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esjeon

1,399 karmajoined 13 anni fa

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esjeon
·ieri·discuss
Sure, that is a case, but I mainly wanted to quote INTERPOL (the international police):

> Criminals behind pirate sites can be part of organized crime groups. They can use the proceeds to fund other illegal activities, such as illegal online gambling, online sexual exploitation, drug trafficking, arms smuggling, and money laundering.

Another notable example would be Operation KRATOS 2 by EUROPOL[1]. The case was roughly the same — crime organization pirating video content. IPTV piracy is certainly a lucrative business, because videos are relatively more difficult to handle for normal people.

[1]: https://www.europol.europa.eu/media-press/newsroom/news/29-a...
esjeon
·ieri·discuss
Possibly:

1. Piggybacking established brand names (Postgres + Rust)

2. … without practicality nor advancement (e.g. this solves no extra problems)

3. … without trust (i.e. LLM-driven rewrite, with no capabilities to thoroughly review it)

I think people get easily upset when the title has high-signal names like Postgres, and the title touts it somehow, yet it’s obviously impractical for obvious reasons (short-/long-term practicality, social trust & network effect, etc)
esjeon
·l’altro ieri·discuss
A dirty secret is that piracy is being abused by criminal organizations[1]. When people unknowingly access such sites to see contents for free, it generate ad revenue for those organizations, which can fund other crimes.

[1]: https://www.interpol.int/en/Crimes/Illicit-goods/Projects/Pr...
esjeon
·l’altro ieri·discuss
Corporations acting as if naive is a bit of problem in reality. For one thing, CF is probably the largest entity serving pirated content internationally while hiding the identities of actual perpetrators for privacy.

Same here: CF is basically giving malicious actors an ability to ship contents/data publicly while laundering the legal responsibility of those actors.

Now tell me what is cool
esjeon
·l’altro ieri·discuss
I’m quite sure there is a certain amount of correlation unfortunately, mainly because there are micro patterns (e.g. IO, allocator) that can’t be modularized into functions. Lots of manual copy-pasta.
esjeon
·11 giorni fa·discuss
Just a side note: prompts often get a disproportionate amount of attention. That is, when you copy-paste an error message into the prompt, the LLM will focus on pleasing you immediately by fixing the error message, rather than understanding and fixing the underlying issue.

A better workflow would be to let LLMs directly access the same verification tools you use. This allows LLMs to observe failures during the loop and incorporate the info more organically, without giving failures too much attention priority.

The above is based on my own experience. LLMs perform better in a positive context (e.g. constructive thinking, building outward, what to do) than in a negative one (e.g. restrictive thinking, carving context inward, what NOT to do). LLMs themselves are designed to be defensive & negative, but they get easily confused under lots of prohibitive rules. LLMs are good at expansive exploration, but suck at verification and pin-pointing what you want. (I'm not sure whether it's related, but this mantra is also true for image generation using Stable Diffusion)
esjeon
·20 giorni fa·discuss
> Looking away is not the fix …

> The fix is to manage the consumption and the sources. …

> Containing news consumption to defined windows of time …

> Choosing depth over volume

Golden.

TBH, we must concentrate on what matters to us. When people cross that boundary, they not only hurt themselves, but end up hurting someone close by for issues from far far away.
esjeon
·26 giorni fa·discuss
> Then, run the frame analysis pipeline, which will divide the video into separate video scenes (1s each, or 1fps) > (…) > Frames analyzed 57,537

Aha, it makes total sense. This number sounds much more reasonable than “669 GB”, since the actual total size of processed frames would be like 10-30 GB.

(Not downplaying anything. Doing-at-home always requires some math on practicality)

> Total compute time 67h 40m 42s

I’m just curious tho — is there any paying options that can accelerate this kind of process? Just spin up GPU instances?
esjeon
·29 giorni fa·discuss
> the model itself really wants to spend them all

In fact, Opus does the same. It finishes the job, and redo it from scratch before presenting the result to the user. This happens even for simpler writing tasks especially when I instruct it to create a text file.
esjeon
·mese scorso·discuss
Yeah, you got a very good point there. Yes, it may seem very weird, but that’s because China was not playing the game.

The game that I suggested earlier assumes that (1) those in power seek to maximize their gains, (2) and such behavior is NOT aligned with social gains. So, basically, a never-ending arms race between the authority and the people. (check Leviathan by Thomas Hobbes if you’re interested)

However, China (and also South Korea) got a weird alignment in interests between the authoritarian government and the people — both of them somehow sought after national economic growth. Since their interests are already aligned, they didn’t play the game that I suggested above.

I think such alignment cannot be reproduced through games nor social interaction b/w powers — rather, it is more of a humane part of the history.
esjeon
·mese scorso·discuss
I think the caste system is what’s hampering social and economic progress in India (or at least partially).

It’s a sort of game theory stuff here. A structured class hierarchy makes it inherently more difficult for individuals to challenge the authority in power, even under the democratic government. The system imposes an additional risk of social backlash/punishment/retaliation for anyone who attempts to disrupt the established order, thus people have more reasons to stay back. This kind of risk is largely absent in more egalitarian/classless societies.
esjeon
·mese scorso·discuss
> the ability to align local governments

I think seeing it as an “align”-ment problem puts too much blame on the local side. Also, autonomy has nothing to do with the problem of misalignment.

In authoritarian systems like China, mis-alignment with authority can carry serious political and social risks, so people are easily pushed toward dishonesty. What happened under the Mao’s rule is simply this; local officials were too afraid of criticizing the very father of the revolution, which could be interpreted as attacking the legitimacy of the revolution itself. It was a side effect of over-concentration, and gaining more control over local would have not made any differences.

Deng was successful only because he was exactly aware of this problem. In his speeches on the government reform (the Open-Door policy), he explicitly pointed out over-concentration as a major issue. He not only eased the concentration of power, but also redesigned the incentive structure, so that officials can adopt objective measures and even try their own experiments.
esjeon
·mese scorso·discuss
I’ve been trying this on some social and political science topics, and, tbh, Opus is never going to replace ChatGPT in terms of sharpness of claims. Claims generated by Opus alone are almost always dull and inadequately nuanced. It’s also heavily influenced by popular opinions that include common misunderstanding, preconception, and vague language. The context gets contaminated too easily by external texts, so I have to carefully control and craft the input to Opus.

So my pipeline is mostly stuck with: (1) brainstorm with Gemini (2) plan with GPT (3) augment the plan with Gemini (4) execute the plan with Opus.

Perhaps, given all the materials filtered and prepared, Opus is good for verification.
esjeon
·2 mesi fa·discuss
Perhaps the real job of programmers is (or has been) adapting to new requirements. The art lies in the process, not in the result.
esjeon
·2 mesi fa·discuss
Last time i checked their issue tracker (in 2025), the main source of problem was the engine, not their Zig code. A lot of core dump was happening inside and around JSC.
esjeon
·2 mesi fa·discuss
Partially, the team would have never expected the project to be acquire before Bun touches v1.0.
esjeon
·2 mesi fa·discuss
I guess “void” here is a bit more like a place you can’t even see (because of the flag).
esjeon
·2 mesi fa·discuss
This is a really nice write up. The reason itself — why the delay — is totally within my own speculation, but the sheer quality of the writing dragged me through the whole article. That is something.

I think this shows how Noctua value their customers, including myself. I really love how they are nice to their customers — both their products and services — especially because experience like this is getting more and more scarce. I really appreciate their work.
esjeon
·3 mesi fa·discuss
Exactly. Much of the intellectual work is, in fact, intellectual labor. It’s mostly about combining various information in one place — the exact task that LLM far outperforms human. People traditionally misclassified this class of work as “creative”. It’s not really.
esjeon
·3 mesi fa·discuss
Lack of information, lack of knowledge.

The “AI” “technology” is an easy excuse to create artificial information gap in the era of the interconnected.