• 4 Posts
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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: March 22nd, 2024

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  • Lots of tracking can still be done.

    Pick your poison for the situation, basically. If you really want to stop cross-site tracking for a browsing session, for example, use Cromite, which goes out of its way to actively spoof fingerprinting.

    If you are really worried about surveillance for whatever reason, use a Mullad configs

    If your ad profile is messed up, use an ad click spoofer instead of uBlock. If you’re concerned about security, use a browser inside a sandbox.

    Zen with UBlock is just fine (I use it, sometimes), but there’s really no perfect solution. Keep a few browsers around, like tools for different situations.


  • brucethemoose@lemmy.worldtomemes@lemmy.worldYoutube
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    19 minutes ago

    Even if YouTube tore down the algorithm tomorrow, and went back to randomized classification recommendations (like the good old days)… I think it wouldn’t work. As spambots would rule, and your video would still get drowned out.

    I’m honestly not sure what they could do, other than demonetize it entirely, which is not going to happen.



  • brucethemoose@lemmy.worldtoMemes@lemmy.mlThe AI of Power
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    1 day ago

    Yeah.

    Not gonna lie, it was a terrible idea from him.

    The first thing the AI Bros want, and the absolute last thing I want, is for my country and social security to get entangled in a pyramid scheme.

    I’m all for collaborative AI effort (like China) or some national funding to train open models as a utility (like Europe is trying but kind of struggling to get together). I’d be alright funding “infrastructure” companies like Huggingface or Cerebras, or maybe AMD/Intel with very very specific conditions. But Bernie’s proposal is basically the worst of everything.


  • Cerebras makes really interesting hardware though. The engineering, even just the packaging and cooling and power delivery, is utterly insane.

    I have a server teardown saved that was so cool, they took it down from YouTube (for revealing too much I think).

    I hope they survive the bubble so their stuff can be used for oldschool small-model ML, which is what their stuff is actually good at.

    …And no one else is like that, except maybe Huawei. All the other “AI” ASICs are junk, nothingburgers, vaporware, or straight up pyramid schemes.



  • Nope.

    I don’t think there’s any way to know for sure without some left-field software technique.


    My first thought would be something akin to the VAEs already used to encode/decode chunks of video. I dunno how practical it could be adapted as a general video codec, but it has a high compression ratio and a healthy distance from the media patent minefield.



  • For the way I use my laptop I need fairly current hardware

    Then Framework isn’t a great option, as their hardware isn’t particularly new or fast. It’s not really their fault, but just a function of the modularity (which restricts space for cooling/PCB), the small company size (so they don’t get/integrate new chips as quickly).

    This is true even if you upgrade it over time, as other laptops might be a generation ahead with higher end chips.

    The one exception might be the Desktop. And that’s fairly niche.

    Don’t get me wrong, I like Framework. But it’s not a great brand if you really need all the CPU/GPU you can get in a particular size.



  • It got so shallow, though.

    A long time ago, homesteading was the American dream. “Buy your own property, buy stuff for it, build your own life,” and that ethos extended to industrialization, post WWII (with the suburban boom), and even the 80s/90s.

    I feel like that slowly broke with the rise of social media.

    The “American urge” went from home/lifebuilding to encouraging short term, FOMO thinking. “Who cares about the future, look at this beatuful person, they’re using this thing and you need it NOW!” is what basically all modern ads say. Though there are some oldschool holdouts like Berkshire Hathaway, most big buisnesses seem to have adopted that mindset for their own decisions, too.