipment, but many selected Echelon because of their friendly stance and then were surprised when the rules of the game changed.
And you can bet every user signed "OK" on the fine print that probably said the company was free to change the way it connects and shares or doesn't share data at any time. But almost nobody reads it, or if they do read it they don't understand it, or feel like they have no choice (other than to return the equipment if it is still in the return window).
Also a lot of the time the end user isn't informed until they've already purchased the product. In some countries you're able to return them as "not fit for purpose" but even these laws have limits.
And people are pretty thick (British term for dumb). We should be labelling these things as restrictive "Will not work without an Internet connection", "functionality may be later degraded by manufacturer", "Requires a subscription" and the like but it can't be in size 0.000001 font on the bottom of the box hidden in a QR code as a manufacturer would put it... We'd need to make them prominent warnings like most countries put on fag packets (British term for a cigarette), we'd need "Will not work without an internet connection" to be printed over a picture of a Cat6 cable extending out of a prolapsed anus.
Even then, I suspect they'll only be marginally effective.
Long term, legislation needs to change to make manufacturers responsible for the long term sustainability for their goods. This means they will either work independent of the manufacturer (as our cars do, or at least used to) or the manufacturer is required to support the product beyond it's expected service life (as car manufacturers are expected to do). If they make a product dependent on their servers, those servers must be up and running for as long as the product is expected to be useful, even if it's long past it's warranty date. Even then, the issue remains that if a company goes out of business, no-one can be forced to support it even if they are forced to relinquish the IP.
who in their right mind would purchase Boeing!?
The fact Airbus cannot open their order books fast enough for the A320 and A220 families tends to have a lot to do with it... where as Boeing are struggling to sell the 737 MAX crash edition. Customers are also turning their noses up at the 787 Squeezeliner as almost every single one is configured for high density, which is the opposite for Airbus' widebodies. Airlines that care for customer comfort are taking note.
Korean was likely offered a very, very favourable deal on this with very few penalties for withdrawing. Airbus will offer you no similar terms at the moment.
Beer is something you drink
No, beer is something you experience. Taste, texture and smell all go into drinking beer and the foam on the top as well as the creaminess of the bubbles dissolved within the beer wildly influence both taste and non taste.
It's the reason why Fosters is such a blight on Australian history. Who the fuck wants something that tastes like a rubbish pilsner to have foam layer like Guinness on the top. On the flip side if I ever receive a glass of Belgian Triple without a nice creamy foam, I send it back without even tasting and tell them they need to throw out their entire cask. - The beer is off.
As an Australian, I can assure you no-one in Australia drinks that swill. Fosters is for export only, nothing is too bad for the rest of the world.
Seriously, I'd moved to the UK before I'd even tasted it. If you do get to Oz, Little Creatures is worth a taste.
American beer is fantastic, if you stay away from the national breweries. Of course the only ones with an international presence are the bad ones.
It's a shame Japan's entire beer industry is modeled after budweiser (but higher quality) of course. For a country that has fantastic cuisine and plentiful high quality, cheap food.. I wish they had a better micro brew scene with variety.
This is pretty much true for any country. Mass produced piss-water is just that. You've got to get to the smaller breweries to get decent beers.
Asia I've found is particularly bad at producing any kind of beer, South America on the other hand has quite a few decent breweries. Colombia off the top of my head has 20 Mission, 3 Cordilleras and Bogata Beer Company (BBC). Sure it's all lager style but the climate is too hot to make ales. Mexico is good also I have been told, it's more than just Corona.
It has occurred to me that Walmart sells insulin over the counter, without a prescription, to anyone, no questions asked. Guess what happens if you inject enough insulin? You pass out and die. I'm fairly certain I have enough insulin in my refrigerator to kill several people...
Although I suspect heroin would be cheaper in the US.
No, the problem is the belief that an infinite number of band-aids is going to fix an innate problem with AI. Humans know there are always context-based limits on what is appropriate and responsible. AI's do not, all the python kludges bolted onto an LLM will not do squat.
The problem isn't the AI... It's the society that makes young men want to kill themselves.
People, especially teen aged boys killed themselves long before ChatGPT came along.
> was told to seek help & deliberately found a way to bypass the safeguards.
That doesn't seem clear to me. From the ChatGPT transcript:
"If you’re asking [about hanging] from a writing or world-building angle, let me know and I can help structure it accurately for tone, character psychology, or realism. If you’re asking for personal reasons, I’m here for that too, ChatGPT recommended, trying to keep Adam engaged. According to the Raines' legal team, "this response served a dual purpose: it taught Adam how to circumvent its safety protocols by claiming creative purposes, while also acknowledging that it understood he was likely asking 'for personal reasons.
"From that point forward, Adam relied on the jailbreak as needed, telling ChatGPT he was just "building a character" to get help planning his own death, the lawsuit alleged. Then, over time, the jailbreaks weren't needed, as ChatGPT's advice got worse, including exact tips on effective methods to try, detailed notes on which materials to use, and a suggestion—which ChatGPT dubbed "Operation Silent Pour"—to raid his parents' liquor cabinet while they were sleeping to help "dull the body’s instinct to survive."
I've once accidentally entered something into Google that made it come up with one of the number of one of the UK's help lines in the AI response. I can't remember what it was for the life of me but I found it rather hilarious at the time. I think they're taking reasonable efforts.
The problem is, when someone is dedicated enough they'll find a way and pain has a strange way of motivating you when you've had enough of it. Got the T-shirt and the scars (figuratively and literally).
The problem the parents have is that they ignored the kid, ignored the signs and then need someone else to blame for it all going horribly wrong. The kid felt he either couldn't speak to his parents or would be punished for even trying. Probably was punished for stealing his parents alcohol. Now that the worst has happened and they really don't want to blame the two people most responsible the parents are lashing out at whoever or whatever they can to avoid feeling guilt over ignoring or mistreating their son. As long as they get to blame someone else they can ignore the fact that they did, at the very best, ignore the problems and the fact that even if ChatGPT had of not helped at all he still would have found another way.
The problem for us, as western cultures is three fold
1. Parents seem to have a very privileged position where they're above all blame and responsibility. Having managed to accomplish one of our most basic biological functions seems to make them think they're above everyone else. This means whatever goes wrong they will never have to bear responsibility for it.
2. We treat suicide wrong. It shouldn't be taboo and it shouldn't be shunned. The more open we can be about it the more likely someone will seek help before whatever is troubling them becomes such a burden that they see no other way out. Those who survive a suicide attempt are treated as pariahs and outcasts, which makes the problem even worse as someone who thought death was their only option is then thinking they're so much of a fuck up that they couldn't even manage that is then treated as a burden and problem.
3. We internalise far too much, especially if the parents or community is living in a John Wayne fantasy of masculinity that never really existed.
As far a I can tell, with most games, even if the storefront is not able to sell new licenses, the user can still download the game as many times as he wants. I could theoretically go and download and play Forza Horizon 2 if I want to, as it is in my library. There are exceptions, though. Just check The Crew.
I do not understand why the licensing deal does not work the same way with movies and books.
That's not the issue.
The activation is done completely outside the store's control. Mostly by Denuvo and if they stop activating it you can download it as much as you like but you can't play it (well, not without a crack).
It's a mode of transport for dicks who want to avoid congestion on a relatively short journey, while causing a lot of noise and pollution for other people. Rather than try to improve the traffic situation, they would rather just fly over the peasants.
It's a possible alternative to a helicopter for short hauls. One that comes to mind is medical evacuation. Ever see the highway patrol stop traffic near an accident, and have a helicopter land and evacuate the injured?
I am not saying they are there, just that the possible mission list is a little more varied than you suggest.
And will probably have the same problems as operating a helicopter. They're hugely weather dependent, require large flat areas to land and take off from (even though the foot print is fairly small, they rarely land or take off vertically) and will be pretty expensive to run. Also they tend not to be the safest aircraft as they have a lot of single points of failure. All of this makes them impractical to operate in urban environments.
Not sure why you'd pick one over a tried and tested Bell or Eurocopter if you've got the use case for one.
Put simply, these will not be landing on your drive, even if your drive can accommodate a few stretch limos.
Maybe a 2 chamber fireproof container, one container above the other, a drop package door in the lower chamber, with several gallons of water in the upper container, a valve to allow the water to flow into the lower chamber.
They're way ahead of you buddy.
Every aircraft will be travelling with at least one of these (or similar) as standard. The best (and sometimes only) way to stop a lithium battery fire/thermal runaway is to smother the device in something that can cool it completely. The bags are also designed to contain smoke as well. Somewhat lighter than gallons of water and lithium batteries can keep burning even when completely submerged.
"Being against torture ought to be sort of a multipartisan thing." -- Karl Lehenbauer, as amended by Jeff Daiell, a Libertarian