- 6 Posts
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jqubed@lemmy.worldto
Opensource@programming.dev•Frustrated users crowdfund a $2,000 fix for Lenovo Legion ‘speakers not working properly’ error — bug bounty posted, coder wins the cash by fixing complex audio annoyance in just a month
34·12 days agoI am most intrigued by this concept of frustrated users crowdfunding pledges for bug bounties that bother them
jqubed@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Android QuickShare is now compatible with AirDropEnglish
4·16 days agoHere’s the Google blog post announcing it: https://blog.google/products/android/quick-share-airdrop/
jqubed@lemmy.worldto
Linux@lemmy.ml•A statement concerning the Fedora and Flathub relationship from the FPL – Fedora Community Blog
3·16 days agoAnyone know what the embargo that wound up lasting 3 months was about? I’m assuming a security vulnerability that is now fixed?
jqubed@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Google’s Sundar Pichai says the job of CEO is one of the ‘easier things’ AI could soon replaceEnglish
674·16 days agoI’m sure there are many jobs AI is not capable of doing but some CEOs probably do a bad enough job that an AI chat bot could probably do better.
I know we like to dump on CEOs all the time but a good CEO does not seem like one that could be replaced by AI, certainly not by what is currently being hyped. There are just a lot of highly visible companies with CEOs who aren’t actually very good. I suspect the dysfunction of publicly traded companies and the goals of Wall Street investors (or other nations’ equivalents) frequently not aligning with a good long-term health of a company has a strong influence on this.
And of course these guys will be happy to have AI replace them; they’ve already made boatloads of money and think they’ll be able to keep that going even if they lose their job.
I can’t remember if it’s announced or rumored, but I think there’s an entry-level MacBook coming with an A17?
The one area I would sorta disagree is on updates, although only inasmuch as they’re needed for security fixes on things connected to the internet. But if it’s not connected? No, no updates needed unless I encounter a bug or they add a new feature I really want.
jqubed@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•German court: ChatGPT violated copyright law by ‘learning’ from song lyricsEnglish
12·23 days agoTo tag along with this, I remember this becoming an issue 10 or 15 years ago and a lot of the big lyrics websites were forced to reach licensing agreements with the songwriting groups like ASCAP and BMI (they collect and distribute royalties on behalf of the writers). I think a couple sites tried going to court to claim fair use but lost pretty quickly. That’s pretty established law going back to the earliest days of music publishing. Just because they were publishing online instead of printing up songbooks doesn’t mean the laws change.
jqubed@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Artist sneaks AI-generated print into National Museum Cardiff galleryEnglish
124·25 days agoMarrow was interested in “how public institutions decide what’s worth showing, and what happens when something outside that system appears within it”.
He said using artificial intelligence to create it was “part of the natural evolution of artistic tools”, adding he sketched the image before he used AI.
“AI is here to stay, to gatekeep its capability would be against the beliefs I hold dear about art,” he said.
[…]
The artist, who said similar stunts he had carried out at Bristol Museum and Tate Modern were not “approved, sanctioned, or acknowledged”, denied it was vandalism.
“The work isn’t about disruption. It’s about participation without permission,” he said.
“I’m not asking permission, but I’m not causing harm either.”
It’s like the same “logic” AI companies use when they take copyrighted content without permission: claim you’re not causing harm so you don’t need permission. They don’t see the harm, so from their perspective it’s fine, even if the creator doesn’t want them taking their work.
Railing at the institution as being gatekeepers might reveal the flaw in their logic. People or institutions are entitled to decide what belongs in their collection and what does not. Random outsiders are not entitled to be a part of that collection. They can be invited in if the curators are interested in their work, but the curators are generally not required to add them just because they’ve made something. The artist can create their own collection and invite others to be a part of it, but they’re not entitled to be in anyone’s collection. They also can’t just go and take something from someone else’s collection without permission, and even taking a photo of someone else’s work and placing it in their collection would at the very least be bad form. The other artist is just as entitled to decide where they do or don’t want their work displayed.
With encryption and encryption backdoors I often use the illustration that I put a lock on the door of my house, not because I have something to hide, but because I have things valuable to me that I want to protect. Just because I have nothing to hide, it doesn’t mean I give the police a key to my house or let them add their own lock to my door. I wouldn’t want to come home one day and discover a random policeman had let himself in and was making copies of all my documents and photos just to make sure I wasn’t doing something bad. I’d be even more upset if I came home and discovered a policeman from another country had let himself in because he’d gotten a copy of the same key, or a thief was doing the same because he’d gotten a copy of the key.
Building off that illustration, I might have a collection of art in my house. This guy is not entitled to come into my house and look at my art, nor is he entitled to come into my house and put a picture on an empty space on my wall just because he thinks it should be there. Railing against gatekeepers keeping his slop out to me seems as ridiculous as him being mad that I won’t open my door and let him put a picture on my wall. He might not be damaging my walls, but just forcing his way in against my wishes is something I would view as harmful.
jqubed@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•Artist sneaks AI-generated print into National Museum Cardiff galleryEnglish
8·25 days agoSneaked is the traditional form as the past tense of a regular verb, dating back to at least the 1500s, whereas snuck only appeared as an irregular form in the 1800s and it’s not clear why. It’s very unusual for a regular verb to become irregular. Snuck is more common in US English than British English, although sneaked and snuck appear in both variants. Sneaked would seem more correct especially for British English.
jqubed@lemmy.worldto
Showerthoughts@lemmy.world•You have to be married to have a mother-in-law or father-in-law but you don't have to be married to have a brother-in-law or sister-in-law
2·27 days agoInteresting; I’ve read that more and more jurisdictions are ending the concept of common law marriage. The idea is it existed in a time when a legal marriage was harder to get. Nowadays in those areas a legal marriage is easy to get so the thought is if those people never legally married it’s because they didn’t want to, not because they couldn’t, so there’s no reason to have a marriage forced onto the couple.
I know there are two outside Paris. We took my wife’s parents back to her dad’s hometown this summer and because I don’t feel comfortable with driving 5 hours to the west coast after flying overnight from North America we usually try to find a place to stay near Paris. We discovered our hotel would be about a half-hour’s drive from the Costco southwest of Paris and we joked about driving there after checking in so we could troll friends and family on social media that our first meal in France was a €1.50 Costco hot dog. I would be genuinely curious to check it out sometime if we ever had the time, just to see what’s the same and what’s different.
Yes, but I think the headstone comment is relating to all the products killed by Google, often referred to as the Google Graveyard, a term that’s been around since at least 2013. Nothing to do with Google being evil or not.
It seems they offer it for €1.50 in Europe, too!
They’ve been killing good products for well over a decade
I have always found Pepsi sweeter than Coke
jqubed@lemmy.worldto
Showerthoughts@lemmy.world•People who rely on their phones/computers to tell time probably forgot or didn't realize that a Daylight Saving Time-Change even happened, some might've forgotten that DST existed at all.
11·1 month agoI got a late appointment for my dog at the vet’s office. A tech walked out and was kind of freaking out that it was already dark at 5:30. She said she’d never experienced DST before. Turns out she’d moved here fairly recently from Puerto Rico and they don’t change time there.
If you’re allowing dogs in your vehicle getting licked is a risk you take
jqubed@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•OpenAI moves to allow “mature apps” on its platformsEnglish
25·1 month agoThey realized how much revenue they were leaving on the table







Thanks, this is still helpful! I never did get anything and with some health issues that have developed in our family we’re starting to look at moving to a 1-story house that would be more accessible. Anything AV is on the back burner for now but it might be good for planning if we end up building something.