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mattlutze

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Distributed blockchain auth mechanism for secure and efficient MANETs

nature.com
1 points·by mattlutze·8 months ago·0 comments

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mattlutze
·15 days ago·discuss
Participants as equal owners doesn't preclude security guarantees.

The advantage is having a voice in setting direction, investment and ultimate shared incremental profit recovery over the rent capture from hyperscalers.

It's an interesting idea really. But it also comes with cooperation, which means trust, and a lot of for-profit enterprises are bad at operating cooperatively outside of 2- or 3- way engagements.
mattlutze
·15 days ago·discuss
You haven't heard of them * unless you build hardware that talks to other hardware

Then you've had lots of fun with EAR compliance.
mattlutze
·2 months ago·discuss
[dead]
mattlutze
·5 months ago·discuss
You only start to need the popups if you specifically put cookies on a visitor's browser to build a personal profile of them.

This can be for e.g. sales acquisition or marketing engagement, but also includes cookies to simplify login, so not everything is "stupid stuff." A cookie that stores "was here, skip the splash page" may already fall afowl, if you put any session metadata in it.
mattlutze
·5 months ago·discuss
Use one of the cookie popup managers to automatically assert your personal identity sharing choices.
mattlutze
·5 months ago·discuss
"People are forced into extensions, just to stop wasting their time here."

Except, what actually has happened is that the annoying pop-ups became ubiquitous, and then relatively standardized, so that now an extension like Consent-o-Matic (because the browser companies don't want to upset their advertisers) can automate away your actual choices.

If you want to allow websites to track you, tell the extension to make those choices. If you don't, then tell the extension that. It does a great job almost instantly clearing the popups, and you have more control over your digital identity.
mattlutze
·5 months ago·discuss
The regulatory frameworks in the EU are intentionally not designed like the US, to maximize company profits over e.g. human rights and health.

It is thoroughly documented that social media and the modern web are designed to be addictive, by psychologists who specialize in this. We regulate access to other addictive things, because addictive things break humans' normal control systems.

> "the farther you get from the influence of bureaucrats, the happier life becomes"

only when things are "normal" and if you're a default power-holder in a community. For everyone else, really no.
mattlutze
·6 months ago·discuss
I remember having some kind of a shell app on my iPod Touch in college and needing to run and find wifi a few times to troubleshoot something at a job I was student working at.

They were fun times :D
mattlutze
·7 months ago·discuss
The prevailing implementation of capitalism compels all companies to continue developing revenue streams to increase their overall “worth.”

Any company that has unique or rare data is compelled to do things with it. Those that don’t either can’t figure out how or explicitly reject the reward function of contemporary capitalism. We should really expect those deviations to be the exception.
mattlutze
·8 months ago·discuss
When we let the market bubble-up protective conditions through buyer behavior, we advantage innovation at the cost of accepting more harms, because the market response is always reactive instead of proactive, and the reaction can sometimes take decades or more (like GHG emissions and global warming).

When we let structural regulations assert protective conditions on a market, we try to advantage proactive harm reduction at the cost of innovation, because artificial market limitations will be barriers to innovation and create secondary game conditions that advantage some players.

Which way we lean should depend on the type and severity of potential harms, especially with consideration of how permanent or non-reversible those harms are.
mattlutze
·8 months ago·discuss
OP is not being literal. Satire and the interpretation of it are important for a healthy and nuanced world view and discourse.
mattlutze
·8 months ago·discuss
0.5% of the starlink node network deorbits each month currently, though potentially more.

They're already having a negative, contaminating effect on our upper atmosphere

Sending up bigger ones, and more (today there's some 8,800, but they target 30k), sounds ill-advised.

1: https://www.fastcompany.com/91419515/starlink-satellites-are... 2: https://www.science.org/content/article/burned-satellites-ar...
mattlutze
·8 months ago·discuss
https://ev-database.org/cheatsheet/energy-consumption-electr...

The Model 3 manages < 140 Wh/km, and many seem to be under 150/160/170.
mattlutze
·8 months ago·discuss
If you're putting motors in wheels, lower weight means reducing the weight/capacity of adjacent systems.

Lighter motors for mobile robots could also be cool.
mattlutze
·8 months ago·discuss
We also need to consider the confounding effect of corporate performance and recession expectations.

Cost centers in businesses are early canaries of expected pain, and a reduction in security roles may reflect belt-tightening irrespective of AI impact.
mattlutze
·8 months ago·discuss
By avoiding fishing, you stop damaging many of the carbon sink systems in the ocean, and so as a second-order effect improve the sinks we used to have.
mattlutze
·8 months ago·discuss
Bell also "just" provided telephone service, but had a nation-wide practical monopoly, and so was broken up into different regional operators.

The US has since gotten bad at dealing with companies like this. A company like Google or Amazon could/should be broken up into a few parts and would likely result in those parts together being worth more than when it was just the one company, and more competition in each industry.

Too early and the break-up can kill innovation. Too late and the company will have been a rent-seeking operation for so long that it chokes out dynamism.

It might be too early for OpenAI, but we shouldn't wait until they own all of the next Internet in the way Facebook, Google and Amazon ended up.
mattlutze
·9 months ago·discuss
If you claim, for example, that an input is not stored, but examples of internal steps of an inference run _is_ retained, then this paper may suggest a means for recovering the input prompt.
mattlutze
·9 months ago·discuss
I feel like, if the feedback to your paper is "this is over-done / they claim more than they prove / it's kinda hype-ish" you're going to get less references in future papers.

That would seem to be counter to the "impact" goal for research.
mattlutze
·9 months ago·discuss
Especially when, as it is currently in vogue to observe, the difference between $50b and $1t is roughly $1t.