megopie
@megopie@beehaw.org
- Comment on Here’s what ads on your $2,000 Samsung smart fridge will look like 2 days 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” 5 days 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) 1 week 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 1 week 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 1 week 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. 2 weeks 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? 2 weeks 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? 2 weeks 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.
- Comment on Microsoft 'illegally' tracked students via 365 Education 2 weeks ago:
I’m shocked! Shocked I tell you!
… well not that shocked actually.
- Comment on Microsoft support for Windows 10 officially ends today, but a third of Steam players still use it | VGC 3 weeks ago:
You’d probably be fine using mint.
Like, if you’re using an Nvidia graphics card you’d want to use mint’s built in driver manger GUI (don’t need to even use the command line) to make sure you have the best driver. If you have AMD graphics (ether iGPU or dedicated GPU) you don’t even have to do that. The main thing that Bazzite does is have the right Nvidia graphics drivers out of the box.
The main difference between the two is the package manager, the thing that downloads programs and makes sure they have all the dependencies they need to run. Bazzite is fedora derived so it uses DNF instead of the Debian derived APT for package management. Frankly the differences between the two are not really material.
Ether way, Lutris will get windows versions of games running as well as steam does, and any game can be added to Lutris regardless of how you got it, if not from one of the major store fronts you just have point Lutris to the files.
- Comment on As Microsoft bids farewell to Windows 10, millions of users won’t 3 weeks ago:
I switched over about… I suppose 2 and a half years ago now? Honestly it’s been a lot easier to use. Like it’s kind of shocking to me that people will act like windows is cohesive and better put together. Every time I interact with it these days, the more it looks like a taped together ball of junk crusted over with 30 years of repainting.
Like the fact that I have to go to three separate settings programs to find the right toggle, that every program has a dedicated installer and its own path for updates. That there are just default always on programs running in the background eating up a 1/4 of the ram and two of my CPU cores for no damn reason. That a laptop will randomly turn inside a bag when it should be asleep and run down its battery over 6 hours of trying to connect to an absent WiFi network to run updates.
- Comment on The AI bubble is 17 times the size of the dot-com frenzy and four times the subprime bubble, analyst says 3 weeks ago:
It has burst in terms of the liquidity of the system, sure the on paper value of the asset hasn’t collapsed, but that’s because the number of people willing to sell has reduced in turn with the number of people willing to buy. Everyone who was going to cash out big time already has, and the people who bought from them are waiting on another order of magnitude increase in value before they cash out, or they intend to hold on to it forever.
- Comment on A tangled web of deals stokes AI bubble fears in Silicon Valley 3 weeks ago:
They’re dependent on it indirectly. Like, most of the rest of the economic growth that has gone on in recent years has been from the wealthiest 10% of Americans increasing their consumption of various goods, or continuing consumption even as prices rise while wages stay stagnant.
That 10% has felt comfortable spending money due to the value of their assets growing, being able to liquidate some here and there or using them as collateral for loans.
If they lose a significant portion of 1/3rd of their assets in stock, and no other investments are showing rapid growth, they’ll probably pull back on their spending, which will in turn hurt the rest of the market. That won’t be as quick as the panic around “AI” companies, nor as disastrous.
It will be a slow thing, as companies that have moved towards the high margin premium side of the market see sales dry up on their most profitable products.
- Comment on A tangled web of deals stokes AI bubble fears in Silicon Valley 3 weeks ago:
I mean, given that 1/3rd of the s&P 500s value is in 7 companies who are all heavily invested in AI compute.
I’m sure that the 10% wealthiest who’s consumption makes up over half of consumer spending won’t drastically cut back their spending if they lose a third of their wealth that’s in index funds.
And I’m sure private equity firms that are also heavily invested won’t start trying to liquidate their other assets at the same time.
No way this could see a massive decrease in consumer spending.
- Comment on A tangled web of deals stokes AI bubble fears in Silicon Valley 3 weeks ago:
Or like, anyone one of the massively cash negative companies with in the bubble being unable to secure more money.
Hey, how’s that deal between SoftBank and OpenAI doing? You know, the one where they get the liquidity they need to keep operating if they convert to a for profit company before the end of the year? Yah? So … they managed to convert to a fire profit company yet? No? Oh, damn, I sure they’ll figure out that incredibly complicated and dubiously legal process by the end of the fiscal year.
- Comment on A tangled web of deals stokes AI bubble fears in Silicon Valley 3 weeks ago:
All it takes is openAI or anthropic to run out of cash, then everyone providing them compute suddenly has giant power sucking white elephants that are basically useless for anything else (maybe crypto mining LMAO). And then they all stop buying more chips from Nvidia (you know, the company whose valuation is 8% of most index funds, and 80% of their revenue and all of their revenue growth over the past two years has been from data center sales).
Kinda crazy how 7 companies, all heavily invested in AI cloud compute, in one way or another, make up about a 1/3rd of the S&P 500.
I mean, good thing the AI bubble couldn’t possible pop any other bubbles? I mean, it’s not like nearly a decade of low interest rates could possibly have built any other bubbles in any other sort of asset markets.
- Comment on New Yale Study Finds AI Has Had Essentially Zero Impact on Jobs 3 weeks ago:
The reality is, its only impact has been as a cover story to conceal jobs that were already going to be cut.
It’s patently ridiculous how many people in positions of authority have parroted talking points about this and laughable how many journalists and publications have uncritically reported those talking points as if they have merit.
- Comment on Wikipedia is resilient because it is boring 4 weeks ago:
To those who believe that truth derives from authority, and not from debate backed with evidence, a website where the debate is visible and clear undermines its authority. But just because we don’t see that process at other publications doesn’t make them more reliable, it just means we can’t judge the quality of that process.
Wikipedia’s system has its flaws, but the ability to know that, to see those flaws and be aware of them, makes it more reliable. It also makes it very difficult for authoritarians to seize control of for their own ends, to shut down debate and impose consensus. That’s the real reason it is under attack, because those who wish to impose consensus have justify them selves publicly.
- Comment on Microsoft is plugging more holes that let you use Windows 11 without an online account 4 weeks ago:
Operating system as a service. Customers as products.
That is their goal.
- Comment on How the US got left behind in the global electric car race 4 weeks ago:
I think a big part of it is the nature of the US car market over the past 10 years, where the growth has come from sales of “premium” vehicles. The standard and budget market segments have underperformed and thus most US car companies haven’t invested in them much. Consumer spending is increasingly driven by the wealthiest 10% of the population. Everyone else is struggling and cutting back where ever they can, that means buying used cars and holding on to their current cars as long as they can, if they’re even in a position to own a car. The middle and low end consumer is doing so poorly that they’re not just moving down market, they’re not buying at all.
EVs just aren’t super competitive in the premium market. One of the biggest real selling points of Electric vehicles is their low operating cost. Electricity is cheaper than gas, way less maintenance is needed, and the most expensive and failure prone parts are absent, reducing repair costs. To a wealthy person, none of that is particularly compelling. What can an EV sell on in a premium segment? Acceleration and the “saving the environment” vibes, and that’s just not compelling enough to take significant market share.
So why isn’t what remains of the budget market dominated by EVs? Because there are no Budget EVs on the US market. The cheapest EV on the US market is the Chevy bolt and that’s got an MSRP of around 30,000 dollars. None of the companies are willing to invest the money needed to make a budget EV production line and the required supply chains. They’d rather take their capital and put it in to high margin premium vehicles, and service the anemic budget market with legacy production lines.
- Comment on EU probes SAP over anti-competitive ERP support practices 5 weeks ago:
Enterprise Resource Planning.
That makes a lot more sense than… uh… my first thought.
- Comment on Regulating AI hastens the Antichrist, says Palantir’s Peter Thiel 5 weeks ago:
Sounds like a someone who needs to talk to an LLM less.
- Comment on Meta’s Mark Zuckerberg unveils new smart glasses powered by AI 1 month ago:
More like continuing to try to will something in to existence that can replace smart phones because they want to be in charge of the hardware so they don’t have to go through Apple and Google.
- Comment on Samsung brings ads to US fridges 1 month ago:
Whole other part of the company.
Like, Samsung is a big company, really like 3 or 4 companies in a trench coat.
- Comment on Artists are losing work, wages, and hope as bosses and clients embrace AI 1 month ago:
There are a lot of actors who are decently well known and talented who still make most of their income from ad work, and couldn’t afford to stay in the industry without it.
- Comment on Artists are losing work, wages, and hope as bosses and clients embrace AI 1 month ago:
I suspect a lot of these layoffs are actually just cost cutting in response to these companies doing really poorly, the idea that the jobs are now being done by generative models is largely a smoke screen to save face and avoid admitting that companies are scaling back operations due to a lack of demand.
Those few cases where they actually are just replacing people are going to vanish the moment that the people hosting the models run out of money to burn and have to charge full price. Like the scale of operating losses is orders of magnitude greater than anything we’ve seen in the past.
- Comment on Artists are losing work, wages, and hope as bosses and clients embrace AI 1 month ago:
This is the thing that really kills me, like, what an LLM can do is not a revolutionary leap, it’s an evolutionary step beyond basic grammar, tone, and spell checking. It’s more capable than traditional auto complete, but it’s not a fundamentally different capability.
- Comment on Artists are losing work, wages, and hope as bosses and clients embrace AI 1 month ago:
Most actors don’t make much money playing roles in theater, movies or TV shows (obvious exceptions for big name stars), rather they do those when they can get them, but make most of their money doing ads. If that ad work disappeared, way fewer people could afford to be actors and the overall talent pool would shrink.
Same goes for people doing drawn art or photography, the commodified work provides a stable income that allows them to pursue the career and creates space for them to produce genuine art.
- Comment on US Oversight Committee Requests Discord, Steam, Twitch CEOS At Online Radicalization Hearing | Aftermath 1 month ago:
There is absolutely a lot of issues regarding things going on in certain discord servers, or in certain subreddits, less so on twitch or steam.
But a lot of those issues are due to different use cases being pushed into proximity by being pushed off other platforms, ether by moderation decisions, or by their structure and user engagement maximizing algorithms making certain communities unviable.
So you end up with communities that need forum or chat room style organization being pushed in to close proximity to communities that run afoul of corporate moderation. This was less of an issue when these things might have just headed off to dedicated websites, but with everything ending up on platforms now, you have this milieu of mundane game or hobbyist communities, communities for mental health discussions, communities about drug usage, explicit adult content, and fringe politics, all right next to each other. Thus cross pollination between all of them becomes inevitable at a far higher rate than if they were on separate platforms, or on a mega platform with a bunch of other things that would dilute the cross pollination.
I’m not even saying that any of those are explicitly bad things that shouldn’t exist, just that having them all confined in such close proximity is a time bomb. This is not a result of careless management by these companies, but rather the result of pressures pushing these things off of other major platforms, and thus forcing them on to ones that are inherently more permissive.
- Comment on What do people actually use ChatGPT for? OpenAI provides some numbers. 1 month ago:
They get things wrong at a far higher rate than most of the websites that tend to end up at the top of a web result, and they get things wrong in weird ways that won’t stand out to users in the same way a shitty website will. These probabilistic text generators are much better at seeming like they have the correct answer than actually providing it.