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avater , to technology in California deploys AI to detect wildfires before they start spreading
@avater@lemmy.world avatar

that’s some minority report shit

cerevant ,

Not really - it isn’t prediction, it is early detection. Interpretive AI (finding and interpreting patterns) is way ahead of generative AI.

Fizz , to technology in Tor’s shadowy reputation will only end if we all use it | Engadget
@Fizz@lemmy.nz avatar

Why would I use it? I get that we need it for journalists and stuff but it’s mostly used by hackers

BobKerman3999 ,

The idea is that if lots of people use it, then it’s not only for hakers

emberwit ,

But what do people use it for? There is no point logging into your facebook and youtube accounts through Tor but thats what most people do on the web.

wxboss ,

It’s for people who want to keep their network traffic private from say their ISP or other sniffers.

emberwit ,

Yep, and thats nothing the average user has any interest in.

skullgiver , (edited )
@skullgiver@popplesburger.hilciferous.nl avatar

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  • FirstMajesticComet ,
    @FirstMajesticComet@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

    Might also be a good idea to use something like Ublock origin and Portmaster as well, don’t just try to curate ad targeting, block them, if you want to still support websites you can use something like adnauseam which clicks the ads.

    I’m not trying to say that Tor isn’t a good idea because they should be blocking ads, I think more people should absolutely use it for better anonymous browsing, I only bring up ad blockers because if people don’t want to be targeted ads they should be blocking them.

    Bonus: Add anti-adblock filters to ad-block, it helps significantly with sites that try to detect them, also spam and malware filters are essential.

    GustavoM , to retrogaming in The NES at 40: Seven ways it changed the gaming world forever
    @GustavoM@lemmy.world avatar

    We need games to be more “gaming” and less “cinematographic, ultrarealistic movie”.

    jocanib , to technology in Mastodon's decentralized social network has a major CSAM problem | Engadget

    They don’t seem to list the instances they trawled (just the top 25 on a random day with a link to the site they got the ranking from but no list of the instances, that I can see).

    We performed a two day time-boxed ingest of the local public timelines of the top 25 accessible Mastodon instances as determined by total user count reported by the Fediverse Observer…

    That said, most of this seems to come from the Japanese instances which most instances defederate from precisely because of CSAM? From the report:

    Since the release of Stable Diffusion 1.5, there has been a steady increase in the prevalence of Computer-Generated CSAM (CG-CSAM) in online forums, with increasing levels of realism.17 This content is highly prevalent on the Fediverse, primarily on servers within Japanese jurisdiction.18 While CSAM is illegal in Japan, its laws exclude computer-generated content as well as manga and anime. The difference in laws and server policies between Japan and much of the rest of the world means that communities dedicated to CG-CSAM—along with other illustrations of child sexual abuse—flourish on some Japanese servers, fostering an environment that also brings with it other forms of harm to children. These same primarily Japanese servers were the source of most detected known instances of non-computer-generated CSAM. We found that on one of the largest Mastodon instances in the Fediverse (based in Japan), 11 of the top 20 most commonly used hashtags were related to pedophilia (both in English and Japanese).

    Some history for those who don’t already know: Mastodon is big in Japan. The reason why is… uncomfortable

    I haven’t read the report in full yet but it seems to be a perfectly reasonable set of recommendations to improve the ability of moderators to prevent this stuff being posted (beyond defederating from dodgy instances, which most if not all non-dodgy instances already do).

    It doesn’t seem to address the issue of some instances existing largely so that this sort of stuff can be posted.

    _fishy , to retrogaming in The NES at 40: Seven ways it changed the gaming world forever

    38 technically (it’s the Famicom that’s 40)

    2tone OP ,

    You’re right! I thought that too but didn’t double check

    _fishy ,

    the funny thing is this it’s not the first article I’ve read about it this year, and tbf to them it’s really hard to talk about how some of the games we love for the NES are turning 40 while the console itself is only 38

    I’m sure for the marketing it’s a lot better to be succinct with a title for the casual reader. Saying "The Famicom, the pre-cursor to the NES, turns 40: … "

    ColdWater , to technology in YouTube Premium quietly goes up in price to $14 per month | That's a significant $2 increase with no official announcement.
    @ColdWater@lemmy.world avatar

    This doesn’t concerned me one bit because I have Revanced Premium

    Marcy_Stella , to technology in YouTube Premium quietly goes up in price to $14 per month | That's a significant $2 increase with no official announcement.

    So I’ve had YouTube premium for years now, going all the way back to when it was still called YouTube red so I’ve been on the legacy $10/month plan and because I got to keep my old pricing it’s stopped me from canceling at any point when I was rebudgeting and it even stopped me from getting the cheaper $8/month student plan as I didn’t want to lose my legacy pricing once I was done with college but considering they’re hitting all subscribers and not just new subscribers I’m going to jump to that student plan to pay less each month instead.

    It just doesn’t quite make sense why they’re increasing prices besides greed(or they know they can with the roll out of ad blocker blockers). If it was still during the YouTube red era they could have at least used the argument that they were re-investing in originals but they stopped creating YouTube originals. The only real new thing to YouTube premium since the rebrand from YouTube red is PIP and you can join the beta program.

    xenomor , to technology in Kevin Mitnick, formerly the world’s ‘most-wanted’ hacker, has passed away

    deleted_by_author

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  • PipedLinkBot ,

    Here is an alternative Piped link(s): piped.video/B2ac98FUMq8

    Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.

    I’m open-source, check me out at GitHub.

    Hazdaz , to technology in Kevin Mitnick, formerly the world’s ‘most-wanted’ hacker, has passed away

    Man, I remember reading about blue boxes and chrome boxes and not fully understanding it all, but it was fun learning about that stuff.

    mhz , to technology in ASUS will manufacture and develop new Intel NUC mini PCs

    I hope they consider cheap models especially arm based. not just “gamer” crap

    linearchaos , to technology in Google lays off contractors who unionized last month | Engadget
    @linearchaos@lemmy.world avatar

    How does a contract union even work? Isn’t the whole point of contractors that it’s a less binding temporary position that can be terminated if needed?

    RocksForBrains ,

    Every major contract I’ve worked on has has a union presence.

    98codes ,

    Most contracts are through contract companies, who then employs (ala W2) the workers.

    I could see all tech workers that work for these companies forming a union—that could make a real, honest change in the tech workforce overall.

    Captain_Patchy ,

    How does a contract union even work?

    It works because a company far too transparently pretends that “contractors” aren’t employees. I also helps to prove to be BS when the “company being contracted to” sets the rules of employment and decides who is a suitable “contractor” and who is not.

    Shardikprime , to technology in Google lays off contractors who unionized last month | Engadget

    I mean here in Argentina, we IT workers push against unions. When we have issues at work, be it salary or whatever, we just leave and jump ship into the next one Most work is remote and beyond junior positions, salaries are good. We don’t even have to worry about compliance with law because most work in IT has to be taxed.

    Negotiations? We do that when the relationship between both parties begins. Firing? Sure go ahead and do it, we don’t give a shit.

    I imagine IT workers in USA have even better salaries and benefits, so this measure makes no dent. Obvious even, given the size of the union, I mean 80 people come on.

    I tell you, this isn’t the news item they are making it out to be

    lasagna ,
    @lasagna@programming.dev avatar

    After all, Argentina isn’t known for its economic smarts.

    Shardikprime ,

    Indeed, that’s why it has about 3500 unions. None work at all thanks to the leftist in charge of the country

    fubo , to technology in University professors in Texas are suing the state over ‘unconstitutional’ TikTok ban

    The prohibition is not on speech. It’s on installing a specific piece of software on government-issued devices, when the government has determined that software is a security & privacy threat.

    The professors could legally use a third-party client app (if one exists) to connect to the service.

    Heresy_generator ,
    @Heresy_generator@kbin.social avatar

    One example cited by the plaintiffs is Jacqueline Vickery, Associate Professor in the Department of Media Arts at the University of North Texas, who studies and teaches how young people use social media for expression and political organizing. “The ban has forced her to suspend research projects and change her research agenda, alter her teaching methodology, and eliminate course materials,” the complaint reads. “It has also undermined her ability to respond to student questions and to review the work of other researchers, including as part of the peer-review process.”

    This is literally preventing some profs from doing their jobs properly. There has to be a way to sandbox it to negate the threat while still allowing academic research and teaching.

    athos77 ,

    The ban says they can't install the TikTok app on government-provided devices. I don't see why they can't have the TikTok app on their personal devices. Or if they have to visit it on a government device, why can't they use the web interface.

    Heresy_generator ,
    @Heresy_generator@kbin.social avatar

    The ban is on devices and networks, so even if they bring their personal devices to campus or want to use the web that's a no-go.

    Raphael , to technology in University professors in Texas are suing the state over ‘unconstitutional’ TikTok ban
    @Raphael@lemmy.world avatar

    Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.

    Unless it’s from China or any communist allies.

    zaph ,
    @zaph@lemmy.world avatar

    If blocking a website on government devices/networks is a violation of free speech why are you just now sounding the alarm? Why didn’t you sound the alarm when I wasn’t allowed to browse reddit on my government laptop? The government blocking access on personal devices/networks is a violation, blocking access on government networks/devices is business as usual.

    nothacking , to technology in Canadian judge rules the thumbs up emoji counts as a contract agreement

    So is saying yes.

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