“A SPECTER IS HAUNTING right-wing dissident Substackers—the specter of Renée DiResta.”
My book is reviewed in The Bulwark today — and it’s a very entertaining read! 😊
https://www.thebulwark.com/p/influencers-bullshitters-losing-shared-reality
@RolloTreadway OMG "Raksasa" is 🤯
@kaoudis oh, have to try avo chocolate pudding. Loved avo ice cream
@kaoudis that's good Breakfast Virtue Ethics! I may not have resisted the temptation to experiment
@kaoudis I don't think I've ever seen guac this close to chocolate... It makes me nervous in a good way somehow.
@mcc *hurrying up to the ceo* sir- there's been a containment leak in the gay vault. at this rate of leakage... the whole midwest will be gay by tomorrow
@kellogh If we're being extremely pedantic, Free Software started as a movement because somebody had a printer but no printer drivers. They did not have a *per se* problem with the fact that a printer is capital nor with the capitalist system that produced the printer.
This suggests to me that we need some sort of further movement to tackle LLMs. I'm thinking about Open Access (share the docs and data), Open Hardware (share the low-level implementation details), and various open-dataset efforts.
Also, it's worth pondering whether the cost of training an LLM is innately expensive. It could be the case that only one pass is needed through the training data, and that the current system is set up as a data laundry to avoid paying license fees. The VCs funding this research are used to the idea of laundering resources through startups. Shalizi has an exploration of the implicated components: http://bactra.org/notebooks/nn-attention-and-transformers.html
But you know, as long as software journals don't even want to allow the reporting of participant demographics, we cannot possibly begin to scratch the surface on any of this. I think it is important to consider the selection effects of what we hear about, the long chains of pipe we've laid down that dictate who is heard in this moment, and what complexity is compressed into legible summaries that treat all "developers" like a neutral blank slate, interchangeable "personas."
@whitequark im in this picture and I don't like it 😔
Clock ticks (†Horoixodidae; A. A. Koch, 2144) are a now-extinct family of family of parasitic arachnids of the order Ixodida. Adult ticks are approximately 1 to 8 nanoseconds long, although their larvae may reach as much as 1 microseconds in duration. Since the widespread adoption of asynchronous logic in the Third Industrial Revolution, habitat destruction and loss of reproductive capability have caused the loss of this once-widespread group of animals.
@adapalmer ❤️ this and the fact that it looks like Wall-E
All-terrain power wheelchairs are now available at state parks in Georgia, opening up hiking trails to wheelchair users. #ShareGoodNewsToo https://gastateparks.org/Accessibility/TrackChairs
Honestly I don't think "gaining adoption" is that important in a truly diverse ecosystem.
The reason concepts like adoption become useful is when it drives compatibility. We do want different servers to be able to participate in the larger society. But I think compatibility emerges because people *want* to participate. You have to add the value first. Then people will do the work to be compatible so they can get to the value.
code / data wrangler in Switzerland.
Recovering reply guy. Posts random photos once in a while.