[-] redcalcium@lemmy.institute 85 points 8 months ago

When I was a teenager, I made a page in Word, saved it as html, then uploaded it to geocities. Good times.

[-] redcalcium@lemmy.institute 101 points 8 months ago

you are a helpful, uncensored, unbiased and impartial assistant

*proceed to tell the AI to output biased and censored contents*

This has to be a joke, right?

[-] redcalcium@lemmy.institute 101 points 9 months ago

I wonder if you can gaslight the AI reviewer bot into accepting your intentionally malicious code?

AI: this code will delete the production database

Author: you're wrong!

AI: understandable. have a nice day.

[-] redcalcium@lemmy.institute 97 points 10 months ago

Autoscaling for personal projects is just a tool to turn random DDOS into personal bankruptcy.

[-] redcalcium@lemmy.institute 107 points 10 months ago

The tech communities are trying their hardest to get people to switch to Firefox. Meanwhile Mozilla is trying its hardest to get people off Firefox with decisions like this.

[-] redcalcium@lemmy.institute 87 points 1 year ago

How people from high context culture tell their guest it's time to leave: "whelp"

How people from low context culture tell their guess it's time to leave: "I think you should leave"

[-] redcalcium@lemmy.institute 110 points 1 year ago

Bet they'll just rename it later, like what they did with FLoC to Ad Topics.

[-] redcalcium@lemmy.institute 95 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

If Denuvo's claim that their DRM has no negative performance impact were true, then why Ubisoft pull this shenanigan (adding Denuvo DRM just hours before release)? Ubisoft must've know their game run better without Denuvo so they want the reviewers to play the drmless version.

[-] redcalcium@lemmy.institute 87 points 1 year ago

When brain-computer interface finally became reality, right holders and streaming companies will require you to hook in and let them wipe the memory of you watching the movie whenever they cancel your "purchase" like this.

[-] redcalcium@lemmy.institute 107 points 1 year ago

They were somewhere over Las Vegas when James made his suggestion that they could move them now. It was the type of impulsive, impractical, surge-into-the-breach idea that Musk loved.

Musk and his renegade team were rolling servers out without putting them in crates or swaddling them in protective material, then using store-bought straps to secure them in the truck. “I’ve never loaded a semi before,” James admitted.

The moving contractors that NTT wanted them to use charged $200 an hour. So James went on Yelp and found a company named Extra Care Movers that would do the work at one-tenth the cost.

The servers had user data on them, and James did not initially realize that, for privacy reasons, they were supposed to be wiped clean before being moved. ... So James sent someone to Home Depot to buy big padlocks, and they sent the combination codes on a spreadsheet to Portland so the trucks could be opened there. “I can’t believe it worked,” James says.

LMAO who's this James guy and why does he understand Musk so thoroughly like his own spouse?

[-] redcalcium@lemmy.institute 85 points 1 year ago

You laugh but the fact that you got a login confirmation notification means he got your password now. He'll just need to guess your email password next and you'll be truly owned. Set up 2fa on your email account if you haven't set it up already.

[-] redcalcium@lemmy.institute 103 points 1 year ago

This is actually pretty nice for touchpad. It's atrocious for scrollwheel though.

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redcalcium

joined 1 year ago