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job description, screaming 

BA or MA degree in engineering, computer science or other technical related field

HOW THE FUCK DO I GET A BACHELOR OF ART DEGREE IN ENGINEERING OR COMPUTER SCIENCE

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btw if anyone here is good at computers and knows how to get pygame and hidpi to play nice on linucks do feel free to share your wisdom

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Aaand clew is back up! :D

https://clew.se

I think it'll stay that way for a while this time, but… fingers crossed!

Clew is a new search engine that maintains an independent index and is aiming to be a copyleft (APGLv3), self-hostable, privacy-respecting, customizable search engine which prioritizes independent creators/bloggers/writers and penalizes sites with ads and trackers. (Boosts welcome!)

We're currently in a public beta and had extended downtime while implementing spam-fighting measures, which we've just returned from.

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On reviewing privacy preserving tools:

This is not a new discipline.

We have mathematical and engineering tools to do analysis.

We have decades on decades of research literature, rooted in cryptographic analysis, statistical methods, probability theory, and computer science detailing how privacy preserving system are broken.

Just how one can tell that a badly engineered bridge will collapse before it is built, one can assess that a "privacy preserving" tool will not preserve privacy.

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There's a funny thing you see in many scientific papers - especially #AI papers: The paper will prominently include a link to a GitHub repository with claims of code availability "soon" but when you go there (months after the paper was released) there's either just a placeholder or the paper text.

People use GitHub links to score browny points for "doing open science" but most of it is just not there. Especially with statistical systems when you realize that you don't get the training data, you don't get the code, you don't get model weights what you get are results and a "trust me bro".

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About 14 years ago, one of my coworkers read California labor law and realized we were entitled to overtime for working more than eight hours a day, rather than for 40 hours a week. It meant a big bump to my income, to about $30/hour. I was working night shift, with twelve hour shifts, and two hours of commuting each way. I was continuously sleep deprived and barely saw my family that I lived with, for five years.

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A spy tool is scraping the messages of thousands of Discord servers and selling the data. This is letting people track users across servers, shows when they joined voice chats, which servers they're in, etc: 404media.co/a-spy-site-is-scra

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The true power of #genAI is not technological, but rhetorical: almost all conversations about it are about what executives are saying it will do "one day" or "soon" rather than what we actually see (and of course no mention of business model which doesn't exist).

We are told to simultaneously believe AI is so "early days" as to excuse any lack of real usefulness, and that it is so established - even "too big to fail" - that we are not permitted to imagine a future without it.

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Today I read scattered-thoughts.net/writing

and thought up several things I want from an IDE

For a pure language like Haskell, I want the IDE to magically find properties for me.

There are already libraries like github.com/nick8325/quickspec and github.com/rudymatela/speculat that can do it, but they're not yet hooked into haskell-language-server.

I also want my IDE to discover which tests execute which functions, and run the tests whenever the functions change.

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#python #coding #academia

Working with long scientific data pipelines can be a nightmare because the code of dozens of people, package managers (conda, pip, poetry) and workflow tools (make, snakemake, nextflow, pydoit) just bundle up into an indecipherable mess.

I'm wondering if people here know of good examples or have suggestions on how to keep scientific software workflows lean... Or at least make them less of a pain.

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Increasingly finding that #AI-generated images on a blog post lowers my opinion of the author — not (just) because of a principled anti-AI stance but also simply because it’s rubbish.

If you’re happy decorating your work with generated garbage I’m just going to assume your standards are that low for everything you do.

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Hey what are y’all’s favorite *books* on AI ethics? I get asked for recs a lot and I rec the usual suspects but I think a lot of people are hoping for things that are especially relevant to gen AI (as opposed to ML) and I wonder if I’m missing more recent stuff.

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Fun fact: the Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer can't use a real-time operating system. 

This is because it's Io bound.

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Tiny Privacy Tip for Application Developers 🔒✨

Every piece of data you
collect on others with your application becomes a liability to you.

You are responsible for
safeguarding and keeping track of every single piece of personal data you collect.

This is a heavy responsibility.

Especially if you collect and store a lot of data.

A much easier approach is to collect only what is absolutely necessary and delete it thoroughly as soon as it is not necessary to keep it anymore. You will save yourself so many headaches adopting this practice right from the start in your software development.

Remember: You can't be liable for the data you simply never had.
This is the easiest path for you,
and the safest path for your users.

#TinyPrivacyTip #Privacy #DataMinimization

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