in /tmp?! in post_install()??! With a new random contributor email????
Archlinux is focused on enabling a specific type of user, and certainly ones that can read bash scripts, and understand reasonable depedencies vs unreasonable ones. And even then - this is specifically in the AUR and not a package the distro directly offers.
> isn’t that also the case for every browser extension, VSCode extension, nuget package, Cargo crate, python package, npm package
Yes, and all of those have supply chain hacks in them, and have happened within the last year? In this specific case, it's a malicious npm package being installed with official npm tooling in the PKGBUILD.
The advantage to the AUR is just that you can reasonably review every PKGBUILD for what you're installing, they are very simple bash scripts. It'd be great if more people would donate resources to help verify and validate AUR scripts, but the AUR specifically exists for packages that the trusted users and devs of arch don't have time to personally maintain.
I probably add or change a feature in emacs once a day, or every other day. I've been using emacs for some insane amount of time, maybe 20 years? And still I had more customization to go.
Emacs and programs with it's level of programmatic user customization will survive the AI period in my opinion. Anything static will falter.
> Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said his company’s recent investments in OpenAI and Anthropic are likely to be its last in both, saying that once they go public as anticipated later this year, the opportunity to invest closes
ok, sounds obvious
> Nvidia, for its part, isn’t offering much more on the matter
ok, so no more news from nvidia
> Still, a few other dynamics might also explain the pullback..
Please reread (or.. read) the paper. They do not make that mistake, specifically section 7.1.
A reward function (R) may be hackable by a model's response, but when asked to confess it is easier to get an honest confession reward function (Rc) because you have the response with all the hacking in front of you, and that gives the Rc more ability to verify honesty than R had to verify correctness.
There are human examples you could construct (say, granting immunity for better confessions), but they don't map well to this really fascinating insight with LLMs.
While I have several disagreements with this deck, there are two large ones:
1. In my experience, a lot of teams don't have long enough meetings to avoid the litany of small meetings. For example, a lot of staff meetings could easily be 2 hours and then cancel many project specific meetings that have 50%+ of the same attendees later in the week. They also enforce a cadence of execution - everyone knows they need to prepare for the weekly staff meeting, rather than many small meetings every day. It also avoids the problem of people feeling not included - you're always invited to the one huge meeting every week, it's up to you to attend or skip.
2. The problem with meeting culture cannot be solved with education on how to say no, it's about admitting that attending meetings actually does convey a lot of things. Lots of information is not shared outside of meetings. Seniority of attendees actually does have a huge impact on visibility in folks' careers. A lot of the advice in this slide deck feels like it should work, but doesn't in practice because of self interest.
The education that needs to happen is quite different imo:
- leadership needs to be done through writing
- meetings should be recorded and minutes sent out broadly, along with allowing silent attendance.
- decisions need to give time for dissent outside of meeting attendees before committing.
Math notation is high context, so it's great to just ask llm's to print out the low context version in something like lisp where I can read and decompose it quickly.
attention required: 10 minute video > 10 second short
When the written word took over with the printing press, the same concern was levied. The amount of attention required to listen and memorize a story/poem is a lot more than just reading it.
The change with smart phones is just one of access/time spent on these things. There are people who are spending ~5 hours/day watching this content. There is a big difference between someone listening to 5 hours of a single poem, to reading 5 hours of a single book, to reading 5 hours of blog posts, to watching 5 hours of a youtube video, to watching 5 hours of random videos, to 5 hours of <10s videos.
Considering Cinnamon is a fork of Gnome 3, it seems to be significant evidence of Gnome 3's influence. And Plasma was first released in 2014, 3 years after Gnome 3.
Gnome 3 had a HUGE affect on desktop environments, due to Gnome 2's popularity.
It changes the contributor email?
to install random npm packages?!
in /tmp?! in post_install()??! With a new random contributor email????
Archlinux is focused on enabling a specific type of user, and certainly ones that can read bash scripts, and understand reasonable depedencies vs unreasonable ones. And even then - this is specifically in the AUR and not a package the distro directly offers.