@cremieuxrecueil@OliviaHelenS Makes sense, your prompt is not the only thing passed to the model, silently your context is added and if the ‘security’ checks come after the context is injected, it would explain it
@WarintheFuture Are we reaching a point where the economics skews against long range drones? I imagine the interceptors will always be way cheaper because of the payload size and energy needed to produce and shoot?
@KarelDolejsi Ano, s Greenpeace jsem se jako dlouhodoby podporovatel rozloucil uz v roce 2008 kvuli radaru. Pry nejenom green ale i peace a proto byli proti.
🚨1/9 In a new WP, @LichtingerGuy and I use detailed LinkedIn résumé + job-posting data on ~285k U.S. firms (2015–2025) to study a debated question: how does generative AI adoption affect entry-level employment?
Nice that it finally happened but funny that they feel the need to lie about the start of that effort being `22. I left in `21 and it’s been the plan for years already. I guess taking 6+ years to migrate is not something to write about.
https://t.co/EbTEQmDWPv
Manufacturing has collapsed across much of the world, but nowhere more than in Australia.
We haven’t stopped consuming manufactured goods. We’ve just outsourced the factories to China.
They burn our exported energy, create the emissions, and capture the jobs and industry we once had.
Australia’s competitive advantage in manufacturing was always cheap and reliable energy. For decades, our access to abundant coal and gas gifted us some of the lowest energy prices in the world. But that advantage is gone.
Decades of insane energy policy failures have left Australian manufacturers unnecessarily paying some of the highest prices for gas and electricity.
The higher our energy costs climb, the further our manufacturing sector contracts.
With every factory that closes, we become more dependent on foreign nations for the basics of modern life.
Australia has no manufacturing future without affordable, reliable energy. A nation that can’t make its own goods is not a serious country.
7 in 10 people who joined the NDIS in the last year had a primary diagnosis of autism, and most were children.
This is total BS and is taking resources away from those on the right hand side of the chart who really need it.
https://t.co/REkyBVMMFK
“There are now 498 AI "unicorns," or private AI companies with valuations of $1 billion or more, with a combined value of $2.7 trillion, according to CB Insights.”
This is not going to end well…
https://t.co/3ZxM0UCc0D
Every tech bubble is initially pumped by some extraneous source of liquidity poured into unsustainable growth:
-Web2 consumer used VC for paid ads growth to pump MAUs
-Crypto used retail tokens to pump user rewards to inflate usage and hence the token
-AI is using VC (and inflated equity) to subsidize compute costs and inflate consumer usage
(This all also happened with railroads and the telegraph too.)
It all blows up at some point, and the real businesses crawl out of the wreckage and eventually become titans. Nothing new under the tech sun.
We deployed 44 AI agents and offered the internet $170K to attack them.
1.8M attempts, 62K breaches, including data leakage and financial loss.
🚨 Concerningly, the same exploits transfer to live production agents… (example: exfiltrating emails through calendar event) 🧵
Australia has dispatched the first batch of donated M1A1 Abrams MBT to Ukraine. The entire package comprises of 49 vehicles.
Source: Australian Defense Ministry