- 4 Posts
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atrielienz@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•Google hit with $314m fine for collecting data from idle Android phones without permissionEnglish2·1 天前They already argued once in court that this was detailed in the TOS. Dunno if the appeal will do anything, but Google isn’t exactly hurting for the money.
He may well have done but the only clip I have seen is the one where someone asks about it while he’s streaming games and he responded to that person with misinformation.
atrielienz@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•Google hit with $314m fine for collecting data from idle Android phones without permissionEnglish2·1 天前They’ll likely appeal.
atrielienz@lemmy.worldto Games@lemmy.world•How Nintendo locked down the Switch 2’s USB-C port and broke third-party dockingEnglish2·1 天前Yes. I have two of them.
For those who don’t know, this streamer is only tangentially related to the stop killing games petition because he made a comment about it being BS because he misinterpreted what it was supposed to do. He used his misinterpretation to spread false information about this petition leading to it not getting the support it initially should have.
When the guy behind the petition made a statement saying he didn’t think the petition was going to get enough signatures in part because of the misinformation being spread about it, PirateSoftware doubled down on his false claims and all of this lead to people doing the research they should have done in the first place and deciding to support the petition after all.
What we should probably be learning from this is that we should do our own research, and find out things instead of taking the word of random people online.
Edit: electric has brought to my attention that it wasn’t just one clip, but in fact a whole video dedicated to spreading misinformation that was made by Thor from PirateSoftware. Just wanted to be clear about that.
atrielienz@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•On July 7, Gemini AI will access your WhatsApp and more. Learn how to disable it on Android.English4·2 天前In the case of my fully updated pixel 9 pro XL, Gemini was installed from the factory. I uninstalled it and installed Google Assistant. It has not re-installed itself for me, and further, I would recommend that if you don’t use Gemini, you uninstall it.
This may change once the July patch hits but. As of right now it’s not currently installed.
You can own more than one. You can’t be the primary account holder on more than one (for the purposes of sharing digital games).
If you own two and buy games for both on separate accounts it’s fine. If you’re the only account holder and you want to share games you’ve bought with other accounts (kids account etc) on an additional system Sony doesn’t allow that.
atrielienz@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•Trump Team Has Full Meltdown Over CNN Story on ICE-Tracking AppEnglish21·3 天前There’s one major problem with what you’re saying. It’s that ICE is actively jailing people without giving them due process. As an entity it is assuming guilt which is in direct conflict with the constitution. Because it’s violating the rights of the people it is no longer a government agency acting for the people, and because it’s actively breaking the law it is not protected. If you can’t understand that without due process they can and possibly will arrest you and deport you somewhere regardless of your constitutional right to reside in the US then you are in fact missing the main point of this app and there’s a reason people are down-voting you.
Also, you’re making a lot of assumptions about what the app is for, and still posit no actual proof of your position. You have made an assumption here and when confronted about your opinion based on that assumption you have continued to double down instead of even considering the alternatives.
And speed traps aren’t intended to be a detterant. I don’t know why you think that’s the case but in fact they are set up specifically to catch speeders. The deterrence is a bonus. But a lot of police departments make money for their municipality via speeding tickets. So don’t try to play like we can just ignore this so you can feel like you’ve won.
atrielienz@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•Trump Team Has Full Meltdown Over CNN Story on ICE-Tracking AppEnglish11·3 天前In all actuality I believe the point of being able to report a speed trap is to allow people to avoid getting caught breaking the law which amounts to the same thing.
Google maps and Waze can absolutely be used to show where to attack law enforcement. They can also be used to avoid law enforcement. What you’re saying is that you feel like the intention of the app is to break the law in some way but you’ve been given a similar app that does basically the same thing and you back up nothing or what you’ve said with documented case law or even the laws you think this app is breaking. Cool. Good talk.
atrielienz@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•Trump Team Has Full Meltdown Over CNN Story on ICE-Tracking AppEnglish61·4 天前I want you to explain to me how when Google does it (allowing anyone with an app to report a speed trap - you know where law enforcement is present) it’s legal but when some random developer who’s not a multi-million dollar Corp does it, it’s illegal and obstruction.
I’ll wait for your list of case law.
atrielienz@lemmy.worldto Steam Deck@sopuli.xyz•Desktop Linux distros similar to Steam OS?English1·4 天前I already have some issues with my public tone sounding… Too official. Using the em-dash just makes it seem like I might be a bot. I’m not going to bother with that.
atrielienz@lemmy.worldto TechTakes@awful.systems•People Are Being Involuntarily Committed, Jailed After Spiraling Into "ChatGPT Psychosis"English16·4 天前My response was a joke. You don’t have to clarify anything. You’re just taking it too seriously. It’s cool man. I’m not mad or anything.
atrielienz@lemmy.worldto TechTakes@awful.systems•People Are Being Involuntarily Committed, Jailed After Spiraling Into "ChatGPT Psychosis"English16·5 天前The barista and the barmaid don’t love you man. They don’t love you. I don’t care if you flirt and they smile. They are doing a job. It’s a transaction. Don’t get in your feelings and do something you’ll regret just because she makes a nice latte.
I do want a Batrick plushie though. . .
atrielienz@lemmy.worldto TechTakes@awful.systems•People Are Being Involuntarily Committed, Jailed After Spiraling Into "ChatGPT Psychosis"English3·5 天前In practice the justice system actually is reactionary. Either the actuality of a crime or the suspicion of a crime being possible allows for laws to be created prohibiting that crime, marking it as criminal, and then law enforcement and the justice system as a whole investigate instances where that crime is suspected to be committed and litigation ensues.
Prevention may be the intent, but the actuality is that we know this doesn’t prevent crime. Outside the jurisdiction of any justice system that puts such “safeguards” in place is a place where people will abuse that lack of jurisdiction. And people inside it with enough money or status or both will continue to abuse it for their personal gain. Which is pretty much what’s happening now, with the exception that they have realized they can try to preempt litigation against them by buying the litigants or part of the regulatory/judicial system.
atrielienz@lemmy.worldto Technology@lemmy.world•We need to stop pretending AI is intelligentEnglish4·6 天前Word roots say they have a point though. Artifice, Artificial etc. I think the main problem with the way both of the people above you are using this terminology is that they’re focusing on the wrong word and how that word is being conflated with something it’s not.
LLM’s are artificial. They are a man made thing that is intended to fool man into believing they are something they aren’t. What we’re meant to be convinced they are is sapiently intelligent.
Mimicry is not sapience and that’s where the argument for LLM’s being real honest to God AI falls apart.
Sapience is missing from Generative LLM’s. They don’t actually think. They don’t actually have motivation. What we’re doing when we anthropomorphize them is we are fooling ourselves into thinking they are a man-made reproduction of us without the meat flavored skin suit. That’s not what’s happening. But some of us are convinced that it is, or that it’s near enough that it doesn’t matter.
atrielienz@lemmy.worldto TechTakes@awful.systems•People Are Being Involuntarily Committed, Jailed After Spiraling Into "ChatGPT Psychosis"English112·6 天前This has “people don’t understand that you don’t fall in love in the strip club” vibes. Like. The stripper does not love you. It’s a transactional exchange. When you lose sight of that, and start anthropomorphizing LLM’s (or romanticizing a strip tease), you are falling into a trap that will allow chinks in your psychological armor to line up in just the right way to act on compulsions or ideas that you wouldn’t normally.
atrielienz@lemmy.worldto Steam Deck@sopuli.xyz•Desktop Linux distros similar to Steam OS?English3·6 天前I like the em dash and am very upset that AI has stolen it.
Cars do have that in what amounts to a TCU or Telematics Control Unit. The main problem here isn’t whether or not cars have that technology. It’s about the relevant government agency forcing companies like Tesla (and other automakers) to produce that data not just when there’s a crash, but as a matter of course.
I have a lot of questions about why Tesla’s are allowed on public roads when some of the models haven’t been crash tested. I have a lot of questions about why a company wouldn’t hand over data in the event of a crash without the requirement of a court order. I don’t necessarily agree that cars should be able to track us (if I buy it I own it and nobody should have that kind of data without my say so). But since we already have cars that do phone this data home, local, state, and federal government should have access to it. Especially when insurance companies are happy to use it to place blame in the event of a crash so they don’t have to pay out an insurance policy.