Spoilers ahead for the earlier volumes
( Read more... )
Does anyone make footnote annotated editions of books before they're hundreds of years old? Or cultural context footnotes for cultures that aren't countries or languages? If $someone were to setup a wiki for such notes, with context provided by limited quotes from the original, what'd be the mean estimated time to error 451 (down because lawsuit)?
New scam going around DeviantArt. It opens when you get DM’d the line “Pardon me, may I have a moment of your time? I have a concern I’d like to share.”
The scammers are doing these from real people’s hacked accounts, so if you get suspicious and look at the user’s profile, everything about it suggests “genuine non-bot person.” I got suspicious and googled a whole sentence of their text, and found the above post about other scammers using the same script. Stay alert out there.
—
This post is from 2018, but I was looking for the link again recently, so I’m bringing it back. Concrete examples of ways you can change an image that don’t affect what a human brain perceives in them, but wildly messes with what a computer algorithm detects in them. (I’m pretty sure “AI poisoning” art algorithms, like Glaze and Nightshade, are doing a variation of this.)
“Builder.ai, once touted as a revolutionary AI startup backed by Microsoft, has collapsed into insolvency after revelations that its flagship no-code development platform was powered not by artificial intelligence—but by 700 human engineers in India.“
“We conduct a randomized controlled trial (RCT) to understand how early-2025 AI tools affect the productivity of experienced open-source developers working on their own repositories. Surprisingly, we find that when developers use AI tools, they take 19% longer than without—AI makes them slower.” (Narrator: Nobody was surprised.)
“”Tasks that seemed straightforward often took days rather than hours, with [LLM “coding” bot] Devin getting stuck in technical dead-ends or producing overly complex, unusable solutions,” the researchers explain in their report. “Even more concerning was Devin’s tendency to press forward with tasks that weren’t actually possible.”“
It’s worth watching the full “actual coder exposes the scam what Devin actually did” Youtube video linked in the previous article. (The speaker says he’s pro-AI! He’s just exhausted by all the fake hype!) Among other things, Devin gets access to a Github codebase, writes a completely new file that duplicates (badly) the functions of a file the project already had, fixes at least some of the bugs it just created in the redundant new file, and then submits this as “fulfilling the task to review the project for bugs.”
Reddit post: ChatGPT, you have the file and not a cactus?
Have you ever read a book, a story, or an article and thought, “Everyone should read this. It would change the world.”? This still happens to me now, but it was most frequent when I was in college. Yes, I was in college way back in the 1980s, so these books have been around a while. And they changed my life!
If you look at my life now, you may ask yourself why you’d want my life. It’s no great shakes being me. I’m in my mid-fifties and early retired because of disability. I’m the poster child of when wunderkind burn out in adulthood and fall flat on their faces. But without these books, it would have happened sooner. Without these books, I’d be dead instead of just hurting, sometimes addled, and still fighting like hell to keep living. Keep that in mind.
Life Maps: Journey of Conversations on the Journey of Faith by Jim Fowler and Sam Keen
Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion by Robert B. Cialdini
Becoming a Master Student by Dave Ellis