MCasq_qsaCJ_234

joined 4 months ago
[–] MCasq_qsaCJ_234@lemmy.zip 5 points 1 day ago

It is unlikely that Amazon will buy Bluesky, but it is likely that Amazon will do its own fork of Bluesky.

[–] MCasq_qsaCJ_234@lemmy.zip 6 points 2 days ago (2 children)

What if Linux foundation buys Chrome?

 

China's Baidu Inc (9888.HK), opens new tab unveiled a slew of new applications for its artificial intelligence technology on Tuesday, including a text-to-image generator and a tool that enables users to develop software applications without coding expertise.

The country's leading search engine company is among tech firms shifting their focus to the commercialization of large language model (LLM) applications after nearly two years of heavy investment in research and development in models that they tout as alternatives to OpenAI's GPT.

[–] MCasq_qsaCJ_234@lemmy.zip 21 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (1 children)

Party in the CIA

Party in the NSA

Party in the CSS

Party in the NRO

Party in the NGA

[–] MCasq_qsaCJ_234@lemmy.zip 2 points 1 week ago

I curse patents

[–] MCasq_qsaCJ_234@lemmy.zip 2 points 1 week ago

The Marginalia site reminds me of the Twilight Zone

[–] MCasq_qsaCJ_234@lemmy.zip 8 points 3 weeks ago

Then there will be check marks for the accounts and priority in appearing in other users' feeds.

 

Bluesky has revealed how it plans to start making money without necessarily having to rely on ads. The platform will remain free to use for everyone, though it’s working on a premium subscription that will provide access to profile customization tools (remember when Myspace offered that for free?) and higher quality video uploads.

One thing that you won't get as a paid user, though, is any preferential treatment. Unlike certain other social platforms, Bluesky won’t boost the visibility of premium members’ posts. Nor will they get any kind of blue check, according to chief operating officer Rose Wang.

[–] MCasq_qsaCJ_234@lemmy.zip 6 points 3 weeks ago

I could mention all the forks that Linux currently has, please.

[–] MCasq_qsaCJ_234@lemmy.zip 30 points 4 weeks ago (15 children)

No changes until China decides to invade Taiwan and the sanctions that Russia currently has begin.

[–] MCasq_qsaCJ_234@lemmy.zip 23 points 1 month ago (4 children)

Soon the new COD will weigh 5TB

 

South Korea convened an international summit on Monday seeking to establish a blueprint for the responsible use of artificial intelligence (AI) in the military, though any agreement is not expected to have binding powers to enforce it.

More than 90 countries including the United States and China have sent government representatives to the two-day summit in Seoul, which is the second such gathering.

The first summit was held in The Hague last year, where the United States, China and other nations endorsed a modest "call to action, opens new tab" without legal commitment.

[–] MCasq_qsaCJ_234@lemmy.zip 2 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Are you referring to the Chinese, American or Dutch government to whom the subsidies will be offered?

[–] MCasq_qsaCJ_234@lemmy.zip 2 points 2 months ago

In fact, they are going to remove third-party printer drivers and replace them with universal drivers. Link

[–] MCasq_qsaCJ_234@lemmy.zip 2 points 2 months ago

Steam has a somewhat inconsistent interface in some aspects, but for some reason it is acceptable.

 

Artificial-intelligence company Anthropic asked a California federal court on Thursday to dismiss some copyright claims brought by a group of music publishers over the alleged misuse of song lyrics to train its AI-powered chatbot Claude.

Anthropic said that the court should reject the publishers' allegations that the company induced Claude users to infringe their copyrights or committed other copyright-related violations.

The company did not address the core claim from the publishers - Universal Music Group (UMG.AS), opens new tab, ABKCO and Concord Music Group - that the use of their lyrics to train AI violates their rights or the key defense that such training makes fair use of copyrighted work.

"Anthropic's latest motion is completely without merit and is yet another example of an AI company seeking to avoid taking responsibility for its massive infringement of copyrights," the publishers' attorney Matt Oppenheim of Oppenheim + Zebrak said in a statement on Friday.

 

In 2010, as the country still reeled from the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression, tech companies, real estate developers and rural lobbyists went to the state Capitol in Olympia to press for a tax break for data centers.

Turning it down, supporters argued, would mean rejecting high-paying, long-term and environmentally friendly jobs in distressed parts of rural Washington. Owners of data centers — gargantuan facilities filled with computer servers that power the internet — were scouting Washington and other states for new homes.

“In the end,” then-state Sen. Rodney Tom, D-Medina, who advocated for the tax break, told his Senate colleagues, “we get the clean jobs that all the states are competing with, as far as the jobs it takes to run these things long term.”

State lawmakers nearly unanimously passed the special exemption and have kept the benefits flowing to the industry ever since. But the tax break has strayed from its original promises, and the state failed to fully scrutinize whether the sacrifices were worth it, a deep examination of legislative archives, public tax disclosures and utility data by The Seattle Times and ProPublica revealed.

 

The new Labour government has shelved £1.3bn of funding promised by the Conservatives for tech and Artificial Intelligence (AI) projects, the BBC has learned.

It includes £800m for the creation of an exascale supercomputer at Edinburgh University and a further £500m for AI Research Resource, which funds computing power for AI.

Both funds were unveiled less than 12 months ago. The Department for Science, Innovation and Technology (DSIT) said the money was promised by the previous administration but was never allocated in its budget.

Some in the industry have criticised the government's decision. Tech business founder Barney Hussey-Yeo posted on X that reducing investment risked "pushing more entrepreneurs to the US." Businessman Chris van der Kuyl described the move as "idiotic."

 

Karen Hobbs was more nervous than usual before this particular gig. A well-known circuit comedian, she's accustomed to the UK's often bruising stand-up comedy scene. It's eclectic, unpredictable and famously short on pity-laughs. Hobbs has tackled some of the most unforgiving rooms in Britain, from major London theatres to the back rooms of rural pubs. She has even triumphed within the dreaded competition circuit, in which a merciless audience votes in a gladiatorial popularity contest for the funniest gags.

But this Thursday night in late June, above the Covent Garden Social Club bar in Central London, Hobbs was about to attempt something totally new. She would take to the stage equipped not with her usual material, but with a stand-up set written for her by the AI platform ChatGPT. Most daunting of all, she would follow three comedians doing their actual, human material.

 

Researchers from Nokia and GFiber Labs (the experimental arm of Google Fiber) successfully achieved 41.89 Gbps download speeds on a live Google Fiber network. This marks the first time that Nokia's 50G PON (passive optical network) technology has been used on a Google-owned network, and its one of the only examples of live 50 Gig networking in the United States.

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