- 4 Posts
- 21 Comments
KatherinaReichelt@feddit.orgto
Technology@lemmy.world•Nvidia’s New Partnership Wants to Put Mini AI Data Centers on Your HouseEnglish
10·3 days agoSo they’re distributing their data center into various neighborhoods and therefore are leeching on power lines and everything else there. Kind of clever but also sneaky an slimy.
KatherinaReichelt@feddit.orgto
Fediverse@lemmy.world•AI-assisted moderation in the fediverse is happening. Now what?English
1·3 days agoIt depends on your jurisdiction, but it is a GDPR nightmare. There is a difference between exchanging public posts between instances and building political profiles with AI for individual users without their consent.
And that is also one of the reasons why it is so infuriating that modern linux based Android systems or Windows wants to steer you away from the filesystem.
KatherinaReichelt@feddit.orgto
Fediverse@lemmy.world•Which instances have the most ban-happy moderators? Analysis insideEnglish
65·7 days agoThat’s actually quite wild coming from someone on dbzero0, which is doing the same on an instance level as instance policy
KatherinaReichelt@feddit.orgto
Technology@lemmy.world•I Asked AI to Count My Carbs 27,000 Times. It Couldn’t Give Me the Same Answer Twice.English
18·8 days agoThe issue is that there are apps promising you an calorie count via photo.
KatherinaReichelt@feddit.orgto
Technology@lemmy.world•LinkedIn Is Scanning Your Browser Extensions. This Is How They Use the Data. — 404English
5·9 days agoThat behaviour shouldn’t be possible in a browser that has its users interests in mind. The browser could limit the extentions websites could monitor for to a sensible amount. Or disable that feature at all. Or block fingerprinting by default by providing false data. But if you have the worlds biggest spy company building your browser, you will get a browser that spies
KatherinaReichelt@feddit.orgto
Technology@lemmy.world•Meta lost 20 million users last quarter. First drop in daily active users since it started tracking the numbers in 2019English
10·9 days agoThey are reporting “family daily active users” and I assume that this “family” means all of their apps. They are reporting 3.56 billion DAU, but Whatsapp alone has 3.3 billion users according to some sources. So we really do not know how Facebook or Instagram are doing from those numbers - and it does make sense that user numbers are dropping when Russia is restricting access to WhatsApp & Co and Iran is switching off its internet.
KatherinaReichelt@feddit.orgto
Technology@lemmy.world•Google has a price for you. We found it.English
5·9 days agoAccount bans? Which accounts will be banned?
KatherinaReichelt@feddit.orgOPto
Technology@lemmy.world•After Xbox and Windows, now GITHUB is in crisis, "failing me, every single day, and it is personal"English
5·10 days agoNot really. Blockchain technology has one use case and that is collaboration between partners who don’t trust each other. So we’re talking crypto coins, where not all nodes are really trustworthy and there is an incentive to cheat. But there’s no reason to bring this tech to your Git repository because you really do not want untrustworthy participants in your code. Only you should have access to your Git rep, and then the easier solution is to host it yourself and use a normal database.
KatherinaReichelt@feddit.orgto
Technology@lemmy.world•Google has a price for you. We found it.English
35·10 days agoThe average American generates about $1,605 a year in advertising value. A 35- to 44-year-old man in Bozeman, MT, without children, using a desktop and making high-value corporate searches, generates an estimated $17,929.30. An 18- to 24-year-old father in Fort Smith, AR, using an Android phone and making low-value searches, generates $31.05.
Just imagine how much people have to buy through ads to justify this amount of ad spending.
KatherinaReichelt@feddit.orgto
Ask Lemmy@lemmy.world•If someone change their last name woudl it cost them job oppetutines?
10·10 days agoSure - first of all, your job application might be rejected as spam when you are naming yourself Sauron McSauronface. Depending on which character you are naming yourself after, people might also think that you are an idiot. If you name yourself Patrick Bateman, they might not want you to work in that kindergarden because your choice tells them a lot about you.
KatherinaReichelt@feddit.orgto
Technology@lemmy.world•Canonical lays out a plan for AI in Ubuntu LinuxEnglish
2·10 days agoI know that text to speech does work without AI, but the modern AI-based models are so much better.
KatherinaReichelt@feddit.orgOPto
Technology@lemmy.world•Microsoft Vibing — capturing screenshots and voice samples without governanceEnglish
1·10 days agoYeah, that really does not look good. Something like that should never have been released in that state and that is a serious problem with processes.
KatherinaReichelt@feddit.orgOPto
Technology@lemmy.world•After Xbox and Windows, now GITHUB is in crisis, "failing me, every single day, and it is personal"English
481·10 days agoYeah, and the worst thing about this is that Github is critical infrastructure. If Github goes down the drain, so many devs and projects will be affected
KatherinaReichelt@feddit.orgto
Technology@lemmy.world•Canonical lays out a plan for AI in Ubuntu LinuxEnglish
41·10 days agoPeople really have no idea what AI is. And in many cases those “AI features” are just machine learning. I’m currently running Ubuntu and I have several AI features running. One of them then is Handy.comptuer and it’s a really nice push to talk voice recognition software. I’m dictating this post with it and it’s awesome.
Another feature is image classifications integrated in Immich. It’s nice to have your personal photo library and all the pictures that you have ever taken classified so that you can search for “dog” or “hamster” or “John”. There are great text-to-speech programs out there. Everything is running locally and stuff like that is really useful to have in your OS. And it won’t boil the planet, the energy requirements are quite low.
KatherinaReichelt@feddit.orgto
Technology@lemmy.world•I Left Port 22 Open on the Internet for 54 Days. Here's Who Showed Up.English
42·10 days agoI really struggle to see the point of posts like this. It is an interesting article about an interesting topic.
KatherinaReichelt@feddit.orgto
Fediverse@lemmy.world•Does a pay‑what‑you‑want Gumroad model make sense in a decentralized ecosystem like the Fediverse?English
3·11 days agoI really struggle to see what the benefit of federation would be here. That would mean that you would have several eCommerce pages with a federated product catalog? And if I buy on site A I might buy from someone on site B?
KatherinaReichelt@feddit.orgto
Technology@lemmy.world•Deezer says 44% of songs uploaded to its platform daily are AI-generated | TechCrunchEnglish
21·18 days agoAnd what is the fundamental difference between the background music styled songs from the YT Audio Library that were done for a small penny in a short time by some underpaid performer vs. something a computer created?
KatherinaReichelt@feddit.orgto
Technology@lemmy.world•Deezer says 44% of songs uploaded to its platform daily are AI-generated | TechCrunchEnglish
1·18 days agoYeah, about that: In most jurisdictions copyright lasts until 70 years after death. So that means in 2026 that both composer and all performers must have died before 1956. Using such old songs from old recordings is simply not feasible for most companies.


They are kind of public:
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/tesla-cybertruck-sales-elon-musk/