

uh, I’ve been writing like that for years and I am not about to stop just because the slop machines decided to copy me!
Transfem demigirl with an interest in coding, gaming, and retrocomputing.
My links:


uh, I’ve been writing like that for years and I am not about to stop just because the slop machines decided to copy me!


Each chip runs ONE model, hardwired into the transistors.
That’s… that’s an ASIC. That’s literally just an ASIC… with all the tradeoffs and compromises that come with it.


Ethics and rights aside, this isn’t even possible to comply with. The law applies to additive and subtractive manufacturing hardware, and expects it to automatically detect and refuse any attempts to manufacture a firearm. But that depends on an underlying assumption that a machine can answer the question “will this command (set) result in the construction of a gun?” And that assumption is false.
Even if you somehow designed an algorithm that could read a G-code program and determine whether it produces something shaped like a gun, it still wouldn’t be enough - because the CNC machine is just one step of a manufacturing process. The human operator controls what materials and commands go into the machine, so they also have full control over all inputs that the “oversight” program is allowed to see.
Some simple ways to bypass this (hypothetical and perfect implementation):
So even if this was something we wanted to enforce, it’s just not possible. For the same reason why Minecraft abandoned their plans for an SMP “penis detector”, this law could never be complied with because it’s impossible to build a machine that actually meets the requirements.


“unlock the ability to purchase” 😕


And of course, OP is now banned 🙄


Validating output should be much easier than generating it yourself. P≠NP.
This is very much not true in some domains, like software development. Code is much harder to read than it is to write, so verifying the output of a coding AI usually takes more time (or at least more cognitive effort) than if you’d just written the code yourself.


are locked in their shared bedroom from 8pm to 8am
you mean the fucking cell?


wait you’re serious? this isn’t satire???


Here’s the full report, for anyone who doesn’t want to give their personal information: https://enby.life/files/c564f5f8-ce51-432d-a20e-583fa7c100b8


I hope you didn’t literally use XOR
It’s XOR(key, block) with IV and chaining: https://github.com/RommieEcho/qrcatalyst-open/blob/main/src/routes/anon/XORCipher.js
Since it’s chained at the byte level, you can strip it out by just XORing each byte against all following bytes. Then the IV can be XORed out of the first block, at which point you have just a series of XOR(key, plaintext) blocks that can be attacked with conventional methods.


Disclaimer: I administrate multiple Sharkey instances and am one of the project maintainers, so I’m likely quite biased. Please take my opinions with a grain of salt!
poa.st, for example, and yet many do. But Beehaw’s staff have shown a commitment to their roles, and the community has consistently backed them up with reliable reporting and a solid effort to maintain the community health. I think our people could do very well in the larger fediverse space.

Isn’t that a classic corporate raid technique? Sell the company’s assets to you or an organization you control, then lease them back to the original owners.


This isn’t just about teens - the article shows that every age under 45 is less happy, and - excluding a brief bump in the late 20s - people just keep getting unhappy as they get older. There’s no “it gets better” age to look forward to.


oh so it would just be app-based MFA but without using TOTP. That makes sense


I’m confused about how this is supposed to act as a second authentication factor 🤔


I see, thank you for explaining!


what’s the concern with channel blockers? /genq


Aren’t ideas like, the easiest part of making a game??


Just renewed my library card, and apparently it’s been 17 years since I last used it. The staff did a double-take when she read the date 😅
it was stable, up until a few years ago. But starting when MS scaled back their QA department (Windows 10 era IIRC) - and worsening when they went all-in on AI (Windows 11 era), stability and reliability has fallen off a cliff. I started tracking crashes and problems that required manual intervention, and over the last two years I’ve spent more hours debugging and fixing Windows 11 than Xubuntu. This is the first time in my life where Linux has required less maintenance than a stock Windows installation. It’s bad enough that I advised all my non-technical family members to stay on Windows 10 instead of upgrading to Windows 11, despite the lack of support.