That’s the second time in three days that I’ve seen an article where “AI” (machine learning) was actually useful. It’s a hype machine and it’s overvalued, but it’s nice to see it being useful. I still can’t wait for OpenAI to fail. I run the Llama model locally because to hell with giving corps more of my data. Anyway…
ChatGPT used to disable SecureBoot in locked-down device – modded BIOS reflash facilitated fresh Windows and Linux installs
Submitted 5 days ago by cm0002@lemmy.world to cybersecurity@infosec.pub
Comments
some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org 5 days ago
BeardedGingerWonder@feddit.uk 5 days ago
Out of curiosity, what’s your use case and spec of the machine running it?
some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org 5 days ago
I only eff around with it occasionally. I run it on a MacBook Pro M1 Max. It’s solid for performance. I don’t have a job where I can employ it regularly, so after initial testing, I barely use it.
Honse@lemmy.dbzer0.com 5 days ago
This feels like a fluke more than indicative of LLM capabilities. When working on large code bases they shit the bed. I’m surprised to hear it was able to this without breaking something else to brick the whole device. An exception, not the rule (for now).
maniacalmanicmania@aussie.zone 5 days ago
From the article:
It used to be that someone hacked a device and wrote about everything they read and debugged and passed on that knowledge. Not anymore, just feed instructions to a machine and trust it doesn’t spit something out that won’t kill you if you blindly trust it.