geosoco
@geosoco@kbin.social
- Russia, China, Iran state media see boost on X after removal of ‘state-affiliated’ labelsthehill.com ↗Submitted 1 year ago to technology@lemmy.world | 41 comments
- Comment on GPUs from all major suppliers are vulnerable to new pixel-stealing attack 1 year ago:
Many sites have had to enable reveal passwords for people with complicated passwords not using password managers.
It's low risk, but their numbers are also coming from fairly dated hardware and is just proof of concept. It can almost certainly be speed up significantly.
- Comment on Announcing ‘Be My AI,’ Soon Available for Hundreds of Thousands of Be My Eyes Users 1 year ago:
Yeah as the other person suggested i suspect it's more like "when do these expire?" "does this have mold on it?" "what does this sign say?"
- Comment on GPUs from all major suppliers are vulnerable to new pixel-stealing attack 1 year ago:
The problem is that so many browsers leverage hardware acceleration and offer access to the GPUs. So while browsers could fix the issue, the underlying cause is the way GPUs handle data that the attack is leveraging.
As these patterns are processed by the iGPU, their varying degrees of redundancy cause the lossless compression output to depend on the secret pixel. The data-dependent compression output directly translates to data-dependent DRAM traffic and data-dependent cache occupancy. Consequently, we show that, even under the most passive threat model—where an attacker can only observe coarse-grained redundancy information of a pattern using a coarse-grained timer in the browser and lacks the ability to adaptively select input—individual pixels can be leaked. Our proof-of-concept attack succeeds on a range of devices (including computers, phones) from a variety of hardware vendors with distinct GPU architectures (Intel, AMD, Apple, Nvidia). Surprisingly, our attack also succeeds on discrete GPUs, and we have preliminary results indicating the presence of software-transparent compression on those architectures as well.
It sounds distantly similar to some of the canvas issues where the acceleration creates different artifacts which makes it possible to identify GPUs and fingerprint the browsers.
- Submitted 1 year ago to technology@lemmy.world | 53 comments
- Apple Releases macOS Sonoma With Interactive Widgets, Game Mode, and More For all Compatible Macs - Download Availablewccftech.com ↗Submitted 1 year ago to technology@lemmy.world | 1 comment
- Submitted 1 year ago to technology@lemmy.world | 12 comments
- Comment on Reddit revamps gold system with opportunities to earn real money for posts 1 year ago:
Who says there's no innovation in tech companies today? lol
- Comment on Announcing ‘Be My AI,’ Soon Available for Hundreds of Thousands of Be My Eyes Users 1 year ago:
I have no idea what their business model is, but this would be a great way to collect more data for training various forms of AI. Arguably without harvesting people's personal data or their creative works.
I also suspect that because it's an assistive tool, it can probably get a fair bit of grant money.
- Comment on Announcing ‘Be My AI,’ Soon Available for Hundreds of Thousands of Be My Eyes Users 1 year ago:
Yes, it's a press release, but I think this is maybe a an interesting use for some of the AI to augment that of volunteers who help describe and annotate for people who have vision challenges.
- Announcing ‘Be My AI,’ Soon Available for Hundreds of Thousands of Be My Eyes Userswww.bemyeyes.com ↗Submitted 1 year ago to technology@lemmy.world | 10 comments
- Submitted 1 year ago to technology@lemmy.world | 30 comments
- Comment on Meta’s AI chatbot plan includes a ‘sassy robot’ for younger users 1 year ago:
I saw some research a while back around giving computers personality traits or having them respond more human like, and college students found it super creepy. If you watch how people interact with assistants, it's very different than from interacting with humans.
- Submitted 1 year ago to technology@lemmy.world | 6 comments
- Comment on anonymous fb? 1 year ago:
That's a decent start, but you need a browser that's resistant to fingerprinting through some plugins and something like ublock origin that will block all embedded content. At some point, it may require you to use a phone number, and at that point you may have a problem. If you avoid that, one of the biggest threats are the facebook and related meta content placed on other pages around the internet. The pixel is one aspect, but almost any facebook content can still track you across sites. These are easily blocked with a decent adblocker and probably privacybadger too.
I know lots of folks will disagree, but I'd care less about Facebook tracking you as they mostly only care about serving you ads and making content suggestions to keep you on the platform to view more ads. Facebook has never served me a relevant ad, and even with a lot of use still can't recommend things I'm interested in. Data leaks and sharing is a concern, but that's a concern with every site. I think when it comes to privacy, there's far bigger concerns.
- Submitted 1 year ago to technology@lemmy.world | 8 comments
- Comment on Bluesky sees record signups day after Musk says X will go paid-only 1 year ago:
From a feature-functional perspective, sure, but it's not entirely true. The biggest differentiators for social media are rarely the core features, but the content and friends. There's a few specific groups that have slowly been migrating from Twitter and Mastodon there.
There's a couple of very famous people that have moved over and because the audience is smaller, they tend to engage with people more often.
- Comment on "waves of technological innovation" have gotten faster over time, "students might now find themselves learning skills in college that are obsolete by the time they graduate" 1 year ago:
This has arguably always been the case. A century ago, it could take years to get something published and into a book form such that it could be taught, and even then it could take an expert to interpret it to a layperson.
Today, the expert can not only share their research, they can do interviews and make tiktok videos about a topic before their research has been published. If it's valuable, 500 news outlets will write clickbait, and students can do a report on it within a week of it happening.
A decent education isn't about teaching you the specifics of some process or even necessarily the state-of-the-art, it's about teaching you how to learn and adapt. How to deal with people to get things accomplished. How to find and validate resources to learn something. Great professors at research institutions will teach you not only the state-of-the-art, but the opportunities for 10 years into the future because they know what the important questions are.
- Comment on Bluesky sees record signups day after Musk says X will go paid-only 1 year ago:
It doesn't really matter. If you find value in using it, just keep using it.
- Comment on Should I putchase a 4-year-old nVidia TV Pro, another technology, or wait for next Gen? 1 year ago:
Had this question like 2 years ago, thinking it was due for an upgrade... At this point, I wouldn't be surprised if they never release another.
I think it supports pretty much everything you might want in a device already.
- Comment on Serious debate please: How is Mastodon decentralized? 1 year ago:
Many folks running instances take donations. Folks are happy to toss up a few bucks to help cover costs. Similar to how people are happy to hop on patreon and support whatever creators on a monthly basis. That's where a lot of the core mastodon money comes from. There's also grants from orgs and governments too to contribute.
This isn't a new concept, and the internet has always had services that worked like this. Usenet, mirrored file repositories, etc. It wasn't until the early 2000s that many things started to become centralized, and we see how well that's worked out.
- Comment on Bluesky sees record signups day after Musk says X will go paid-only 1 year ago:
THere were a few but they got bought (eg. tweetdeck).
There are also 3rd party apps for mastodon that a lot of people like, and they try. But for many people, mimicking the parts of Twitter they value is difficult to do without proper backend support for supporting algorithms, and even then the way activitypub works it still makes it difficult to support for most developers.
Two of the key features are discovering new or related content, which is hard to do in mastodon as it needs to calculate similarity across all of the profiles and their content in order to make recommendations -- or collect data like your cell contacts to help you connect with people you already know. Most people don't want contact sharing, and indexing all of the recommended profiles, especially across federated servers is challenging.
The second is engagement based recommendations. Many social media users aren't incredibly active. They want to open the app in specific moments to quickly catch up with everything since they last opened the app. To do this well, you need to know what they've engaged with and look back at content since they last logged on and rank it based on that. People may follow 1000 people, but really care about maybe 30-40 accounts the most. Friends, family, specific journalists or famous people. Mastodon just gives you like a sample of the last 50 or so items. If you follow anyone super active, you may just get a lot of noise in those updates.
Obviously, there are times when everyone wants a linear timeline, but it depends upon their daily use.
- Comment on Countries Eye Weight Tax To Counter Public Safety Threat Of Extremely Heavy, Large EVs 1 year ago:
That's definitely true. It's also a concern for a lot of infrastructure like parking garages and bridges.
I suspect it's left out because the site focuses on tech, but I've seen a few articles looking at that this year. I think some states already do licenses based on weight, though arguably it's not enough.
Apparently, there's some loopholes that manufacturer's are using to justify increasing weights (eg. this ), and a similar taxbreak from some recent legislation for cars over 6k lbs.
- Countries Eye Weight Tax To Counter Public Safety Threat Of Extremely Heavy, Large EVswww.techdirt.com ↗Submitted 1 year ago to technology@lemmy.world | 37 comments
- Submitted 1 year ago to technology@lemmy.world | 0 comments
- The European Commission Re-Imposes €376.36 Million Fine on Intel for Anticompetitive Practices in the Market for Computer Chipswww.techpowerup.com ↗Submitted 1 year ago to technology@lemmy.world | 10 comments
- Comment on iOS 17 Could Break Crucial Diabetic Glucose Monitor Alerts, Manufacturer Warns 1 year ago:
Thank you! Super glad that your daughter is doing great and this is working for her!
That's all fascinating. I'd seen a few videos of people who had pumps talking about how it effectively revolutionized their lives, but I didn't know exactly how. I didn't know the finger pricks were still common. I just assumed there was some intermediate device between pricks and phones, but boy was I wrong.
- Comment on Bluesky sees record signups day after Musk says X will go paid-only 1 year ago:
It's also easier to find and fix bugs with smaller numbers of people, especially performance bugs which can be amplified at scale. So it gives them a lot of time to work through issues over the beta. It also gives them time to build teams around the expanding infrastructure and build processes for monitoring and handling issues as a larger team.
Plus, these invite only periods start with more tech savy early adopters who more willing to put up with issues, and willing to provide decent bug reports to fix them.
- Comment on Bluesky sees record signups day after Musk says X will go paid-only 1 year ago:
It's a convenience article. They're just reporting some number they have access to.
- Comment on Bluesky sees record signups day after Musk says X will go paid-only 1 year ago:
I'd bet mastodon saw an increase, but i haven't seen the numbers.
It's also hard to get a good count since it's not centralized. So whatever numbers we do see, could be wildly underreported.