astronaut_sloth

EULAs are part of the reason I almost exclusively use FOSS or just spin my own software (if time permitting).

The first time I encountered one was as a small child (like 5 or 6) when I was trying to install some game. The EULA came up, and I started reading it. Of course, I only understood a fraction of the legalese, but seeing some clauses that seemed to a child supremely unfair, caused me to hit "Do Not Agree." Who would agree to such non-sense without having a full understanding or seeing crazy stipulations? The window closed, and I couldn't understand why, so I asked my parents. They said that although you should read and understand any agreement, EULAs were different because if you don't agree, then you can't use the software.

It's crazy to me that even as a kid, I could see how one-sided EULAs were. These companies aren't even hiding their malicious intent, and we as a society have just decided to go along with it. I'm part of the problem, too (much as I try not to be). There have certainly been times that I hit accept even knowing that the EULA was taking advantage of me in some way, but I needed to use the software.

Anyway, there's not much of a point of writing all this. Companies' EULAs screw us over, and there is little we can really do about it, especially if the software is necessary in some way.

The US defence secretary, Pete Hegseth, has been accused by historians and rights campaigners of “grotesque stupidity”

I see they were being kind to him.

I literally don't know a single veteran or service member who either respects him or even just likes him. Literally 100% across the board disdain. There's got to be at least a couple who have positive views of him in the DoD, but no one I've met or worked with...

One of my friends once told me that when you go far enough left, you get your guns back.

the solution might be cancelling my AI subscription

16d 8h ago in technology from thoughts.hmmz.org

Please read the citations. I've found Claude (and a slightly lesser extend GPT) to be right more often than not, but the leading LLMs do get things wrong with enough frequency that it's worth checking.

Also, to be clear, I'm not fervently anti-LLM, but I do know how it works (as much as anyone who has read the academic literature). "Thinking" is at best a misnomer and at worst a marketing term. It's just an ouroboros; the LLM more-or-less feeds its output back into itself to "check" it and "think." It works surprisingly well, but it's not actual thinking.

Something along these lines is why I've always loved Star Trek and didn't get into other shows/movies as much (like Star Wars, Harry Potter, Marvel, etc.), especially as a kid. The crew of the Enterprise were just regular people, albeit hyper-competent, but still just people at the end of the day. They would combine their diversity of skills and overcome crazy situations. There was no savior or chosen-one, just people with skills and their own interests. It feels achievable for anyone to be an officer on the Enterprise if they put in the effort to be there. Not everyone can be a Jedi or a super hero. That's not to say those other stories are bad, but I always felt that's what made Star Trek special, and Picard's humility, I think, really showcases it. It feels like he would say, "I'm just a guy doing a job."

A sauce NOT for warriors

1mon 1d ago in tenforward from media.piefed.world

I'm glad I'm not the only one who has this thought when I use that sauce

Jennifer Griffin phrased this really poorly. (Fox News isn't really known for intelligence...) Three ships were fired on, and they returned fire with retaliatory strikes, per USCENTCOM. https://www.centcom.mil/MEDIA/PRESS-RELEASES/Press-Release-View/Article/4480437/centcom-protects-us-warships-transiting-strait-of-hormuz/

So, the war isn't back on, but it's not off either. For a cease fire, there's been a lot of firing going on. The US never should have kicked this hornet's nest.

THANK YOU! I studied AI in school, and it always bothers me when people think that LLMs are the only facet of AI. Between 2022-2024, I had a knee jerk reaction of explaining that AI is more than LLMs and that LLMs are really a small subset of the entire universe of AI, yadda yadda yadda. Now I've given up and roll my eyes as someone tries to tell me about the cool new Claude skill they built.

What's funnier is people think I hate LLMs. That couldn't be further from the truth; they are a fantastically interesting and innovative technology! "Attention is All You Need" is a great paper, and super impactful. I just hate that people are outsourcing their thinking to a chatbot and neglect the rest of my field of study.

It depends. I'd say it's a scale of fairly easy to very easy depending on how you have everything set up and documented. Essentially, back everything up and install the new distro then put it all back. It will take some time, though. The first time I distro-hopped, I forgot to take a list of my installed packages, which made for some unwelcome surprises when I couldn't find certain programs. That's not hard to overcome, just keep a list of your installed packages. Even if you don't, it's easy to just reinstall them.

Dr Douchebag to med bay

1mon 23d ago in tenforward from sopuli.xyz

"The Host," which is also the first episode with the Trill.

Yesterday was such a nice day!

3mon 10d ago in chicago@midwest.social from midwest.social

Hegseth Orders Rare, Urgent Meeting of Hundreds of Generals and Admirals

8mon 25d ago in politics from www.washingtonpost.com

WE DO NOT SERVE KINGS

1y 1mon ago in Resist@fedia.io from fedia.io

Governor Pritzker calls for mass mobilization against Trump

1y 1mon ago in illinois@midwest.social from www.instagram.com

Another Poster

1y 2mon ago in Resist@fedia.io from fedia.io

Don't comply

1y 3mon ago in Resist@fedia.io from fedia.io

Here's the 'Fire Elon Musk' Ad the Washington Post Refuses to Run.

1y 3mon ago in Resist@fedia.io from www.commondreams.org

For Those Communicating: Use TailsOS

1y 4mon ago in Resist@fedia.io from toxigon.com