Handy markdown guide for lemmy:
- 32 Posts
- 24 Comments
RegularJoe@lemmy.worldOPto
Lemmy Shitpost@lemmy.world•Have a Tootsie Roll, Fatso!English
4·17 days agoThanks for the added information!
High Voltage
Powerage
Flick of the Switch
Power Up
RegularJoe@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Ordinary WiFi can now identify people with near perfect accuracyEnglish
132·24 days ago“This technology turns every router into a potential means for surveillance,” warns Julian Todt from KASTEL. “If you regularly pass by a café that operates a WiFi network, you could be identified there without noticing it and be recognized later – for example by public authorities or companies.”
Later…
Inexpensive or older routers either don’t store history at all or keep it for a short time.
Newer models can store more information for more extended periods.
https://www.thetechwire.com/how-long-does-a-router-store-history/
RegularJoe@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Dozens of empty Waymos invade neighborhood in Atlanta leaving neighbors baffledEnglish
391·1 month agoWay more Waymos (Way mo’ Waymos) than expected.
RegularJoe@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•YouTube, your feeds are broken - Open RSSEnglish
23·1 month ago-
get content creators.
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hide their feeds so they don’t make money. Use the algorithm to feed up creators the viewer didn’t subscribe to, so that they watch randos.
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…
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Profit.
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“YOU VILL NOT POST ZE REACTION GIF FOR ZEY ARE CANCER!”
you broke your own rule.
OK, so from what I gather this is about a user called Rimu and it’s making fun of him. I thought this was OP’s attitude, so I will remove the Sokka from the last air bender screaming boo gif!
RegularJoe@lemmy.worldto
Lemmy Shitpost@lemmy.world•idk what to say for this one folksEnglish
43·2 months agoKirk hears defeat?
RegularJoe@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Snowflake customers hit in data theft attacks after SaaS integrator breachEnglish
25·2 months agoFor clarity the platform is called Snowflake.
While numerous cloud storage and SaaS vendors were targeted using the stolen tokens, BleepingComputer has learned that the majority of the data theft attacks targeted the cloud data platform Snowflake.
The headline is not calling the customers snowflakes.
When I grew up there was a company that said “Wednesday was Prince Spaghetti day”.
RegularJoe@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•LibreOffice Drama: The Document Foundation Removes Collabora Developers in One SweepEnglish
79·3 months agoThe Document Foundation’s official reply came from Italo Vignoli, a founder Collabora lists as having already exited TDF membership.
He has kept it short, confirming that the removals happened, pointing to TDF’s recently adopted Community Bylaws as the basis. Those bylaws include a clause requiring anyone affiliated with a company in an active legal dispute with TDF to step down from membership.
Link to those bylaws from Jan 15
https://community.documentfoundation.org/t/vote-adopt-version-1-of-community-bylaws/13472
Quote from that link [bylaws] above
Members involved in legal claims for endangering the Foundation, eg. by means of putting the charitable status at risk, or misusing TDF’s funds, or by damaging any of TDF’s assets, or by attempting to do any of these must relinquish their membership by means of notification to the MC. If the legal claim, in relation to the mentioned matters, involves a company/organisation then also their affiliated members must relinquish their membership.
Back to the original linked article:
The stated rationale is that past situations saw people put their employer’s interests ahead of the foundation’s, and the clause exists to stop that happening again. The specifics of the legal dispute between TDF and Collabora are not mentioned by either party.
TDF also makes clear that a membership revocation is not a ban from contributing, with the project remaining open to anyone, and expects Collabora to keep contributing “when the time comes.”
So without details, all the article really details is that this happened. The why is murky. It seems the TDF is trying to protect itself, but there’s no description of Collabra or TDFs legal dispute.
If none of us exist, how are you getting upvotes?
A shitposter is never late, Frodo Baggins. Nor is he early; he posts precisely when he means to.
In case you lack context, an I-65 sign near Nashville fell onto a semi-truck on Jan. 26. (Photo: TDOT)
ChatGPT isn’t on the team.
Except that when someone pastes “ChatGPT thinks that {wall of AI-generated text}”
That person put ChatGPT on the team. And if there was no human input, the competition is free to use that and mock it word for word. Use fear, uncertainty, and doubt to convince your team that anyone can use that, including your competition, if it is published.
The U.S. Copyright Office’s January 2025 report on AI and copyrightability reaffirms the longstanding principle that copyright protection is reserved for works of human authorship. Outputs created entirely by generative artificial intelligence (AI), with no human creative input, are not eligible for copyright protection.
https://natlawreview.com/article/copyright-offices-latest-guidance-ai-and-copyrightability
RegularJoe@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•U.S. customs searched a record number of electronic devices last year— Recently revised directive adds flash drives, smart watches to searchable devicesEnglish
24·3 months agoEFF has an article on this, too. They have links on how to limit ad tracking on iphone and android.
RegularJoe@lemmy.worldOPto
Technology@lemmy.world•Nvidia delivers first Vera Rubin AI GPU samples to customers — 88-core Vera CPU paired with Rubin GPUs with 288 GB of HBM4 memory apieceEnglish
202·4 months agoNvidia’s Vera Rubin platform is the company’s next-generation architecture for AI data centers that includes an 88-core Vera CPU, Rubin GPU with 288 GB HBM4 memory, Rubin CPX GPU with 128 GB of GDDR7, NVLink 6.0 switch ASIC for scale-up rack-scale connectivity, BlueField-4 DPU with integrated SSD to store key-value cache, Spectrum-6 Photonics Ethernet, and Quantum-CX9 1.6 Tb/s Photonics InfiniBand NICs, as well as Spectrum-X Photonics Ethernet and Quantum-CX9 Photonics InfiniBand switching silicon for scale-out connectivity.















Kukla, Fran and Ollie.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kukla,_Fran_and_Ollie?wprov=sfti1