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My hot take is that Yi Long Ma on tiktok is hilarious. But only if I see him like once every three months organically. More than that and the magic gets lost a little for me.

I wonder if there's any people that like ai generated ads out there. I mostly hang around artists that hate them but I kinda assumed that it was the general sentiment. Seems it's mostly used by spammers and scammers and cheapskates and makes products seem unprofessional.

Seven years ago, I posted "So-called 'Big Data' is just Taylorization applied to every aspect of human existence and, in the long run, just as destructive to human values."

Tried generating APL but I think I can't trust any code that I can't audit :P

Might make more sense to practice my "write comments and prompt to convert to code" approach instead so I'm still the one "solving" and leave the syntax to the LLM.

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At the same time, people are generally boring, admins are generally ethical, and snooping takes *work*. I've dug into the database to look at DMs once (?) in five years, and that was at the specific user's request. I've also been inside the surveillance capitalism sausage factory: corporate snooping is both far more invasive than most people realize, and also *ridiculously* lossy/noisy. We don't have the resources to fight a subpoena, but also no government has *bothered* to ask for our data.

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"In cyber warfare, the greatest victory is achieved not by the strength of your firewall, but by the complexity of your CAPTCHA." - The Art of Cyber War

Maybe this year for I should use an LLM programming tool like Aider to solve the problems and see if it's able to do any of them.

tech ramble 

One thing I like about the MST paper is the focus on sparse replication of CRDTs which I think is crucial to consider for any sort of distributed application that wants to do CRDTs for their data model with a large ish number of "documents" to modify. One thing MSTs don't help with is compaction of CRDT data to help deal with long histories. Unsure how one would best address that tho.

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tech ramble 

Bruh. Prolly Trees are just so much easier to use than Merkle Search Trees. Just the construction alone ends up being so much more simple.
Like, just reading the overview from Aaron Boodman is so much easier than the MST paper and construction/updating/reading is so much easier.

IMO ease + sequential reads are more important than "layers" being similar sizes and containing items.

MSTs are a step up from the CHAMP/HAMT craze though.

github.com/attic-labs/noms/blo

inria.hal.science/hal-02303490

I may be too stupid to do this thing I have to do but also maybe I am tenacious to do it anyway.

Tiny Privacy Tip 👁️🔒✨:

Biometric data is one of the
most sensitive type of data you have.

Why?

You cannot change biometric data like you can change a password.

If your password gets leaked,
you can change it easily 🔑🔑🔑🔑

If your email gets leaked,
it's a pain but you can change it ✉️✉️✉️

If your phone number gets leaked,
it's an even bigger pain but you still can change it 📞📞

But when your fingerprints, facial print, voice print, keystroke pattern get leaked?

It's game over ☠️
You cannot change any of these.
Ever.

You should be extremely careful about where you are sharing your biometric data and how it is protected.

For all biometrics,
preventive protection is vital.

#TinyPrivacyTip #Privacy #Biometrics #BiometricData

Typescript strikes again! Now I need to waste another precious hour because nobody else has been forced to contribute types to this particular repo. 🤪

Here's a "typical Western attitude" that most of us are utterly unaware of: social systems are either hierarchical or horizontal; they either have strong states and laws or they don't.

Actual people, however, living their actual lives in the actual world do not seem to agree with this sentiment, and have never had any problem adapting different ways of interacting at different times of year or different places in the landscape. Political theorists should probably be taking this into account.

I stopped using flatpak for my syst5em this time around and suddenly stability of all my apps jumped up significantly :P

I feel like the older I get, the more I resent manipulation of all kinds. Like, not that I'm more immune to it, just that it pisses me off more and more once I recognize it. Advertising, sales tactics, rhetorical techniques, dark patterns - all of it just feeling ever more cynical & obnoxious to me.

instead of ai generated ads they should bring back pepsi man

Not talking to cops can be harder than it looks, here's why 👈 😮 (don't talk to them) 

@silberfuchs

Something that I think was not clear to me and maybe to many more people at the beginning: We all have an idea to not say anything incriminating during an interrogation, but cops will be fishing for *any* information at *all* times, and they will use sketchy emotional strategies to catch you off guard or provoke a reaction. A formal interrogation in a room is 1% of it.

**Edit**: Details about laws in these examples are specific to Germany, but the general idea and cop behaviour apply universally.

"Good cop" in my experience looks less like the nice detective from the cop show, and more like a non-cop-looking woman in cleaning lady clothes coming to you at the corridor and asking if you would like a cup of coffee. If you accept the next question will be "are you doing OK?" or "are you being mistreated? would you like to file a complaint? I can ask for a female officer if you prefer." This is a trick. Your emotions are high, you'll be thirstier for support and a bit of fucking humanity than you can imagine right now, and they'll deliberately exploit that to get you to slip more info, about yourself and others.

So your answer to "would you like a cup of coffee" is silence. If you're pressured to say something that's not silence, you say "no comment". "Is this your first time here?" No comment. "If you don't follow the proper procedure we'll have to hold you for longer" no comment. "You know, I don't really want to do this, actually I'm really proud that young people like you are taking a stand, this is just my job, can we just get this done so you can leave earlier?" No. Comment.

"Bad cop" in my experience looks less like the tough guy Dick Tracy slamming on the table, and more like snarky xenophobic or transphobic remarks, or punching protesters under the banner where the cameras can't record it, more to rub on your face that they can do what they want than to hurt, angling for a reaction; or flashing a heil hitler from the van when they pass antifas. If a cop shows my gender marker to others and make mocking comments and I say "that's transphobia and it's illegal", I fall into the trap. This will start a conversation and in the conversation they'll have all sorts of *other* tricks to enrage and scare and provoke you to talk. Complaints are to be filed with a cool head and through your lawyer.

They get you angry enough to return an abusive insult with "fuck you, you bigot"? Congrats, you just did a crime. Furthermore, anger leads to mistakes. At one protest, a cop doing a torture hold on my hand while dragging me around whispered on my ear like, "had enough? I can do much more". The beard of this creep rubbing on my ear while he got off on hurting girls got me so pissed, so eager to be a hero of the resistance, to defy them even harder and prove that pain won't break me, that I refused to show my ID when requested later. Had he not said the thing, I would have been clear-thinking enough to remember that refusing to show the ID, in my particular situation, would just give them a pretext to fingerprint me anyway while increasing my punishment.

Cop walking with you on the corridor: "We know you broke the Starbucks window at the protest, we have you on camera." You, indignantly: "That's preposterous, I was at the other side of the march, I have witnesses!" Now you just helped the cops figure out that one of the other 3 comrades they detained is the culprit, and in addition they get some fresh new witnesses to do their manipulations on.

A trick I heard of: Cop: "We have a complaint that you have been photographing those right-wing protesters, that's illegal." (It's not actually illegal to take photos here, only to publish them; it's also not illegal to photograph cops doing abuse; but they often will tell you it is.) "You must delete the photos from your gallery immediately." (This is not a thing they can demand, but they will anyway.) You, indignantly: "I have no photos of them, look!" Cop will swiftly grab your unlocked cellphone from your hand and take his time scrolling through all folders. Cops are not instant street prosecutors and can't accuse you of things. If an angry cop shouts and accuses you of a crime, you don't prove that you're innocent, you say nothing. "No comment". Criminal lawyers are trained to deal with this type of trick; leave your defense to them.

Want to file a complaint about this type of illegal yet omnipresent cop behaviour? Good luck proving it, it's your word against theirs and who do you think the judges will side with, antifa radicals or cops?

Mikola Dziadok from Belarus recounts that a favourite of cops who catch anarchists, in the post-Soviet world, is to do 4chan-ass political debate, like "you claim to be anarchist but you do judo, that's hierarchical!" Or for good cop, "in my heart I think anarchism makes sense, can you recommend me something to read?" (Your book recommendation is "no comment".)

Browser plugin that detects a “this web site wants to show you notifications!” request, and instantly puts the web site on a black list so it never shows up in searches for you again.

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