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sterlind

6,732 karmajoined vor 9 Jahren
(she/her) currently exploring: bi-level optimization, graph theory, algorithmic network design, computer algebra.

Discord: starstriking Email: sterling dot dorminey at gmail

comments

sterlind
·vor 6 Tagen·discuss
and migrants? I think liberal parties in European countries seem to be much more supportive of refugees than Democrats, current Republican rhetoric aside. also, police, and guns. meanwhile, even with the issue you singled out, most red states in the US have enacted near-total abortion bans. do any countries in Europe ban abortion outright? are the conservative parties pushing for it?
sterlind
·vor 9 Tagen·discuss
they are already pulling the rug. Google took months to publish devicetrees for the Pixel 10. they've signaled (iirc) that they'll no longer make the Pixel line capable of running AOSP. the reason they even did at first was to make Pixel a reference implementation that vendors could use to port Android, but now they've announced a switch to an emulated device for that purpose.
sterlind
·vor 13 Tagen·discuss
"A riot is the language of the unheard." ~ MLK Jr.
sterlind
·vor 13 Tagen·discuss
Merriam Webster defines whistleblowing as:

> one who reveals something covert or who informs against another especially : an employee who brings wrongdoing by an employer or by other employees to the attention of a government or law enforcement agency

Wikipedia further asserts:

> Whistleblowing is the activity of a person, often an employee, revealing information about activity within a private or public organization that is deemed wrongful – whether it be illegal, immoral, illicit, unsafe, unethical, or fraudulent

Arguably, nothing the NSA was doing was illegal. Was Snowden not a whistleblower?
sterlind
·vor 23 Tagen·discuss
there are cheaper ways to do it. not like, consumer-cheap, but I'm setting up a rig for 80% cheaper than that.

I'm a tad worried about triggering a run on the particular hardware I'm buying though so I'll leave it vague here, but hit me up on Discord if you're curious.
sterlind
·vor 24 Tagen·discuss
what about just... becoming mediocre? engineers are already infamously lazy at reviewing PRs. how is Meta incentivizing these Data Labelers to give a shit and actually scrutinize the AI-generated code they're supposed to be reviewing? what's the reward structure? what prevents engineers from flagging minor nitpicks all day while they look at LinkedIn?
sterlind
·vor 24 Tagen·discuss
[dead]
sterlind
·vor 26 Tagen·discuss
I'm amazed we didn't have the same moral panic when the web became popular. billions of people suddenly had access to knowledge about how to create dangerous viruses! sites like Wikipedia don't even check that you're a US citizen before letting you access pages on recombinant DNA and genetic engineering! the articles on sarin and VX nerve gas include syntheses!
sterlind
·vor 27 Tagen·discuss
why would the First Amendment apply to foreign nationals working for a foreign corporation in a foreign country?
sterlind
·vor 27 Tagen·discuss
I think there's space in the middle between "incremental improvement" and "doomsday device." it's a major step up, sure, but so was GPT-5 over GPT-4.
sterlind
·vor 27 Tagen·discuss
they probably did. either they subsequently ignored the models' suggestions, or the model sycophantically gassed up their bad decisions, or the models are not very good at persuasion/spin/politics.
sterlind
·vor 29 Tagen·discuss
how did you feel about Hegseth's "double tap" strike?
sterlind
·vor 29 Tagen·discuss
> The war crime laws were invented as a legal theater for victorious powers to persecute the losers after WW2 with a veneer of legality, for imperialist superpowers to bully the small third countries who refuse to play ball, not for something superpowers to actually abide by themselves

I recommend you watch Judgment at Nuremberg - the 1961 film, not the 2025 one (I've seen both.) the Nuremberg Trials were very much to punish the architects and perpetrators of the Holocaust for their atrocities. you can choose to be cynical, but consider: which "losers" were "persecuted?"

- the Doctors' Trial sentenced the doctors who murdered thousands of disabled Germany's own citizens in the Aktion T4 program.

- the Judges' Trial sentenced the Judges who enforced the Aryan racial purity laws, ordered the castration of "mental defectives" and sent falsely-accused Jews to their deaths.

- the Pohl Trial which sentenced the SS officers who ran the concentration camps and death camps.

sure, the US doesn't have perfectly clean hands, and the victor usually won't prosecute its own the way they prosecute the enemy, but I strongly disagree that the Hague was just an attempt to "persecute the losers." they were prosecuted, not persecuted, and they weren't prosecuted for "losing," they were prosecuted for their atrocities.

just because the Hague is unfair (some men never faced justice, since they were on "our" side) doesn't mean it was unjust (those who were convicted deserved it.)
sterlind
·vor 29 Tagen·discuss
Smoking gun! You've hit the nail on the head, and the case is stronger than you think.
sterlind
·vor 29 Tagen·discuss
I hope they succeed, for the sake of my mom who's legally blind and has dreamed about them for decades. but I'd be significantly more excited about self-driving if you could buy level-4 AVs that you can actually own.
sterlind
·letzten Monat·discuss
just imagine if they made it sneaky. get things just subtly wrong enough that your training runs just never quite go as well as you think they should.
sterlind
·letzten Monat·discuss
I recall there was also an issue with how paths are treated in NT. I don't fully recall, but I think NT paths are parsed by the kernel early on, and the whole kernel operates on "cooked" paths. there was some major performance implications this had for WSL1 in addition to the filter driver architecture.

I also don't remember why they couldn't just bypass the filter stack for paths in a certain volume - WSL2-like I/O on WSL1 - but there must have been a reason.
sterlind
·letzten Monat·discuss
if you're working for one of the organizations Dario has blessed, then sure. you're SOL if you're not one of the top-3 whatevers. maybe they'll let MIT, Harvard and Stanford use Mythos for biology. good luck to everyone else!
sterlind
·letzten Monat·discuss
(disclaimer: layperson remembering how the immune system works.)

the adaptive immune system effectively does KYC by checking the antigens presented on the surfaces of cells. the thymus selects for B-cells (iirc?) which don't react to a corpus of the body's own antigens, but cover a wide library of everything else. when it sees something it doesn't recognize, it reproduces, warns the rest of the immune system and marks targets. that's why our immune systems can eventually conquer almost every pathogen we encounter, if we can survive long enough for it to do its work.

but the KYC I was referring to was KYC that vendors of oligonucleotides (should) be doing, to keep people from ordering nefarious sequences.
sterlind
·letzten Monat·discuss
I'm bullish on mRNA vaccine technology to release the "patches" much more quickly. there was widespread resistance to this during covid, but covid wasn't horribly lethal. if airborne Ebola spread as productively as covid, for example, I doubt there'd be many anti-vaxxers left (one way or another!) the acceleration of biology research that might accelerate pathogen development should also accelerate the development of broad-spectrum mRNA vaccines with high persistence.

also, afaik the most effective way of developing pathogens is through serial passage through humanized mice or something like that - directed evolution at a small scale, selecting for traits. AI simply isn't needed for that. I don't think information or intelligence has been the bottleneck for bioterrorism, it's motivation and resources - same as for any other kind of biology research program.