megopie
@megopie@beehaw.org
- Comment on AI Bros Wanted Trump. Now They Learn What Happens When You Tell Him No. 3 days ago:
Anthropic is just trying to cover their ass from liability.
Ether the user who put the bot in a position to do something illegal is liable, or the person who made the bot that did something illegal is liable. But 90% of the reason hegseth want to use the bots is to avoid liability when doing illegal stuff, and if anthropic is saying “hey it’s not our fault if you break the law using our product, we told you not to use it like that” then they’re basically denying the main use case for hegseth, who really really wants a get out of jail free card for breaking the law.
- Comment on Block ditches 4,000 staff, because AI can do their jobs 5 days ago:
Any job that can be done by an LLM wasn’t a job that needed to get done In the first place.
any manager who tries to replace an actually useful job with an LLM is going to get bit in the ass as productivity slows to a crawl. Other people will hav to step in to clean up the mess and basically do the work that should have been done by the person replaced. Most of the jobs being “replaced by AI” are actually just routine layoffs or companies correcting from over hiring.
I’ve read a story the other day from someone who said they left Amazon due to what a mess it was becoming internally. How increasingly managers were hiring people they didn’t need so their team would be bigger and they would seem more important. This is a well known phenomenon. I suspect a lot of people who did this and created a mess are using the excuse of “embracing AI” to give them selves an off ramp from the mess they created by bloating their departments.
- Comment on No More Neutral ⚛ 1 week ago:
Everything would get slightly heavier. Then a lot of compounds would break and a lot of new compounds would form.
Also a lot of lightning.
- Comment on Relieving oneself over the edge of the ship 1 week ago:
Yah there is a lot of nonsensical compression artifacts, and they’re of wildly varying scales.
- Comment on Parents opt kids out of school computers, insisting on pen and paper instead 2 weeks ago:
On the one hand, I’m skeptical of the assertions that pen and paper is inherently a better way to take notes and learn.
But I do agree with the general aversion to a lot of ed tech. So much effort to shove kids faces in front of softwear and hardware that was sold to administrators by marketing teams from big tech companies. So many opportunities for those tech companies to exploit local school districts, ether to extract unreasonable profits, or for access to a mailable locked in user base.
If a school is going to go all in teaching with computers, they need to be carefully choosing what they use and not just adopting a premade package from some tech company.
- Comment on The world’s oldest known vertebrates had two pairs of eyes 2 weeks ago:
It seems likely that its external sensing function faded before the development of “hot blood” (endothermy) as it’s vestigial even in very basal reptiles like the tuatara, so likely it was already disappearing as a sensory organ fairly early in quadruped evolution. Snakes, crocodiles and turtles (all exothermic) all lost it completely as an external feature, snakes are particularly notable as they’re in the same branch as tuataras and lizards, many of whole still have it as a vestigial external structure. It also appeared in some extinct branches of therapsids(many appear to have been endothermic) in some form, but is completely absent in mammals, the only surviving branch of therapsids.
It does function as a sensing organ in many amphibians, suggesting that it became vestigial for sensing some where in the early evolution of amniotes, but stuck around as an external structure across multiple branches but many have since convergently evolved to loose it as an external structure.
- Comment on Smart Homes Are Terrible 3 weeks ago:
So many extra moving parts, so many additional points of failure. But for what benefit? So I can turn on various washing machines on remotely… after loading them manually anyways? Why not have a washing machine that doubles as a cabinet so I don’t need to load it and unload it?
So I can have a lawn watering system that automatically waters when the soil moisture gets too low? To have a lawn mower roomba that automatically deploys when some sensor sees the grass get a bit to long? I’d rather not have a lawn, or at least some sort of native plant lawn that doesn’t need watering and constant mowing.
I don’t hate clever gadgets, I hate brain dead gadgets, automation of pointless systems. Why automate something that could be avoided entirely with better design. You have perfection not when there is nothing left to add, but nothing left to take away.
- Comment on Dutch students create modular electric car "you can repair yourself" 1 month ago:
I to have a modular electric vehicle but, mine already has a massive variety of after market options to modify and upgrade it to me needs with.
It’s called… my bicycle that I put a motor on.
- Comment on Journalists convinced a AI Vending Machine Things to give them free stuff like a PS5 2 months ago:
it’s so amazing, the absolute brain rot it takes to think that a LLM is a better way to operate a vending machine than simple if-then logic. “If the value of money inserted is equal to the price, then dispense the item”.
Like, why? What is even the point? It doesn’t need to negotiate the price, it doesn’t need have a conversation about your day, the vending machine just needs to dispense something when payed the right amount.
- Comment on Nvidia plans heavy cuts to GPU supply in early 2026 [OC3D] 2 months ago:
“ Shit, we need more cash to keep the bubble inflated, quick squeeze customers for more revenue! “
- Comment on Ford ends F-150 Lightning production, starts battery storage business 2 months ago:
they’re gradually reducing the amount of vehicles sold while increasing the margin per vehicle. They’re approaching the limit of 1 vehicle sold at infinite margin.
- Comment on "Fewer people are playing Call of Duty this year than they have been before" Why has Call of Duty: Black Ops 7 seemingly sold below expectations? Is it simply not good enough? [Eurogamer] 2 months ago:
That all, and they raised the price when the core demographic has less disposable income than ever.
- Comment on Cherry Flavour! 2 months ago:
It’s a growth medium for culturing cells. It’s a mix of sugars, salts, and amino acids, often with other nutrients.
- Comment on Cherry Flavour! 2 months ago:
Forbidden sports drink.
- Comment on IBM CEO says there is 'no way' spending trillions on AI data centers will pay off at today's infrastructure costs 2 months ago:
Because it’s not about the companies being profitable, it’s not about making products people want to use or pay for.
It’s about riding the hype cycle to maximize share price. Because the people making decisions are not payed based on the success of the company, but on the success of the share price and market cap.
- Comment on Leak confirms OpenAI is preparing ads on ChatGPT for public roll out 2 months ago:
Their current business model is not “not very profitable” it is deeply unprofitable.
They aren’t just loosing money on free users, they’re loosing money on payed users. Publicly traded for profit companies are legally obligated to provide accurate reports of the nature and source of their revenue. As of this summer (Second quarter), OpenAI was paying roughly twice as much servicing the demand of paying chat GPT users to publicly traded companies, like Microsoft, as OpenAI claimed to make from subscriptions to chat GPT.
And that’s not even counting the costs to train new models, spending with private companies, or their spending on building data centers with Coreweave or Oracle.
I highly doubt that adding advertising revenue will close that gap, especially since paying users might cancel their subscriptions if they start getting ads.
- Comment on Which of the two would you purchase for someone who’s not so technical? 2 months ago:
I think the steam deck might be worth it for the sake of giving her the option to play stuff that’s isn’t on switch.
Like, sure, maybe she never ends up caring about anything but first party Nintendo originals. But, giving that option opens up a world of possibility.
I have a little cousin, he’s not exactly the most technical, not the most patient with such things, he calls me a lot for help with stuff. But he’s on a laptop instead of a switch because he wanted to play modded Minecraft, i’ve seen him grow a lot in being willing to understand this stuff because he was given an opportunity and a reason to engage with it.
- Comment on Brave AI assistant Leo adds Trusted Execution Environments 3 months ago:
Everything to do as living as a person in a larger community, part of which is using technology.
- Comment on Google tells employees it must double capacity every 6 months to meet AI demand 3 months ago:
puts a bunch of AI features in, turns them on be default without user’s asking for them, mandates employees use it when ever they can.
“How could this be a bubble? Look at all the demand!”
- Comment on 3 months ago:
So, it could be. Like, there’s no reason that the program its self couldn’t run through a comparability layer like wine or proton.
It’s just that it, like many other big multi-player live service shooters, it requires kernel level “anti cheat” programs. Basically programs that run at the lowest level of your system and check what’s running on the system, making sure the user isn’t running any cheats or altering how the game runs to cheat. They need to be at the lowest layer to prevent programs below them spoofing the checks they are running. So if they detect that they’re not running at the lowest level, they tell the game not to run, or at least, not to allow the player to join online matches.
These could theoretically could run through a compatibility layer, but then they wouldn’t be running at the lowest layer of the system, defeating the point of them. They would have to run natively on Linux, and the companies that make them have not made versions that run natively on Linux.
The actual efficacy of these anti cheat systems is dubious, as there is still cheating in games that use them, and they’re super invasive, being basically spywear. But they’re required by a handful of major games.
- Comment on This Spiral-Obsessed AI 'Cult' Spreads Mystical Delusions Through Chatbots 3 months ago:
“Werwolf the Apocalypse” ass title
- Comment on How Fortnite Friday Grew From A Bit Into An Institution That Could Pull Gavin Newsom [Aftermath] 3 months ago:
Newsome keeps trying to reach out to younger voters, but it’s always in such… performative ways. It’s never him listening or signaling he concurs on issues they care about.
It always feel like an effort to inform them that he exists, become a familiar figure, as if the issue that Democratic candidates have been having was lack of visibility.
But the issue is a misalignment of values and goals, not that people haven’t seen them get interviewed on a popular platform.
- Comment on Here’s what ads on your $2,000 Samsung smart fridge will look like 3 months ago:
He put out a video a few weeks back basically endorsing Mamdani.
- Comment on Meta denies torrenting porn to train AI, says downloads were for “personal use” 4 months ago:
As has been made very clear, it is not actually possible to prevent these models from regurgitating any information they’ve been trained on, no matter how fancy the system prompt. So, if there is NSFW content In the training data, users will always be able to access it, not matter how “compliant” the company is with restrictions on NSWF content by way of system prompts.
They can have their cake and eat it to, many users will prefer the models because of their ability to do porn stuff, and they will not be held legally liable for that since they’ve done everything the possible could.
So long as no one proves that they did in fact intentionally train the models on a shit ton of porn …
- Comment on [Epilepsy issue] YouTube AI Filter Is Making My Videos Dangerous To Watch by Anton Petrov - Oct 26, 2025 (Video, 6:09 min) 4 months ago:
I think some department or team lead was told by higher ups that they needed to “implement AI” and are just trying to find places to shove it so they can tell the boss they hit the metrics.
The reason they turn stuff like this on by default without asking creators or users is probably because previous things that were implemented and made optional all got turned off and not used.
- Comment on Bootstrapping Your Own CPU 4 months ago:
this guy was able to make a silicon chip with 1200 transistors on it in a garage, far from a modern CPU, but spitting distance from the 3500 transistors of the intel 8008 CPU. Projects in flight also has a series working on DIY semi conductor fabrication he’s not quite to the stage of fabricating a full chip, but he’s covered a lot of the more difficult parts already. And this is all stuff being done as hobby projects.
Something like an early pentium chip like the P5 would not be a particularly difficult task for a well resourced team. The question is how much could they rely on the currently available off the shelf supplies and tools.
- Comment on Grounded jet engines take off again as datacenter generators 4 months ago:
GE makes the engines, Boeing makes the Airframe.
- Comment on On January 1st of 2026, Texas will be required to give ID to download apps from the app stores. It doesn't matter if it's NSFW or not. 4 months ago:
It’s so fucking funny to me to see governments unwilling to do anything positive to support their constituents constantly stumbling in to this same kind of law. Like, governments that want more control over their citizens but are completely unwilling to offer them any additional benefits in exchange for that control.
So instead they frame it as “protecting the children” because who’s ever gonna object to that? But nah, it’s about actually being able to enforce other moral panic laws and forcing more information in to the hands of servaliance capitalism.
- Comment on What is the most overrated game gamers hype up? 4 months ago:
Balatro.
It is a mechanically very dense game. There is a lot of depth and complexity to its gameplay. I get why a lot of people enjoy that. But I just kind of bounce off that, I need something to motivate me to engage with game mechanics. I need a story, or like, some kind of theming that I can project a goal on to.
Like I adore paradox games, but I can project a broad world buildy-esq self built narrative and goals on to that, even when the mechanics are as broad as an ocean but as deep as a puddle.
- Comment on What is the most overrated game gamers hype up? 4 months ago:
Consider, that, the you’re generally listening the the voice of the main character for a lot of the dialog that isn’t explicitly from other characters, and that he does in fact have his head firmly lodged in his own rectum.