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sanbor

1,526 karmajoined 17 anni fa

Submissions

GCP IAM Authorization Bypass

olearysec.com
7 points·by sanbor·22 giorni fa·0 comments

Learn X in Y Minutes

learnxinyminutes.com
7 points·by sanbor·mese scorso·0 comments

Unhook, extension to block YouTube suggestion feeds, comments, and more

unhook.app
3 points·by sanbor·mese scorso·0 comments

International Law of Self-Determination

en.wikipedia.org
3 points·by sanbor·4 mesi fa·2 comments

Copland (Operating System)

en.wikipedia.org
1 points·by sanbor·4 mesi fa·0 comments

Myths about correct posture [video]

youtube.com
2 points·by sanbor·5 mesi fa·0 comments

Sun Position Calculator

drajmarsh.bitbucket.io
170 points·by sanbor·6 mesi fa·36 comments

comments

sanbor
·5 giorni fa·discuss
I pay for LittleSnitch major releases. I’m kind of forced to, in order to keep up with macOS major releases.

Maybe they can sell the hardware which includes 1 major upgrade release.

Maybe they can have a Kickstarter campaign to fund new releases.
sanbor
·22 giorni fa·discuss
The off-peak hours this pass is valid: Monday to Friday from 9 am to 4 pm and 6.30 pm to 6.30 am. I wonder what happens if you start your ride 3:59 pm.
sanbor
·28 giorni fa·discuss
Good point. I currently choose to give money to Anthrophic rather than OpenAI because they align a tiny bit more with my values and the product is good. Perhaps releasing an open source model every year could be a differentiator from competitors, where enterprise and individuals choses the lab not because is the best model out there but because gives autonomy in case something happens to the organization providing the models.
sanbor
·28 giorni fa·discuss
Because other countries are starting to use AI for military purposes, other countries are also looking into it to asses and learn. Here in Europe there is the EU AI Act to limit harm everyday harm to citizens caused by AI systems. However, it currently excludes military. The new legislation is just started to be enforced to high risk uses (employment filtering, biometrics, etc.) in august 2026, and full rollout in august 2027. In April 2025 there is a report from EU this legislation may help pave the road for military AI usage conventions [1]

[1]: https://www.europarl.europa.eu/RegData/etudes/BRIE/2025/7695...
sanbor
·28 giorni fa·discuss
I would be totally willing to pay $50 per month to support an open source AI lab, rather to get open source models as byproducts of corporations.
sanbor
·2 mesi fa·discuss
The Internet Archive could block (or add a nag wall) all IP addresses from the NY Times to give the journalist and workers there how it feels to be blocked. I guess that would be against IA’s mission “Universal Access To All Knowledge”
sanbor
·3 mesi fa·discuss


    At regular intervals, the team reflects on how
    to become more effective, then tunes and adjusts
    its behavior accordingly.
https://agilemanifesto.org/principles.html
sanbor
·3 mesi fa·discuss
It is very important to have the time and freedom to be idle.

In our modern society, however, we hear the phrase "time is money". So, if you are idle, you are not making money. Instead of being idle, you should be busy. "business" is good.

I learn this play of words in Spanish. Idle in Spanish is "ocio". Business in Spanish is "negocio". Thus negocio is the combination of words "negación" and "ocio". The phrase "negación del ocio" translates as "idleness denial/negation".
sanbor
·4 mesi fa·discuss
Tangent to the topic: One of the great things about Go is that the Go team goal is to have a great developer experience. As a result, they try to bundle common third party libraries (mux, zap) into the standard library. For example, they offered an http server, but due to lacking features community packages offered convenience. The Go team used those libraries as a reference to what people wanted, and addrd a performant and simple http routing in the standard library[1].

From that link:

> We made these changes as part of our continuing effort to make Go a great language for building production systems. We studied many third-party web frameworks, extracted what we felt were the most used features, and integrated them into net/http. Then we validated our choices and improved our design by collaborating with the community in a GitHub discussion and a proposal issue. Adding these features to the standard library means one fewer dependency for many projects. But third-party web frameworks remain a fine choice for current users or programs with advanced routing needs.

[1]: https://go.dev/blog/routing-enhancements
sanbor
·4 mesi fa·discuss
Good question. I find law in general quite ambiguous and full of edge cases and exceptions.

My basic understanding is that self-determination is the right of a nation to choose their own way of government.

[1] Self-determination includes the right of a people of an existing State to choose freely their own political system and to pursue their own economic, social, and cultural development. As such it does not, in light of the current state of international law, impose on all States the duty to introduce or maintain a democratic form of government, but essentially refers to the principle of sovereign equality of States and the prohibition of intervention which are already part of international law

[1] https://opil.ouplaw.com/display/10.1093/law:epil/97801992316...
sanbor
·6 mesi fa·discuss
Why it’s not similar at all?

I want to make an ajax request using jQuery. I look up an example in StackOverflow. I use a very similar code to the example given in the post and by not giving any attribution I just claim ownership.

Same with Spring in action books or looking up Java class references. Many times I look something up and use it as reference just tweaking the examples given.

Millions of programmers have done this.

LLMS in principle use the training data to generate an answer to the prompt, similar to the process I described.
sanbor
·6 mesi fa·discuss
Isn’t similar to looking up/copying code from stack overflow, Google or books? Use it as reference to write the code and claim ownership. My little understanding is that the whole copyright free ride for LLMS is because it is similar to the process of humans using content under copyright as reference to create something new and claim ownership.
sanbor
·6 mesi fa·discuss
I recommend activating "Show Illuminating Sun Beam" under "Explanatory tools" by clicking the graduation cap icon in the top right corner.
sanbor
·6 mesi fa·discuss
Archived version: https://web.archive.org/web/20260111135022/https://drajmarsh...
sanbor
·7 mesi fa·discuss
I have a different point of view. This was a test to see if the AI could perform a specific task. Asking AI to draw a pelican riding a bike is another test. I find the experiment interesting because it proves that currently LLMs are not able to perform a simple task reliably for a long period of time.

If the journalist was not asking the right questions, or was too obvious the article was PR it’s another thing (I haven’t read WSJ’s piece, only the original post by Anthropic)
sanbor
·9 mesi fa·discuss
Interesting points! Maybe a better term is LLMs (BTW smart phones are not smart and people don’t seem to be confused). I agree with being dependent and sending so much data to those servers. I would mention there is a version of ChatGPT you can run locally[1].

[1] https://openai.com/index/introducing-gpt-oss/
sanbor
·9 mesi fa·discuss
I recommend Current Events from Wikipedia[1] for a neutral summary of the most important news in the world.

[1] https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portal:Current_events