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Beta News wrote: only prevent six out of every 10 discovered / noticed attacks. FTFH
Taking undetected attacks in the statistic is a bit difficult.
M.D.V.
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Researchers at IBM released a report Tuesday detailing easy workarounds they've uncovered to get large language models (LLMs) — including ChatGPT — to write malicious code and give poor security advice. I'm assuming the upcoming IBM chatbot is immune?
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Axios wrote: to write malicious code and give poor security advice. as I said the other day...
Hackers and Scammers are thanking God for this year (and for "security researchers")
M.D.V.
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Turning a large language model into a large culture model. Soon it will be a reflection on the worst of us.
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Didn't Microsoft's Tam go that way as well?
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In this article, we continue our examination of this new paradigm of computer programming using English with a systematic study. English, chatbot. Do you speak it?!
With apologies to Jules Winnfield
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I swear the first time I read "Programming using English insults"
and I thought... that would make more people learn "proper" english...
M.D.V.
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Shhhh!! We don't want THAT GUY back here again!
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We’re sharing best practices from our team so others can benefit from Microsoft’s learnings. "You're one microscopic cog in his catastrophic plan, designed and directed by his red right hand"
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MS Sec wrote: We’re sharing best practices from our team so others can benefit from Microsoft’s learnings. If they are hearing them as much as they are hearing feedback from the insider program or the users... we are doomed (again)
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Google today announced the launch of Project IDX, its foray into offering an AI-enabled browser-based development environment for building full-stack web and multiplatform apps. It currently supports frameworks like Angular, Flutter, Next.js, React, Svelte and Vue, and languages like JavaScript and Dart, with support for Python, Go and others in the works. Try it before they cancel it
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We’re already at the final preview release for .NET 8 and will now shift to release candidates. Almost all new features for the release are in their final shape. "It's the final countdown"
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.Net Blog wrote: are in their final shape. Oh no... is the team of .Net now caring about icons too?
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There might be a very simple explanation for why the masses have yet to adopt Linux as their desktop operating system and it's one the open-source community won't like. It's the Year of Guessing Why More People Don't Use Linux
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Article said: The problem is the lack of a representative version of Linux. Although I agree with that, he is clearly understimating procrastination, lazyness and resistance to abandon the comfort zone of the biggest part of the people
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"One 'standard' Linux" breaks fundamentally with the concepts of 'Mechanisms, not policy'. It tells the Linux guy that he no longer can create the user interface the way he thinks the best. The program logic cannot be structured the way he thinks the best. Maybe he will even have to adapt to some established professional vocabulary and set of concepts that he thinks inferior to his terminology and concepts of a professional field outside his own. He can't mandate his favorite file system. Can't make an entirely different menu style, selection style or text input style. Maybe he'll even be denied to promote his well justified technical arguments for 'letter to pål' being a different file from 'Letter to Pål' (or probably to his preference: 'lettertopal').
Windows killed the User Manual. That is what made Windows conquer the desktop. There was one way to set up a window and menu system. There was one way to open a file, to exit a program (vi, anyone?). One way to identify the program and version. One way to access online Help. After having tried two or three Windows programs, you could handle the rest of them without any User Manual.
That is what won the desktop. People felt familiar at once with all applications. No matter what you do to the Linux kernel and the desktop: Linux application developers will continue creating software the way they wish the software world to be. If it doesn't feel familiar to the user, it is the user's responsibility to familiarize himself with the developer's style and preferences. Windows never had that attitude, but said: To make the user feel at home, you should do it this way, do it so and such!
"the majority of desktop use cases these days are centered on the web browser". While that may be argued: If it was the case, who cares about which OS runs the browser? Run the same browser on any OS, and it appears the same to the user. What would then be the argument for replacing the underlaying OS, if the user won't notice anyway?
Today, there is a second reason - another one that the Linux open source community won't like: As soon as you step outside of software development, a large proportion of advanced applications are rather mediocre. Office tools? Half-done attempts at cloning competitors, with no clue about why this and that solution was chosen, won't cut it. Photo editing? To do it well, you must know the tasks as a photographer, not as a programmer. Sound and music editing? Just the same. Document editing? The same. Even if you go to hobbyist software like genealogy: If you have never actually traced your ancestry back to a single forefather that none of your living relatives knew about, you are missing an essential qualification for making a genealogy program. To really push it: You can't even make a program for managing an archive of cooking recipes in a functional way unless you have significant kitchen experience.
As a software developer, I have been using Linux (and earlier: various other *nix-es) at work, and seen high quality tools for software development. At home or in most non-SW-dev-environments: Sorry. The applications from the open-source community are much to obviously created by outsiders who do not know the real tasks and issues. The tools "don't feel right in the hand", even when they have all the functional check boxes checked. Those (few) that cut it are developed in professional application environments, usually far off from idealistic open-source activists.
An essential reason why Windows have retained desktop hegemony: Hadn't MS developed VS, Windows would have been dead today. VS has allowed developers to bring professionals into the software design process, and to some degree allowed professionals to take control over the software design process. Non-programmer professionals have, in the general case, had a much higher influence on and control over successful (non-SW-development) applications, compared to idealistic open source projects based on Linux.
If you switch to Linux, interoperability with other users/environments is always risky. Converting old media projects to Linux tools may be difficult, may be impossible. Moving document bases may discover a lot of quirks. You may frown upon 'legacy', but it is a reality. It is not sufficient to provide some tool with all boxes checked, it must both "feel good in the hand" and the benefits must, in a reasonable time frame, exceed the cost of legacy handling.
Outside the area of software development, this is on the most part not satisfied for any of my non-professional activities. I have tried to run dual setups at home, with Linux for my hobbyist programming. The advantages of Linux tools over VS, and the "advantages" of C++ over C# has never been enough to keep the home Linux installation running for very long before I realize that for home projects, I never prefer it. Just like two years ago, five years ago and ten years ago.
None of this is related to the choice of a distro. Even with a "perfect" distro, the problems of Linux remains.
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His theory assumes that the web-based software is as good as the desktop based versions. From an office application support standpoint, this is simply not true.
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Researchers have discovered a new and powerful transient execution attack called 'Inception' that can leak privileged secrets and data using unprivileged processes on all AMD Zen CPUs, including the latest models. I guess you better not sleep on this one
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As long as they do not plant any malware idea...
M.D.V.
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Internet users can block GPTBot and keep their site out of ChatGPT. How not to join the hive mind
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To join, or not to join... I think I'll choose a joint.
The Verge wrote: Internet users can block GPTBot and keep their site out of ChatGPT. Correction. IF then keep their site out of future iterations of ChatGPT, but... if google's cached pages are available for it, I think they are screwed anyways
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Quote: OpenAI's question-answering bot, ChatGPT, isn't smart enough for the team at Stack Overflow, who today announced a temporary ban on answers generated by the AI bot because of how frequently it's wrong.
Stack Overflow said it was withholding a permanent decision on AI-generated answers until after a larger staff discussion, but was taking action now due to fears that ChatGPT could be "substantially harmful" to both the org and its users
Stack Overflow bans ChatGPT as 'substantially harmful' • The Register[^]
«The mind is not a vessel to be filled but a fire to be kindled» Plutarch
modified 8-Aug-23 11:33am.
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They would lose the joy of closing questions themselves...
M.D.V.
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Couldn't compete with the attitude and ego of the humans that do answer the questions.
I don't think before I open my mouth, I like to be as surprised a everyone else.
PartsBin an Electronics Part Organizer - Release Version 1.1.0 JaxCoder.com
Latest Article: Simon Says, A Child's Game
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