Really this is far more probable than a dozen people went crazy in the same way at the same time which seems to be a plurality of comments.
If there's an American great ape they live in Washington state, not Ohio, based on report frequency.
Star Wars nerds? Yes, so many in Ohio.
His best buddy specialized in making exploding pagers.
Good luck out there.
In my younger and more foolish days I had a Pontiac and I opted out with wire cutters to the Surveillance module's power cables.
At the time I was actually more concerned with remote unlock hijacking than tracking but still I didn't trust GM.
All together now: WE TOLD YOU SO.
If I had to guess 20 years later doing that would disable the ECU.
Yeah, this sounds like some kind of jaded Transhumanist humiliation ritual.
If true as written, those 'monks' are without honor or reverence.
If this puts companies like Celebrite out of business, then I'll happily accept, that I have to update my servers 16 times a year until 2028. At least the linux branches of these companies can go, I don't care much about the others.
Are there any tools to watch my lsmod, walk
All of these exploits are in distro modules I'd never use.
Local access, unless you haven't patched apache this week, then it's remote access.
> What are normal people supposed to do?
It looks like a omen to take up farming.
Maybe I should pull some of my 4TB nvme sticks and buy my kid a used car...
It's not md5 collisions that are the problem here, it's poor passwords.
Which is something that we can't actually fix, and maybe have tried for the past 22 years.
As mentioned above, memory-hard algos are better than hashes now.
I did some math the other day on running local AI models and the net result is most homes can't afford to run the current median models.
They don't just need 80GB of VRAM, they need newer architectures - to be supported by CUDA, to be supported by pytorch, etc.
These problems may well be solvable with more clever use of hardware, MoE, acceptable quantization, etc., but today you're in for several grand and something north of 100W idle to use what is effectively a $20/mo plan.
A small enterprise can afford local, so that's good. We paid more than that for one SGI machine back in the day.
The point of the exercise was to plot the position on the curve. We're at something like 2006 YouTube where nobody could afford the drives or bandwidth that YouTube/Google was giving away for free (aka with VC money). Eventually hard drives got cheaper, people got gigabit at home, FlashServer was replaced with h.264/HTML5, phones could stabilize video locally, etc.
So it looks like these AI companies need to stay alive for about seven more years giving away product at a loss, or at least highly oversubscribed, to turn a profit. Hence the low token allowance, the banning of OpenClaw, etc.
On the other hand, I read the blog of a security researcher yesterday who found an exploit with (IIRC) Claude, tried to refine the PoC, but got dinged on "out of tokens" before he could finalize it. So he just deleted the work and moved on.
It sounds like they're trying to not lose money at such a velocity and are trying to find a sweet spot where people don't just declare it too underpowered to use.
A global energy depression may well take out the supermajority of the companies that believe they can burn investment money for seven more years. There is circular financing money, then there is real return on capital money. One is to fool the markets, the other is grounded in current physics.
Your mode of life will be changed to ASCII.