misk

joined 2 years ago
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[–] misk@sopuli.xyz 3 points 34 minutes ago* (last edited 33 minutes ago)

Eh, why fault technology when those people are just children that don’t know anything about running things but they’re deeply convinced they do. Trump is a narcissist with ADHD, doing this kind of scatterbrained but opinionated stuff is very on brand. I sympathise with the condition because I’m similar.

If anything more people should be pointing and ridiculing the formula that was used to derive tariff rates. They padded it with redundant calculation of 4x0.25 hidden away by Greek letters to make it look like something even worth writing down.

[–] misk@sopuli.xyz 43 points 11 hours ago* (last edited 11 hours ago) (2 children)

Apps make or break those platforms. Lemmy apps are way better than what Mastodon has for example (but I have to tip my hat to Phanpy). We got really lucky that Lemmy exploded in popularity due to Reddit API changes which meant many app developers gave Lemmy a shot. I probably wouldn’t use Lemmy so much if Voyager didn’t fill the hole Apollo left in my heart.

[–] misk@sopuli.xyz 6 points 13 hours ago* (last edited 11 hours ago)

I was always hungover when drinking young. Then I stopped getting hangovers because I had an alcohol problem. Then I stopped drinking. YMMV.

 

One twisted thing about cooling and climate change: It’s all a vicious cycle. As temperatures rise, the need for cooling technologies increases. In turn, more fossil-fuel power plants are firing up to meet that demand, turning up the temperature of the planet in the process.

“Cooling degree days” are one measure of the need for additional cooling. Basically, you take a preset baseline temperature and figure out how much the temperature exceeds it. Say the baseline (above which you’d likely need to flip on a cooling device) is 21 °C (70 °F). If the average temperature for a day is 26 °C, that’s five cooling degree days on a single day. Repeat that every day for a month, and you wind up with 150 cooling degree days.

[–] misk@sopuli.xyz 1 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

The more I think about it I agree with some comments on this I saw on Slashdot some time ago. Once those monstrous hacked apps start being used in the wild it’ll be so easy to crack their logic and get them to do unintended things. It’ll be like being a hacker or phreaker in the 80s. Personally, I missed that boat and I’m too dumb for real hacking even if I code so I don’t mind having a go at this.

 

Archive: https://archive.is/2025.04.02-180255/https://www.404media.co/t-mobile-shows-users-the-names-pictures-and-exact-locations-of-random-children/

On Tuesday, some parents lost the ability to track the locations of their children using a T-Mobile tracking device and app and instead were shown the exact locations of random other children around the country, 404 Media has learned.

T-Mobile sells a small GPS tracker for parents called SyncUP, which they can use to track the locations of young children who don’t  have cell phones yet. Jenna, a parent who uses SyncUP to keep track of her three-year-old and six-year-old children, logged in Tuesday and instead of seeing if her kids had left school yet, was shown the exact, real-time locations of eight random children around the country, but not the locations of her own kids. 404 Media agreed to use a pseudonym for Jenna to protect the privacy of her kids.

“I’m not comfortable giving my six-year-old a phone, but he takes a school bus and I just want to be able to see where he is in real time,” Jenna said. “I had put a 500 meter boundary around his school, so I get an alert when he’s leaving.” 

Jenna sent 404 Media a series of screenshots that show her logged into the app, as well as the locations of children located in other states. In the screenshots, the address-level location of the children are available, as is their name and the last time the location was updated. In many cases, the location updated time said “just now” or “one minute ago.” It is clear the tracked people are children because their profile pictures show images of young kids wearing backpacks, and many of the locations shown are schools around the country.

[–] misk@sopuli.xyz 2 points 1 day ago

They’re used to AI being extremely inefficient use of resources.

 

Since the beginning of 2024, the demand for the content created by the Wikimedia volunteer community – especially for the 144 million images, videos, and other files on Wikimedia Commons – has grown significantly. In this post, we’ll discuss the reasons for this trend and its impact.

The Wikimedia projects are the largest collection of open knowledge in the world. Our sites are an invaluable destination for humans searching for information, and for all kinds of businesses that access our content automatically as a core input to their products. Most notably, the content has been a critical component of search engine results, which in turn has brought users back to our sites. But with the rise of AI, the dynamic is changing: We are observing a significant increase in request volume, with most of this traffic being driven by scraping bots collecting training data for large language models (LLMs) and other use cases. Automated requests for our content have grown exponentially, alongside the broader technology economy, via mechanisms including scraping, APIs, and bulk downloads. This expansion happened largely without sufficient attribution, which is key to drive new users to participate in the movement, and is causing a significant load on the underlying infrastructure that keeps our sites available for everyone.

 

Archive: https://archive.is/2025.04.02-134322/https://www.ft.com/content/93d7168b-75a3-41e3-ba5a-4f378b93a709

The UK has circulated plans for European countries to establish a “supranational institution” that jointly purchases military equipment, stockpiles weapons and helps to finance large-scale rearmament across the continent. 

The informal paper, written by UK officials and seen by the Financial Times, presents the case for a multilateral fund for a “coalition of the willing” that would borrow on markets at favourable rates and support defence spending

Backed with equity and sovereign guarantees, the fund would both lend money for defence projects and actually acquire military assets, creating common “stockpiles” of equipment for participating nations.

Drawn up by UK Treasury officials, the so-called “non-paper” was circulated last week with key European capitals for discussion but stated that it does not represent the official policy of the British government. “We don’t comment on leaks,” said a UK government spokesperson. 

While not specifying the intended size of the fund, the paper says the measures could help to close a defence financing gap in Europe that is estimated to be “hundreds of billions of euros”.

[–] misk@sopuli.xyz 3 points 1 day ago

I’m a completionist so I watched it until his fake death and now I pretend he’s dead for real.

[–] misk@sopuli.xyz 1 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

Do you buy new TVs when a broadcast standard changes? Around here people buy cheap chinese tuner/decoder thingy so you can still see some CRTs in the wild if you have older relatives.

[–] misk@sopuli.xyz 12 points 2 days ago (4 children)

By 2030 I intend to expand my media center capacity from 8TB to something like 16TB in a striped RAID configuration. Maybe by then I’ll have an external IP and will be able to stream from home to my other devices without a tunnel connection.

[–] misk@sopuli.xyz 6 points 2 days ago (4 children)

Please make it stop or it’ll end like if they didn’t stop making Highlander movies after the first one.

[–] misk@sopuli.xyz 1 points 2 days ago

This is my understanding as well.

[–] misk@sopuli.xyz -4 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

When all of the elites come from wealthy families then are the institutions they staff really independent? There are judges and prosecutors who have been very partisan here. We know that wealth affects your chances at getting highier education, connections etc. We also know wealth inequality is rising. Maybe the system is rigged subtly enough so that we don’t revolt? Just consider the possibility and basic flaws in human nature.

[edit] Every downvote is a lib saying „nu-uh, propaganda!”, proving my point that they actively reject reality. This is why everyone is surprised when post truth politicians win. Reality was staring them in the face this whole time. How long can they keep this up? Is fascism the end goal? Wouldn’t surprise me. MLK remains timelessly right.

[–] misk@sopuli.xyz -2 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (1 children)

Why the heck would I lie to you. The case Im referring to is commonly seen as an insult to intelligence and it went to the Supreme Court.

https://brd24.pl/spoleczenstwo/najsztub-prawomocnie-uniewinniony-w-sprawie-potracenia-kobiety-na-pasach/

As established by the portal brd24.pl, Piaseczno district office officials marked in the CEPiK system that Najsztub did not have a license. This is how it turned out that the stop was interrupted because their system listed him as a person remaining while driving (in this case, we stored answers to questions about how many times he had been stopped since his license was taken away).

Guy had no drivers license even!

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