HackerTrans
TopNewTrendsCommentsPastAskShowJobs

tmp10423288442

161 karmajoined tahun lalu

Submissions

Abnormal Response to Anthropic Lawsuit

abnormal.ai
6 points·by tmp10423288442·4 hari yang lalu·1 comments

Apple's Vision Pro and Smart Glasses Chief Is Leaving for OpenAI

bloomberg.com
4 points·by tmp10423288442·15 hari yang lalu·1 comments

Nexus Q Revival

mikevoyt.github.io
2 points·by tmp10423288442·bulan lalu·0 comments

Waymo getaway a likely S.F. first

eedition.sfchronicle.com
3 points·by tmp10423288442·bulan lalu·2 comments

SpaceX's Tiered Lockup Aims to Help Post-IPO Trading

global.morningstar.com
2 points·by tmp10423288442·bulan lalu·0 comments

A blueprint for democratic governance of frontier AI

openai.com
16 points·by tmp10423288442·bulan lalu·3 comments

Against the Survival of the Prettiest (2022)

worksinprogress.co
2 points·by tmp10423288442·bulan lalu·0 comments

The Fall of the Theorem Economy

davidbessis.substack.com
4 points·by tmp10423288442·2 bulan yang lalu·1 comments

Claude Opus is not available with the Claude Pro plan

code.claude.com
2 points·by tmp10423288442·3 bulan yang lalu·1 comments

Amazon S3 Files

aws.amazon.com
2 points·by tmp10423288442·3 bulan yang lalu·1 comments

comments

tmp10423288442
·3 hari yang lalu·discuss
Yes, it's expired I think - it only lasts for 1 hour
tmp10423288442
·13 hari yang lalu·discuss
> If you fail to prevent a private key from being added to your repository, you can reverse this and purge it from the blobs and reflog as if it never happened.

Only if you’re absolutely sure that it’s never been pushed to a public repository. I would treat a push of a private key to GitHub as a much higher emergency than it being sent to OpenAI (or even being accidentally used in a Google search), since there are bots that actively scan GitHub for private keys, such that your private key might be found within a few minutes of push.
tmp10423288442
·15 hari yang lalu·discuss
Paul Meade
tmp10423288442
·15 hari yang lalu·discuss
In the past few years, that's been primarily Anthropic, right? A lot of the really regulation-oriented people at OpenAI went to Anthropic, particularly after the failed attempt to oust Sam Altman as CEO (that was in late 2023).
tmp10423288442
·19 hari yang lalu·discuss
Back in the 2010s, EVs were primarily sold to customers that were more likely to be averse to SUVs for the perceived environmental impact and, frankly, snobbery (liberals of the time used to mock big SUVs like the Cadillac Escalade and the Hummer, particularly after they got associated with the timespan of the Bush administration before becoming uneconomical after the late 2000s oil price spike). Also the batteries just didn't have enough capacity at a reasonable price to build anything heavier than a sedan.

As soon as it was feasible, Tesla released a CUV (the Model Y) which now outsells the Model 3 almost 2-to-1. Arguably Tesla has fumbled by letting Elon pursue the Cybertruck rather than a full-sized SUV or normal pickup truck. You can observe that Rivian went after precisely those missing models.
tmp10423288442
·20 hari yang lalu·discuss
I presume you get connected somehow when opening up a high-value account at a participating bank. If that account has some sort of concierge service, I presume that’s how special numbers for other companies might be distributed.

Pope Leo is not that rich, and had lived outside the US for many years (he came up in the church hierarchy of Latin America), so it’s not that surprising that he ran into this situation.
tmp10423288442
·21 hari yang lalu·discuss
What’s your state?
tmp10423288442
·22 hari yang lalu·discuss
So does ChatGPT. The hallucination problem is not completely solved, but much better than a few years ago, especially if you use reasoning mode, where it’s more likely to spontaneously do a web search
tmp10423288442
·23 hari yang lalu·discuss
If a cop happens to see evidence of a crime, they don't need a warrant to arrest you for it nor for you to be charged for it. Unfortunate for this man, but he shouldn't have had drugs on him (he also had cocaine in addition to marijuana).
tmp10423288442
·25 hari yang lalu·discuss
But you think that Anthropic of all companies would realize this, so why did they do it that way? Did they literally take the first suggestion Mythos gave them to add these guardrails - wouldn't be surprising, seeing the state of the leaked Claude Code codebase.
tmp10423288442
·26 hari yang lalu·discuss
Who is they?
tmp10423288442
·27 hari yang lalu·discuss
There’s a simple way to solve this: just use Codex. The auto-compaction is really good, and lets threads go on for a long time without losing track. In case you do notice a session is starting to go off track, it’s straightforward to make a new session, ask it to summarize an old session into an AGENTS.md, and start it from there.
tmp10423288442
·27 hari yang lalu·discuss
Unfortunately, the Metaverse happened during the COVID bubble, so there was no shareholder discipline then. Meta did crash after interest rates went up - there were large layoffs - but then they got a boost to their stock due to their AI strategy, which seemed competitive until Llama 4 in early 2025, although they were never on the frontier. Even since then they’ve been burning a ton of cash on AI with no discernible results.

The private equity strategy of putting Meta into maintenance mode and focusing purely on their social media business would have been much better.
tmp10423288442
·28 hari yang lalu·discuss
Particularly not with OpenAI finally getting on Bedrock.
tmp10423288442
·29 hari yang lalu·discuss
Europe 2031[0] imagined something like this would happen, but thought it would take a few years. AGI ahead of schedule

[0] https://europe2031.ai
tmp10423288442
·29 hari yang lalu·discuss
Anthropic in particular has been angling for regulatory capture (with themselves in control, of course) pretty explicity.
tmp10423288442
·29 hari yang lalu·discuss
You would think that someone is getting real cell phone numbers, for the same reason scammers value residential IPs rather than data center IPs.
tmp10423288442
·bulan lalu·discuss
> In the Hot 8 Yoga burglary case, San Francisco police issued a search warrant that forced Waymo to turn over information on the account that ordered the ride and video footage from the white Jaguar that served as the getaway car, police records show.

> Faye said that he couldn’t discuss certain details of the case, but that the Waymo user’s account information didn’t lead police to the suspect. In general, he said, it’s not unusual for a criminal to order a service with stolen information or a burner phone.

> The video evidence didn’t help much either, Faye said. He said that the company had not retained interior footage of the car by the time the search warrant was filed in April and that it had kept the faces seen outside the car blurred for privacy reasons.

> “It’s highly unusual in the first place that a Waymo is even used by a suspect,” Faye said. “It was disappointing that the internal video was not able to lead to the recognition of a suspect.”
tmp10423288442
·bulan lalu·discuss
[dead]
tmp10423288442
·bulan lalu·discuss
This headline is so vague as to be misleading.

What actually happened is that AT&T and Verizon were penalized for mishandling customer location data by the FCC. They paid their fines, but attempted to contest them because they were levied by an administrative action, without a jury trial (which they claim would violate the Seventh Amendment), drawing an analogy to the case SEC v. Jarkesy, in which the Supreme Court ruled that the SEC could not impose civil penalties without a jury trial.

However, the Court ruled in this case that, since the law in question allowed the companies to appeal their fines to a jury trial, that the penalties are constitutional. This is unlike SEC v. Jarkesy, where the SEC civil fines in question had no provision for appeal to a trial by jury.

Furthermore, the Court clarified that the companies have the option to settle their obligations by either paying the fine, or by not paying the fine and appealing. The companies had claimed that the text of the law required them to pay the fine before their appeal, but the Court disagreed.