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Apex Legends: "We're banning Linux because cheaters use it"

Marvel Rivals: Accidentally bans Linux players, apologizes on the public Discord, says they're going to rescind bans and deal with the problem

@TerryHancock

But... How can medical professionals get around without their luxury cars?

@levisan
It'll all be cheaply and artificially generated for the lowest possible cost/risk.

Real intellectuals will abandon mainstream media and either resort to independent sources or specific traditional medium.

Trust is too expensive to sustain, it's cheaper to sell the audience the lies they need to be entertained.

bastyon.com/index?s=412bc6710b

**For Whom It Is:** This content is designed for network administrators, tech enthusiasts, or developers interested in privacy, decentralized networks, and specifically the i2p protocol. It’s aimed at those who wish to configure and manage i2pd (i2p daemon) across multiple platforms like Linux, Windows, and routers. The readers are expected to have some level of technical knowledge, particularly in network setup and Linux systems.
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@DavidDvorkin

Tired of socio-political opinions that don't align with yours? Find your personalized circle in the new truebeliever.ai

@nedhamson1

All modern industrialized technology has left a carbon footprint that will still be felt decades later.

@sophieschmieg@infosec.exchange Ironically most GenAI implementations have troubles on producing deterministic output due to floating point errors, inconsistent batching, etc. Not random enough for crypto, but random enough to create replication problems. It's what I call Murphy's Duality Law - In engineering, when a system can show both the property "A" and its negation "not A" depending on the specific context, it's always the opposite of what your application needs.

In case you do not know how GenAI works, here is a very abridged description:
First you train your model on some inputs. This is using some very fancy linear algebra, but can be seen as mostly being a regression of some sorts, i.e. a lower dimensional approximation of the input data.
Once training is completed, you have your model predict the next token of your output. It will do so by creating a list of possible tokens, together with a rank of how good of a fit the model considers the specific token to be. You then randomly select from that list of tokens, with a bias to higher ranked tokens. How much bias your random choice has depends on the "temperature" parameter, with a higher temperature corresponding to a less biased, i.e. more random selection.

Now obviously, this process consumes a lot of randomness, and the randomness does not need to be cryptographically secure, so you usually use a statistical random number generator like the Mersenne twister at this step.

So when they write "using a Gen AI model to produce 'true' random numbers", what they're actually doing is using a cryptographically insecure random number generator and applying a bias to the random numbers generated, making it even less secure. It's amazing that someone can trick anyone into investing into that shit.

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@garyackerman

You have to learn to learn first.

Then learn to communicate.

Afterwards learning to collaborate.

Then learn how to teach

Socializing civilly with others can be hard.

@garyackerman
Unless curiosity is blind to rhyme, reason and reality.

Seeing if you can cross a freeway blindfolded will not produce a "better" learning outcome.

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