Really feeling the exhaustion of living in a world where the default is that I will be misunderstood and judged.
LLM stuff, "public good"
Arguing that LLMs are a positive development because they can be used for public good is all well and good, but that would be a much more credible argument if people were actually appropriately credited and compensated for the labour that went into the training data used for that
Like, this discussion would look very different in a society where there's eg. universal basic income, capitalism has been abolished entirely, or there's some other "everyone is taken care of" solution, but that's not the society we live in and that should raise some Questions about any "public good" argument, because exactly whose "public" are we talking about here?
Where does all of this leave the Firefox browser. Surman argued that the organization is very judicious about rolling AI into the browser — but he also believes that AI will become part of everything Mozilla does.
I can't wait to find out what will happen when all the Firefox evangelists wake up to find an LLM baked into their darling.re: eugenics, autism
This includes research into "identifying autism before birth", to be clear. The only possible purpose of that is to eradicate autistic people. It's eugenics.
Naming things is so powerful. I recently learned about the concept of "Cruel Optimism" coined by Lauren Berlant.
I haven't read up much on it yet, but my naive understanding so far is: "optimism" as in "you could be safe/healthy/happy/etc if you just do X"; and "cruel" because it fails to acknowledge the very barriers to being safe, healthy, happy etc. are also barriers to "just doing X".
eugenics, autism
Your periodic reminder that "curing autism" is not commendable; it is eugenics, and should be called out as such wherever it appears.
Things might be different if we lived in a world of consent and agency. But we do not, and that means that a "cure" for autism means eradication of autistic people, *not* freedom of choice.
This thought brought to you by me thinking back to a piece of malware 20+ years ago that called itself "the game", and that upon execution would backdoor the system and start fucking with it
Changing your desktop background to distorted versions of images on your system, trying to creep you out, causing various parts of the system to glitch, only to after X days inform you that its work was done and delete itself
I never was able to figure out where this came from, or what it was, nobody I've talked to about it seems to recognize it
re: food, vegan
Gotta give it to alpro, though, this is one of the most impressive "technically correct in a really annoying way" solutions I've seen to this problem so far 🙃
A month ago I found a cute meme on the internet that I thought would look excellent on my office wall. The bottom of the image said “National Park Service” and some quick image searches found it was originally from the nationalparkservice Instagram account, part of a promotional series to encourage park safety. But Instagram resizes things for the web. So, of course, I did what any internet weirdo would do; I filed a DOI FOIA request for the original artwork. Today the DOI found it for me!
If you appreciate somebody's work, like their kid, value their friendship, learned a lot from that thing they wrote, or whatever, for heaven's sake, tell them. I've gotten two really kind emails out of the blue in the past couple weeks, and the people who wrote them have no idea how huge those tiny glimmers of light are to me in this shitty, painful year. Say thanks! Tell people exactly how they're great, preferably in writing!
Wow another reason to use @tenacity instead of Audacity
Audacity is promoting """AI""" """features"""
https://www.audacityteam.org/blog/openvino-ai-effects/
Edit: Sorry, I thought that stuff was built-in cause of an article I read, they're just linking to some plugins, but it's still really iffy IMO
@drahardja @bumblebeedc I was early in my it career in the 90s. But in my experience working in financial and telecommunications it at the time, even by 1994-1995, industry hardware and software companies, academia, and even governmental oversight was already happening to find and address Y2K issues in US and nascent Internet infrastructure by then.
By Christmas and New Year's 1999 transitioning to 2000 it was still somewhat stressful. Nobody knew for certain that nearly everything had been addressed. I personally volunteered to take the overnight shift as technical lead/project manager so the rest of my team could enjoy the holiday (and incidentally setting the example for other managers at the private bank where I worked at the time). We had a couple hiccups based solely on some preventable human error from other managers getting nervous and blinking against the psychological stress. But nothing actually broke because of uncaught technical failures.
Everyone, in total, across almost all technical, automated industries had done well, addressing and changing technical and procedural issues in time to make the actual chronological transition a piece of cake. But it had been the fruition of a lot of care and effort. Everyone at the time understood that.
In the process of moving to @joepie91. This account will stay active for the foreseeable future! But please also follow the other one.
Technical debt collector and general hype-hater. Early 30s, non-binary, ND, poly, relationship anarchist, generally queer.
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Sometimes horny on main (behind CW), very much into kink (bondage, freeuse, CNC, and other stuff), and believe it or not, very much a submissive bottom :p
My spoons are limited, so I may not always have the energy to respond to messages.
Strong views about abolishing oppression, hierarchy, agency, and self-governance - but I also trust people by default and give them room to grow, unless they give me reason not to. That all also applies to technology and how it's built.