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Comment Re:No jurisdiction (Score 1) 12

Incorrect. Computer misuse within the US, regardless of where the individuals who are doing the misusing are located, is under US jurisdiction. This is long-established. Laws dealing with multi-jurisdictional issues (such as patents/copyrights, illicit interstate commerce, sex tourism, computer misuse) are old-hat.

Attacking US servers located in US territory is an attack carried out within the US, regardless of where the keyboard warrior is.

Now, if the servers attacked are in Ireland, then they're also covered by EU jurisdiction (no matter what the US likes to think).

The law is the law, and nobody, in any nation, is immune. A fact a lot of nations like to pretend they're somehow immune to. They aren't and there will always be a price to pay for such cavalier attitudes.

Comment Republicants (Score 1) 74

gigawatts is typically pronounced with a voiced velar plosive, but also famous for an alternate pronunciation starting with the voiced postalveolar affricate. But with no difference in meaning. The alternative spelling (jigawatt) is rare and discouraged by most style guides, if not explicitly forbidden.

Comment Re:A human Algorithm? (Score 1) 116

Why when apps and social media are nearly as addictive and can be manufactured much more cheaply? I'm thinking smartphones for fetuses is the next big thing. Maybe have an LLM telling infants bedtime stories, perhaps continuously in one ear 24 hours a day. Capturing customers before they exit the womb is the kind of marketing research the industry craves.

Comment Re: Why AI ? (Score 1) 116

Blind obedience not been the US military's doctrine for a very long time (if ever). While following orders is important, the emphasis has been on comprehending the objectives and following lawful orders. Why? One reason is that a FRAGPLAN is concise and would require enough context to correctly execute according to the intent, especially if it was split from a larger operations order. To do this, you need a military with people who can think, and have absorbed the military culture, and not mindless idiots.

That said, Kegsbreath is working hard to undo our professional military and turn them into an obedient invasion force to strike fear into our opponents. Compliance, honor, and reputation are completely unimportant to the current administration.

(Note: I'm not in the armed forced. I'm a civilian that has an interest in the structures that my tax dollars pay for. I'm not pretending to have ever served.)

Comment Re:Brains are a lot more efficient (Score 1) 116

"Lots" and "one that is widely accepted" are not the same thing at all,

Which is why I specifically said "There are widely accepted ones too."

There's no point in discussing intelligence without first nailing down which definition the interlocutors are using.

Absolutely.

There is value in recognizing the problem, not dismissing it. There are lots of defnitions, many of which are fuzzy, because people who want to argue that humans (or specific groups of humans) are "intelligent" while others are not generally have to define intelligence in a very ad hoc way to support their argument. People who are interested in studying the subject generally have reasonable definitions. The former don't like the latter's definitions because they fail to provide the desired absolute threshold they desire.

Comment Re:Brain architecture (Score 1) 116

My point was that the LLMs claim to know everything but when they don't know something they just make things up where a human is likely to say "sorry, don't know,"

me pointing out that much of that "knowledge" is garbage. That's it.

Hm. Those don't quite sound like the same thing. It's like you've been caught saying something silly and you're engaging in a bit of revisionism. On a public, threaded message board with no edit button, no less. If one were being uncharitable one might point out that the quite human phenomenon of "digging yourself in deeper" often follows the one of making shit up rather than saying you don't know.

Comment Re:We already know it (Score 1) 116

That's not entirely true. We don't have a good idea of how biological brains (simple or complicated) learn. There are some hints of how they might feed back error signals but we don't know in detail. There is the possibility, and people love to latch onto it, that brains are doing something that works better than gradient descent. There isn't really a good reason to believe that, and quite a few not to, except for handwavy comparisons like the summary makes.

Certainly the hardware is different, and that's where the obvious differences originate. The brain isn't really any more analog than your laptop though.

Comment Re:Brain architecture (Score 1) 116

My point was that the LLMs claim to know everything but when they don't know something they just make things up where a human is likely to say "sorry, don't know," or at least say "My guess is X" rather than "Oh yeah, it's X. Definitely X. What do you mean it doesn't exist? Oh, sorry, I just made that up. My bad."

That was good for a laugh this morning. Especially posted on Slashdot right after the guy claiming that what the brain does is uncomputable. Because... it is, that's why.

You can train an LLM to say it doesn't know, or even build pretty good objective confidence metrics. We don't, because people don't like it. We don't like it in humans either.

Submission + - WhatsApp Catches Spyware Firm NSO Defying No-Hacking Court Order (securityweek.com)

wiredmikey writes: Meta-owned communications app WhatsApp says it recently detected and disrupted a spear-phishing attempt linked to spyware company NSO Group. The attack is allegedly in defiance of a court order that bars the spyware maker from targeting WhatsApp. WhatsApp filed a lawsuit against NSO in 2019, after it came to light that a zero-day vulnerability had been exploited to deliver spyware to users.

NSO has been seeking to overturn the order blocking it from targeting WhatsApp users, arguing that the company will “suffer irreparable harm”.

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