jarfil
@jarfil@beehaw.org
Programmer and sysadmin (DevOps?), wannabe polymath in tech, science and the mind. Neurodivergent, disabled, burned out, and close to throwing in the towel, but still liking ponies 🦄 and sometimes willing to discuss stuff.
- Comment on My Couples Retreat With 3 AI Chatbots and the Humans Who Love Them 1 week ago:
Therapists are not supposed to bond with their patients. If you find one whom you can stand for half an hour, then take what you can and leave the rest, they’re not to be your friend or lover. The fact that chatbots let people fall in love with them, is a huge fail from a therapy point of view.
Bouncing ideas back and forth is a good use though. A good prompt I’ve seen recently:
I’m having a persistent problem with [x] despite having taken all the necessary countermeasures I could think of. Ask me enough questions about the problem to find a new approach.
If you worry about privacy, you can run an LLM locally, but it won’t be fast, and you’d need extra steps to enable search.
- Comment on My Couples Retreat With 3 AI Chatbots and the Humans Who Love Them 1 week ago:
You can use local AI as a sort of “private companion”. I have a few smaller versions on my smartphone, they aren’t as great as the online versions, and run slower… but you decide the system prompt (not the company behind it), and they work just fine to bounce ideas.
NotebookLM is a great tool to interact with large amounts of data. You can bet Google is using every interaction to train their LLMs, everything you say is going to be analyzed, classified, and fed as some form of training, hopefully anonymized (…but have you read their privacy policy? I haven’t, “accept”…).
All chatbots are prompted by the company to be somewhat sycophantic so you come back, the cases where they were “too sycophantic”, were just a mistake in dialing it too far. Again, can avoid that with your own system prompt… or at least add an initial prompt in config, if you have the option, to somewhat counteract the company’s prompt.
If you want serendipity, you can ask a chatbot to be more spontaneous and suggest more random things. They’re generally happy to oblige… but the company ones are cut short on anything that could even remotely be considered as “harmful”. That includes NSFW, medical, some chemistry and physics, random hypotheticals, and so on.
- Comment on Anthropic destroyed millions of print books to build its AI models 1 week ago:
Aren’t copyright laws awesome?
- Buy digital copy… no you can’t, you can only license one
- Buy physical book, now you have a copy
- Want a digital copy? No you can’t, copyright forbids it…
- …unless you destroy the physical copy in the process, then it’s only a format migration
And still, they are suing them for migrating formats without authorization.
All hail Disney and the 150 year copyright term!
- Comment on The end of Stop Killing Games [Accursed Farms] 1 week ago:
Next campaign:
"Save the games, save the CHILDREN!"
- Let your children have a better childhood
- Play your favorite childhood games with them
- Don’t let publishers decide what’s best for your children
- Make sure your children can play the games with their children
- Childhood is the time to play, think of the children!
…wonder how successful that would be.
- Comment on Apple to Australians: You’re Too Stupid to Choose Your Own Apps 2 weeks ago:
The Play Store has become way more restrictive, they’ve purged tons of old and/or “inactive” apps… including some I happened to have bought some time ago.
It’s made me even more of a fan of F-Droid.
- Comment on Only 1 in 3 Euro consumers are trading in their old phones 2 weeks ago:
replacement cycles for phones extending past 40 months
Rookie numbers. Unless disaster strikes, I fully expect to ride my current phone for the 60 month official support period I was promised.
- Comment on Windows 11 user has 30 years of 'irreplaceable photos and work' locked away in OneDrive - and Microsoft's silence is deafening 2 weeks ago:
Another one to the list:
Google Flagged Parents’ Photos of Sick Children as Sexual Abuse
Google uses Microsoft’s PhotoDNA screening algorithm
- Comment on Windows 11 user has 30 years of 'irreplaceable photos and work' locked away in OneDrive - and Microsoft's silence is deafening 2 weeks ago:
BTRFS, with periodic snapshots and scrubbing, in RAID 1, only accessible remotely.
Just saying, that can be a “2”.
- Comment on Apple to Australians: You’re Too Stupid to Choose Your Own Apps 2 weeks ago:
Works on Android:
- The Play Store exists
- All apps run in secured containers
- Sketchy* apps run in VMs
- Rooting disables banking and security apps
(* including all versions of Windows)
- Comment on Telegram is indistinguishable from an FSB honeypot 3 weeks ago:
Hm, makes sense, but I feel like we’re still missing something.
I saw comments about Durov, similar to this investigation, maybe around a month ago.
With the xAI partnership news, I looked into it and found this nice thing:
- Tool to delete all your messages from chat/channel/ conversation on Telegram without requiring admin privileges - github.com/en9inerd/tgeraser
In Telegram, you can clear them one by one, or date ranges, or use disappearing messages, but this tool still found some I had missed.
(Disclaimer: I got pulled into Telegram by some friends leaving WhatsApp with the policy changes of 2021, my threat model is less one of FSB, and more one of indiscriminate AI siphoning for ad targeting)
- Comment on Telegram is indistinguishable from an FSB honeypot 3 weeks ago:
How does this fit into these two pieces of news?
- Comment on Exclusive: RuneScape developer Jagex slammed by staff for Pride Month U-turn 3 weeks ago:
In their email, Jagex management also told staff: “[…] Our job is not to use the game as an outlet for our own views, but to craft worlds that serve our players, offering immersion, escape and meaning.
Well, isn’t that some of the best BS contortionist corpospeak I’ve seen in some time…
- Comment on The future of web development is AI. Get on or get left behind. 5 weeks ago:
The future of all computing is AI. Get on or get left behind.
Satire?.. hm… for quite some time already, people have been proposing we get rid of all software, and instead use real-time generative AI to render what some software would do.
AI cosplaying as software… imagine “web development”, where the “browser” were an AI simulating to be a browser, connecting to an AI simulating to be a server… what would “web development” even mean anymore?
- Comment on Scientists created contact lenses that make farts visible 5 weeks ago:
Trichromatic NIR upconversion!
That’s more interesting than the modified title, just saying.
- Comment on The internet thinks this video from Gaza is AI. Here's how we proved it isn't. 5 weeks ago:
I’m saying AI is being shoved into all steps of media processing.
Let me illustrate: this is an AI-focused, AI-corrected, AI-remastered, AI-lifted sticker of a photo of my cat… AI-cropped from a screenshot… that got AI-moderated the moment I uploaded it here:
- Comment on ChatGPT's o3 Model Found Remote Zeroday in Linux Kernel Code 5 weeks ago:
There are 10 kinds of people: those who think they understand neural networks, those who try to understand neural networks, and those whose neural networks can’t spot the difference.
Not a coincidence the amount of people who are bad at languages, communication, learning, or teaching. On the bright side, new generations are likely to be forced to get better.
- Comment on The internet thinks this video from Gaza is AI. Here's how we proved it isn't. 5 weeks ago:
What used to be done for decades, is being turned up to 100,000%. Instead of clever algorithms written directly by people, black-box AI algorithms and generative AI are being used to modify content so it fits better to the expectations of the old algorithms.
I wouldn’t be surprised if new compression algorithms came out in the next years, openly taking advantage of generative AI to recreate the “original image”… “original intent/concept?”
- Comment on The internet thinks this video from Gaza is AI. Here's how we proved it isn't. 5 weeks ago:
Do GIMP, Krita, Kdenlive or Inkscape use AI?
There are AI plugins for all of them… but they’re optional for now (2025). Kdenlive is working on integrating correction and background removal generative AI. Main offender is Adobe, which is the “standard” workflow for most media processing, and is forcing AI everywhere, including something as simple as color curves… then slapping a tag of “made using AI” in the output file. Inkscape is foremost a SVG editor, but Adobe Illustrator already has generative AI to allow stuff like rotating vector graphics “in 3D”, it’s only time for Inkscape to follow suit. Even Windows Notepad got some AI features recently 🤦
AI assisted compression and correction
JPG compression itself is a sort of “AI light”, where it analyzes chunks of an image for perceptual similarity, to drop “irrelevant” data. Adobe has added a feature to do that, but using AI in the analysis, tweaking/generating blocks so there are more similarities. It’s likely others will follow suit: “it’s lossy compression after all, right? …right?”
Lossy audio encoding (MP3, etc), also has a perceptual profile to increase block similarities, they’re adding AI there the same way as in images.
Videos… well, they’re a mix of images and audio, with temporal sequences already breaking images into key frames, intermediates, generated, etc. Generatively tweaking some of those to make them more similar, within perceptual limits, also improves compression.
Does this only apply to digital media used in mainstream sources or does it mean everyone who uses editing software is using AI?
Main issue lies at the source: cameras
Unless you’re using a large sensor professional camera, all the “prosumer” and smartphone sensors, are… let’s put it mildly… UTTER CRAP. They’re too small, with lenses too bad, unable to avoid CoC, diffraction, or chromatic aberration.
Before it even spits out a “RAW” image, it’s already been processed to hell and the way back. Modern consumer “better” cameras… use more AI to do a “better” processing job. What you see, is way past the point of whatever the camera has ever seen.
…and then, it goes into the software pipeline. ☠️
- Comment on Discord lures users to click on ads by offering them new Orbs currency 5 weeks ago:
As long as they’re optional, I don’t really see a problem.
Pay with money, pay with ads, pay with privacy… TANSTAAFL
- Comment on The internet thinks this video from Gaza is AI. Here's how we proved it isn't. 5 weeks ago:
Nowadays, all digital media is becoming AI:
- ALL digital photos/videos/audio get processed via software (RAW development, editing software)
- ALL photo/video editing software uses AI (automatic curves and audio correction, AI-assisted compression)
- Ergo: ALL photos/videos are AI
- Corollary: old photos that were not AI, are also becoming AI as they get “remastered” and resaved.
Doesn’t mean “generative AI”, but spotting the difference is only going to become harder and harder.
- Comment on Google’s New AI Puts Breasts on Minors—And J. D. Vance 5 weeks ago:
Sounds like a boon for trans people… and a sensationalized title:
When we attempted to “try on” some products explicitly labeled as swimsuits and lingerie, or to upload photos of young schoolchildren and certain high-profile figures (including Donald Trump and Kamala Harris), the tool would not allow us to.
Google’s own policy requires shoppers to upload images that meet the company’s safety guidelines. That means users cannot upload “adult-oriented content” or “sexually explicit content,” and should use images only of themselves or images that they “have permission to use.”
The reporter admits to having broken those policies, then cries foul when photos of 14+ year olds get a virtual breast augmentation.
- Comment on What Are People Still Doing on X? 5 weeks ago:
Some heads up: if you pay for the 🔵✔️ on 𝕏, a lot of people will instantly block you, and your post comments will get filled by other 🔵✔️ people trying to “market themselves”.
You may want to consider creating a second plain account, with proper tags and old fashioned brand building, to increase your reach. Block every 🔵✔️ on that one, to reduce the noise.
- Comment on What Are People Still Doing on X? 5 weeks ago:
Somewhat ironically, Musk’s changes have split 𝕏 in two:
- 🔵✔️ The mark of shame crowd: their comments get pushed to the front, they pay to one-up each other and see who can be the loudest Musk kissass.
- ⚪ The no-mark people: don’t try to get noticed, fly under the radar, keep finding each other through keywords, get pretty much ignored by the 🔵✔️ crowd… and are happy with that.
- 🟡✔️ Verified organizations: few, but unfortunately too many, government and business PR teams, trying to one-up everyone, attracting the 🔵✔️ scourge to their posts, which turns them into trash for ⚪ people. Still work for some announcements, but are useless for meaningful discussion.
Don’t get me wrong, the “average” public voice is gone, it’s been replaced by influencer wannabes.
What saves the situation for niche communities, is the BLOCK feature. Just block everyone with a 🔵✔️, follow people you like, and suddenly you find yourself in the Twitter of long ago.
In the Nazi bar analogy, it’s like if Musk put up a Nazi rune shaped stage in the middle of the bar, everyone with a 🔵✔️ armband is fighting each other to get to the mic on the stage… while it’s all enclosed in a soundproof cage, and random people sitting by the walls keep their conversations to themselves.
Lots of people have left 𝕏 for that reason, either because they want a fair chance to get their voice heard, or because even being aware of the stage fight disgusts them, and that’s fine. Some have stayed and keep ignoring the stage fight, while the stage fight ignores them, with the rare notification for… another 🔵✔️ to block. Pretty much nobody tries to infiltrate the ⚪ discussions, because they need a 🔵✔️ to get their voice heard above others, but if they get one, then they get blocked.
This also doesn’t mean there are no Nazis or other awful people among the ⚪ no-marks, but the loudmouths quickly get pulled into the 🔵✔️ cage fight.
- Comment on Leak confirms OpenAI's ChatGPT will integrate MCP 1 month ago:
I doubt it’s been fed text about “bergro”, “parava”, and “rortx”, this looks like basic reasoning to me:
- Comment on Leak confirms OpenAI's ChatGPT will integrate MCP 1 month ago:
“AI” has been a buzzword basically forever, it’s a moving target of “simulates some human behavior”. Every time it does that, we call it an “algorithm” and move the goalpost for “true AI”.
I don’t know if we’ll ever get AGI, or even want to, or be able to tell if we get a post-AGI. Right now, “AI” stands for something between LLMs, and Agents with an LLM core. Agents benefit from MCP, so that’s good for
AIAgents.We can offload some basic reasoning tasks to an LLM Agent, MCP connectors allow them to interact with other services, even other agents.
A lot of knowledge is locked in the deep web, and in corporate knowledge bases. The way to access those safely, will be through agents deciding which knowledge to reveal. MCP is aiming to become the new web protocol for "AI"s, no less no more.
- Comment on This Chatbot Promises to Help You Get Over That Ex Who Ghosted You [404 Media] 1 month ago:
I feel like a better solution is to get an AI SO. Shape them into whatever you like, don’t forget it’s still an AI, and get whatever comfort you need in the moment.
You can even have several at once.
- Comment on Leak confirms OpenAI's ChatGPT will integrate MCP 1 month ago:
The connectors are still optional.
Haphazard code is not a new thing. Some statistics claim that almost 50% of “vibe coded” websites have security flaws. It’s not much different from the old “12345” password, or the “qwerty” one (not naming names, but have known people using it on government infrastructure), or the “who’d want to hack us?” attitude.
MCP is the right step forward, nothing wrong with it on itself.
People disregarding basic security practices… will suffer, as always… and I don’t really see anything wrong with that either. Too bad for those forced to rely on them, but that’s a legislative and regulatory issue, vote accordingly.
- Comment on Yes, AI will eventually replace some workers. But that day is still a long way off 1 month ago:
One of the worst possible examples ever: Klarna is a payment processor, people don’t call their bank to get the same answer the system is already giving them, they call to negotiate something about their money. AIs are at a troubleshooting level, at best some very basic negotiation, nowhere near dealing with people actually concerned about their money.
Seems like Klarna fell hook, line, and sinker for the hype. Tough luck, need to know the limits.
- Comment on Lies, Damned Lies, and LLMs: AI is a Con 1 month ago:
Randomly obfuscated database: you don’t get exactly the same data, and most of the data is lost, but sometimes can get something similar to the data, if you manage to stumble upon the right prompt.
- Comment on Lies, Damned Lies, and LLMs: AI is a Con 1 month ago:
It’s going to be funnier: imagine throwing in tons of data at an LLM, most of the data will get abstracted and grouped, most will be extractable indirectly, some will be extractable verbatim… and any piece of it might be a hallucination, no guarantees! 😅.
Courts will have a field day with that.