The original research paper on IBM’s AI Risk Atlas defines a taxonomy of 40 AI risks. IBM then expanded the online Atlas, and the current IBM documentation lists 100 named risks. Where does the 60 number come from for IBM's list of AI risks?
This is interesting. I was thinking about building a similar solution around GRC but this time focusing on AI regulations, AI threats, breaches, 0-days etc. Out of curiosity did you use agents for this or a platform like Exa AI?
Maskwise and LLM Guard serve different stages of the AI pipeline. llm-guard basically filters prompts and responses to prevent prompt injection attacks. Maskwise is for preparing datasets before LLM training/fine-tuning. It processes large document collections (PDFs, Office docs, images) to detect & anonymize PII.
There is a campaign that When you subscribe to Lenny’s Newsletter, you’ll get one free year of 10 incredible products, including Bolt, Cursor, Lovable, Replit, v0, Linear, Notion, Perplexity Pro, Superhuman and Granola.
This requires an annual subscription ($200) to the newsletter, but it looks like it's worth if you are a heavy user of those tools.
You must be a new paying customer of the products to take advantage of the free year.
For a while, we’ve been developing a DePIN-powered uptime monitoring tool designed to potentially handle data from millions of devices. Our current infrastructure monitoring and uptime management service, (Checkmate) is evolving to include DePIN integration. This will allow users to burn tokens to access data from the UpRock DePIN network.
This is currently how it works under the hood:
- Connect your wallet -> Select the server you want to monitor
-> Choose a geographic focus (specific cities, countries, or entire continents) for Checkmate to send ping messages.
While managing large volumes of data isn’t an issue at this stage, visualization remains a challenge. We’ve implemented MapLibre to display the data, giving users the flexibility to send one-off ping requests to the DePIN network or schedule continuous checks (e.g., every minute).
Given the novelty of this concept (similar to RIPE Atlas), visualizations will play a critical role for admins. Here's what we can currently offer on the dashboard:
- Node distribution on a map: Visualize the number of nodes per country.
- Selective probing: Choose probes directly on the map.
- Probe details: View all probes selected for a specific server.
I need some feedback on how to move ahead. Since we are just a few weeks away from the general release, it would be great if I could get some thoughts. We’re considering whether this is the right balance of features or if adjustments are needed.
My immediate questions would be:
- If you had access to a global DePIN network for server monitoring, what would you prioritize seeing on the dashboard?
- Would you be interested in seeing historical logs? Like access logs going back to a specific time.
- would you want to customize packet size? (set the size of the packets being sent).
Probably there are others upcoming but I would like to start with a small UI set initially.
I am the founder of BlueWave Labs - we accept junior developers and UI/UX designers to give them Canadian experience by building open source products, to help them land their full time IT jobs and would love to talk to anyone who has put some thought on bootcamps. BWL is a bit different from bootcamps but the main idea is the same: to help people land full time jobs.
That is probably the end of income share agreements (ISA). If any companies are doing ISA like that, most probably they would have to collect money upfront just like other bootcamps as well.
I believe especially for the sheets part, there is long way to go. There are strong players like Airtable, Retable, Baserow etc - all having a good base, and it will be hard to catch up (and there are 17 more apps to do the same). But all in all, I am impressed - good luck with your journey!