This is exactly the way you stop these so called AI, you pollute its training. Make the training so useless that the product fails too much and you have won the game. It wouldnt surprise me if rivals are doing this to each other.
Posts by Danny 14
4301 publicly visible posts • joined 15 Jun 2009
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Copilot can't stop emitting violent, sexual images, says Microsoft whistleblower
250 million-plus reserved IPv4 addresses could be released – but the internet isn’t built to use them
Rise of deepfake threats means biometric security measures won't be enough
Travel app Kayak offers Boeing 737 Max 9 filter after that door plug drama
Re: Have they never heard of flanges
these are not just static plugs, they have full guide tracks, pins but are secured by bolts. They are mostly doors but without the ability to open, no mechanisms etc. The design of the door framing cannot be changed as this is the approved airframe.
The worry is if the natural vibration loosened the bolts allowing the door plug to "open"
Australia imposes cyber sanctions on Russian it says ransomwared health insurer
ValueLicensing tries to smack down Microsoft defenses in license reselling spat
Re: Its a great model
we have found the exact opposite. autopilot and intune for deployment, sure the gpo to intune policy was a little backward in respect to powerhell (sic) scripts but we are more flexible now. 2FA is much better with the online services now, we still have veeam backup and restore. Onedrive and sharepoint work seamlessly with our ipads and interactive screens too. Cost is about the same but flexibility and admin is easier.
New cars bought in the UK must be zero emission by 2035 – it's the law
Re: Think of the Grid!
oh they most certainly do. Parcel companies use them. We know thia because the 4 public charging points in our village have 4 vans almoat permanently plugged in. Because there are very few cottages that have parking outside the house, most of our village park in two little car parks. EV simply wouldnt work unless there was a massive charging station (larger than a motorway services) put in. These would be public points so would not be cheap at all.
Re: Think of the Grid!
i used to work at the national grid (as was) in Penwortham back in the 90s. The demand vs max load vs availability was quite close most of the time. Infrastructure has not changed even if generation sites have.
there is a reason power stations are all over the place. The grid would not be able to handle the demand even if availability matched.
New York Times sues OpenAI, Microsoft over 'millions of articles' used to train ChatGPT
‘I needed antihistamine tablets every time I opened the computers’
Re: These stories are crazy
quite often units are independent franchises. these tend to have little physical storage so it is quite common to have a small comms cabinet with vpn/firewall, network and server under the POS.
In a company we worked at, one guy left a leaving present of a full crab in his base unit.
we had a call that gis base unit wasnt working. The smell when we opened the base unit was indescribable.Cue a job for the apprentice.
Superuser mostly helped IT, until a BSOD saw him invent a farcical fix
China bans export of rare earth processing kit
Re: Oops!
rare earth extraction amd processing is very dirty business. lots of nasty chemicals and by products. that is the main reason other countries dont do it. There are plenty of viable reserves bit not the will to play with the stuff.
As for uranium, Australia has a lot of the stuff. More than anyone else in fact so the US wont have any issues procuring it.
Russian problems will come years down the line when the chinese come knocking for their loan repayments.
HP TV ads claim its printers are 'made to be less hated'
Re: Missed the target
wasnt always this way. we have a 4000n that is awesome. Still has parts, cheap to run, simple drivers and just works Its over 20 years old and still on its original laser and internals. The exit plastics warped in the sun and the 10Mb network card isnt original either (again, sun damage)
Fujitsu-backed FDK claims nickel zinc batteries ready for use in UPSes
Tesla, Musk likely aware of Autopilot deficiencies behind Florida fatality, says judge
There's no Huawei Chinese chipmakers can fill Nvidia's shoes... anytime soon
Chinese CPUs to feature in servers made by sanctioned Russian company
From vacuum tubes to qubits – is quantum computing destined to repeat history?
If anyone finds an $80M F-35 stealth fighter, please call the Pentagon
Re: I could have understood not mentioning it if it was a Starfighter
my old man was an RAF loadmaster and armorer, he had a few postings but got on with pilots who flew lightnings. Those were notorious for being cramped, very fast and thirsty, the pilots on intercept were often flying back on fumes and none of them wanted to ever eject due to the cramped cockpit shape. The pilots loved to fly them though and even with one engine failure they were still fast. They were known as flying coffins more for the lack of space.
BT confirms it's switching off 3G in UK from Jan next year
Douglas Adams was right: Telephone sanitizers are terrible human beings
Under CISA pressure collab, Microsoft makes cloud security logs available for free
Re: "a step in the right direction"
dont get me started on how shitbag azure logging is. even a lowly 2 node on prem cluster is a cost burden if you go with the default recommended windows admin center azure logging. The only other free option I knew of was WUFB logging (but not email alert).
id rather powershell the shit out it to a syalog server just to spite them.
LG to offer subscriptions for appliances and televisions
Clingy Virgin Media won't let us leave, customers complain
Re: "Being able to switch provider easily is an important part of a competitive market,"
O2 Virgin are just as bad. I had a PAC from them and a full transfer. Im still getting billed for a non existant service on a non exiatant account. O2 were flummoxed the first month as "it shouldnt have happened as the computer says you have no products with us". No shit. So stop fucking charging me.
UK university gets £5M to strap lasers to CubeSats
Let's have a chat about Java licensing, says unsolicited Oracle email
Now that you've all tried it ... ChatGPT web traffic falls 10%
Turning a computer off, then on again, never goes wrong. Right?
Re: Reminds me of an old (early '80s) AI koan ...
ive seenthis before when a windows service really needed a delayed start but also was dependent on another delayed start. Sort of the opposite of a race condition which i call the british queue, "you start first sir! No sir, I insist you start first!" etc.. in the end nothing starts and deriratives all grind to a halt.
India official fined after draining reservoir to recover phone
Indian telecoms leaps from 2G, to 4G, to 6G – on a single day
EU antitrust team closer to full-blown Microsoft probe, say sources
Re: Same old Microsoft, same old games
the number of times I need to move it back to foxit is crazy. Each update Edge is suddenly opening PDFs. You get the little balloon "sorry, some of your default settings have reset to Edge" and you just know what has happened. I dont mind edge as a browser but I do mind the hijacking.
Chinese balloon that US shot down was 'crammed' with American hardware
Techie wasn't being paid, until he taught HR a lesson
Re: Unique keys
this i never understood. User or customers equal numbers. Various bits about a user or customer changes, address, status bit also name. it shouldnt matter if someone changed their name because surely you arent using name as a primary field or upn.
Oh wait, thats exactly what 365 does.
Another redesign on the cards for iPhone as EU rules call for removable batteries
Re: UK specific model?er
not a scuba diver but a snorkeler and I use an aquapac bag for an old note3. this performs very well under water but I imagine the pressure will kill it before the bag gives way. It is certainly harder to use a couple of meters down so scuba diving would definitely render it useless.