

Thank you very much for saying something so funny.


Thank you very much for saying something so funny.


Woah! That’s really cool!


And there are probably many users that do all of this due to being afraid that things might just start breaking, or that more actions they don’t understand will be required to keep the system rolling, if they stray from this path for even a little.


Because having an automated way to identify what is real and what is fake can be extremely useful. That example has major red flags, but perhaps it could be that you want to check an image that doesn’t have any glaring red flags.
Most people can’t tell the difference between the two, probably because they don’t know how either of them works. And just like others have said, it’s the same thing with CGI. I was watching Avatar 2 the other day and one of my friends said something about the graphics like “oh, that’s probably AI”, and I angrily replied “do you have any idea of how many dozens, if not hundreds of people painstakingly worked on this movie’s CGI??”


I’m sure you must receive lots of annoying questions because of the work you do, so thanks a lot for the insight!


I see. I thought that the backdoor had to be in the client, because I thought that could be the only place where the private keys are stored, but I’ve since realized that it could be on the server. Thanks for the insight.


Ooh, I see. Thanks.
Uncaffeinated needs Lisp in their life. The programming language doesn’t have a feature you need? Implement it yourself 👍


The comment itself:
[…] Rust-coreutils does affect us. This is something we definitely see as part of the base so even though we would prefer for coreutils not to change, we’re hoping to align with Ubuntu on this. We’re concerned with regressions. New code almost always introduces regressions. That’s a lot of new code on very important components. I was shocked to see rust-coreutils updated from 0.7 to 0.8 just days before the stable release of Ubuntu 26.04. It actually broke something important on our side. We fixed it. I’m sure Ubuntu will update it whenever new regressions are found. We’ll see.


From the linked press release:
For example, when creating an account, minors below 13 can enter a false birth date that makes them at least 13 years old, with no effective controls in place to check the correctness of the self-declared date of birth.
Meta’s tool for reporting minors under 13 on the platform is difficult to use and not effective, requiring up to seven clicks just to access the reporting form, which is not automatically pre-filled with the user’s information. Even when a minor under 13 is reported for being under the age threshold, there often is no proper follow-up, and the reported minor can simply continue to use the service without any type of check.


What I don’t understand yet is why there haven’t been any independent cybersecurity experts capable of finding a backdoor in WhatsApp. How hard would it be for an expert without access to the source code to find one? Are any independent entities monitoring WhatsApp’s security at all??


Very well written. The comparison makes a lot of sense.


Yeah. This AI boom barely created any new problems. It mostly just enlarged, or sped up the rate of problems that already existed, a bit like a catalyst.


OP, you linked the wrong post. It’s this one: https://gts.apicrim.es/@awoo/statuses/01KN35J2SAE64XK55N8HS1BB2N
It’s pretty funny that the post’s author has already noticed this Lemmy post: https://gts.apicrim.es/@awoo/statuses/01KN4VEEJ77RX3VABB3HRPVNKD


I almost forgot to reply. There’s this group called Spritely Institute that is developing some really cool tools to use with Scheme. iirc two of the institute’s members were co-authors of the Fediverse’s ActivityPub protocol. Not only have they developed a compiler from Scheme to WebAssembly, but they are also building tools that make it way easier to write programs that network with other computers and are as safe as possible. I read this paper they wrote about it, and their ideas look so cool… I hope you also find it cool.
Fellowship of the Ring GNOME
It sounds like a cool concept. Let’s see if it works as intended.


CD is just an acronym for the Compact Disc media format.


I mean, joining that server kind of depends on whether BladeFederation is a sea cow, right? It seems it would be a bit rude for a non-sea-cow individual to join and pretend to be a sea cow…
Those suggetions sound cool!