Lumina Desktop Developer, Fedora Jam & Security Lab Maintainer, Producer of BSD Now, Showrunner for MindDripMedia, Geek, Photographer, and all around swell guy
@damoosmann@kevinroose It's not surprising at all. Dario has been calling for regulation for a long time. He's anti-open source and wants models controlled by a few entities. No better way to usher in regulation than scaring the crap out of people in power, so normal people can't run their own models.
@cryptocom Why are you requiring people to put their SSN into a website that's not behind a login to get their tax forms? Why does your email say I can reject this and get a paper copy, but your support personal are refusing me that option? #security
Why do UI designers continually take something that's easy to use and then bury it behind something else.
In Dophin 25.08.3, "Open Terminal Here" was a primary menu item. Now in 25.12.0, it's in a sub-menu. Why?
Were you upset that your application was useful and efficient?
@rohanpaul_ai Assuming a 5 day work week... and 4 weeks a month... that's 50,000 lines of code a day. Assuming an 8 hours of straight coding a day, that's 6250 lines of code an hour, or 104 lines of code a minute, or 1.7 lines of code a second.
Good luck with that.
@NamelessTechBro@GarandThumb1 There are ways to collect water from nature when you are out in the wilderness. This is a basic skill that everyone learns in SERE training. You can't, however collect a rifle and ammo from nature.
@esrtweet@StefanMolyneux Also, do the people that like to make fun of Aphantasia and Anendophasia not realize that hearing voices and seeing things in your head that aren't real could just as easily be called schizophrenia? Perhaps they aught to think more before trying to pass judgement on others.
Hello, world. The tweets below were sent from a previous owner. The deletion script stopped working past 2013.
From today on, anything from this account is from Mainframe Computer, Inc.
@KyleKneisl Hutchens was arrested when he visited Vegas, so monitoring POIs visiting Vegas isnt new. While there are a lot of skiddies at defcon, there's are skilled people that go as well. IDK what its like now though, as I haven't been to Defcon since 2005.
This sounds like a perfect way to cover Intel services being able to access/compromise hardware/systems of specific high interest individuals, and they simply masked it by convincing the hotel to implement a "hotel wide policy".
A friend of mine got booted out of the Hilton Hotel at DEF CON after room searches and here is his story and what they were looking for:
So during Def Con 32, the Hilton Hotel did raids on the rooms of people it thought were hackers. Here is a post of someone's experience and the photos of what the guards were given:
"Before I explain what happened, let me clarify that this was my personal own experience and I'm not talking on behalf of the other people affected by this incident.
There's this hotel that's engaging in random room inspections specifically to Def Con 32 attendees. They're targeting attendees on the grounds of "making sure [we] are not a threat or have devices that can compromise their network security".
In a very aggressive way, they demanded us to open our rooms to go through all of our stuff. We asked them give us time to confirm what they were asking was legit and legal, and they got mad and demanded to open the door or else they were going to call the police and charge us with trespassing.
Things escalated very quickly and armed security guards came with the intention of breaking the door to get us out. Since they wouldn't reason, I decided to just open the door. They aggressively asked for our IDs, started reading some policy out loud, and then escorted us out of the property without a care in the world.
On our way down the hall there were many more security personnel knocking on doors and getting people out, just like a drug raid.
I'm still nervous by this unnecessary and I bet unlawful situation, but I know nothing about laws and how things work in Vegas for visitors. The only thing I can recommend is to STAY AWAY from the Las Vegas Hilton at Resorts World. They are discriminating against Cybersecurity professionals and attendees to the Def Con convention.
I can't do anything else, but to tell you my experience, so you don't go through similar situations.
If you know how to help in any way, legally, awareness, etc, please do.
Cybersecurity professionals must stick together to make things right for the good of everyone. DISCRIMINATION cannot be tolerated."
Other people had their badges confiscated by security, and were hassled and threatened for even walking through the hotel.
@eevblog This sounds like a perfect way to cover Intel services being able to access/compromise hardware/systems of specific high interest individuals, and they simply masked it by convincing the hotel to implement a "hotel wide policy".
@DennysDiner The @DennysDiner rewards program is pointless, you email a coupon but when I try to use it, it says its voided. Also your $5 off $25 coupon fails if the total bill AFTER the coupon is applied less than $25, so really you have to order $30 worth of food to get the $5 off.
Key point to always remember about LLMs... it's Statistics Not Intelligence. Sometimes those statistics can accurately represent reality, other times they do not.
Link: https://t.co/yOew6IitGe
It's the one of the key points of the subscription model. By making a new payment after they change the contract terms == you've accepted the new terms. The subscription model is a legal loophole allowing them to update the contract whenever they want.
@iamteale @autonomous_ny @setuprepairllc Ah, yes... AI art of a battlestation. You cant fool me with that monitor on the left that's on both a desk stand and a monitor arm, as well as some of the center monitors being trapezoidal.
RIP the privacy of your own thoughts.
Just wait till authoritarian governments get a hold of this and mandate brain scans to ensure Citizens are being good little slaves. Goebbels would have loved this. #dystopian