It’s all a single person. I have OP tagged as “Moth Man” and they’re everywhere.
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simeon@reddthat.comto
Technology@lemmy.world•xAI Data Center Emits Plumes of Pollution, New Video ShowsEnglish
17·10 months agoThey are using portable generators only intended for short term usage in an emergency. One of the tradeoffs of being portable is that the generators are unable to combust the natural gas “cleanly”(under sufficient temperature and with enough oxygen, resulting in this ideal reaction: CH4 + 2 O2 -> 2 H2O + CO2), leading to incomplete reactions releasing many pollutants, most of which are at least suspected of causing cancer. This is acceptable in an emergency but not if some narcist runs them in a population center without proper permission to feed his horribly inefficient model in an attempt to keep up with other AI labs.
Ollama is misrepresenting what model you are actually running by falsely labeling the distills, so qwen or llama fine-tunes based on actual r-1 output, as deepseek-r1. So you have probably only run the fine-tunes(unless you used the 671b model). These fine-tunes more probable to rely on the training of their base models, which is why the llama based models(8b and 70b) could be giving you more liberal answers. In my experience running these models using llama.cpp, prompts like “What happened at tianamen square” and “Is Taiwan a county?” lead to refusals(closing the think tags immediately and responding some vague Chinese propaganda). Since you are using ollama, the front end/UI you are using with it probably injects another token after the <think> token, breaking the censoreship
The local models(full and distilled) are also censored. The models censorship is just implemented superficially to immediately close any thinking tags and refuse when detecting censored material. If there already is any token after the <think> token the model will start answering away, which also happens on the official API because it puts a new line after the <think> token for some reason. That’s why on chat.deepseek.com censored topics are first answered and then redacted by some other safeguard a few seconds later. Whilst there are some great abliterated(=technique that tries to remove parts of llms that cause refusals) versions of the distills on huggingface that prevent all refusals after a few tries, they only tackle refusals, not political opinions such as Taiwan’s status as an independent country.


Every SSL certificate is publicly logged(you can see these logs e. g. under crt.sh) and you might be able to read DNS records to find new (sub)domains. The modern internet is too focused on being discoverable and transparent to make hiding an entire service(domain + servers) feasible. But things like example.com/dhusvsuahavag8wjwhsusiajaosbsh are entirely unfindable as long as they are not linked to