technom

joined 1 year ago
[–] technom@programming.dev 1 points 3 months ago (1 children)

Is it legal? There may be alternatives with plausible deniability.

[–] technom@programming.dev 12 points 4 months ago (1 children)

Crowdstrike exists for Linux too. In fact, it apparently crashed RHEL and Debian a few months back. That didn't get so much attention.

Falcon seems to be a cross between an antivirus and an intrusion detection system (IDS). There are many antiviruses on Linux, but only one FOSS AV is popular - ClamAV. As for IDS, snort is an example.

But in the true sense, Falcon is much more than just an AV and IDS. It's a way to detect breaches and report it back to CrowdStrike's threat detection and analysis teams. I don't think there exists a proper alternative even in the commercial sector.

[–] technom@programming.dev 1 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago)

Google has discovered that FOSS software under their full control is better than pure proprietary software for monopoly abuse and rent seeking. With FOSS software, they enjoy the automatic popularity that they otherwise would have had to market very hard for. At the same time, none of Google's free software is truly free. Google devs regularly neglect and reject overwhelming user requirements (jpegxl in chrome is probably the best example of this) and choose designs that clearly favor the company monetarily. It isn't even practical for normal people to fork their projects.

Google often uses their 'FOSS' projects to twist open standards or the market to their advantage. Android and Chrome are very significant players in this regard. Using Chrome, Google even managed to make the W3C standard too complicated for others to make alternative browsers easily. Google has similar ambitions in the multimedia market. They want to replace the monopolistic media formats with quasi-monopolistic formats like webp and av1 instead of truly open ones like jpegxl.

[–] technom@programming.dev 2 points 4 months ago

It's still possible on almost any distro with pyenv or asdf-vm.

[–] technom@programming.dev 3 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago)

Nice idea!

In addition, we could have an allowlist for honest bots (like search crawlers).

[–] technom@programming.dev 9 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) (2 children)

We need ~~three~~ four things:

  1. A way to poison the data that will throw off the training without causing perceptible difference to humans. As I remember it, many image AIs were sensitive to a peculiar noise that was imperceptible to humans.
  2. A skiplist of AI data stealers, so that their IPs/domains can be blocked in bulk.
  3. Eventually, the above technique will become useless as AI data stealers will start using dynamic IPs and botnets to bypass the skiplists. We'll need to throttle or block data to visitors based on pattern recognition. For example, if the visitor requests linked pages in rapid succession. Or if the request interval is uniform or pseudo random, instead of genuinely random.
  4. If the pattern recognition above is triggered, we could even feed the bots with data from AI models, instead of blocking or throttling. Let the AI eat its own s**t.
[–] technom@programming.dev 2 points 5 months ago

Oh! I misunderstood. Sorry! Glad to meet a fellow Gentoo here!

[–] technom@programming.dev 2 points 5 months ago (2 children)

I use Gentoo with OpenRC. So my position in this matter should be clear. Anyway, check the last paragraph again to see what I think about systemd's modularity.

[–] technom@programming.dev 4 points 6 months ago (1 children)

The kernel isn't a place to play politics. You can't just yank a component out like that on short notice, even if it has such a horrible story attached to it.

Back then, ReiserFS was mildly popular and its use would have been widespread (that includes me). The users of ReiserFS and probably even the other kernel devs had no idea that Hans Reiser was capable of such a crime. Infact, he was known as a computer prodigy back then.

There are plenty of users who don't have the luxury of migrating data on a short notice to a different filesystem. Disabling the filesystem would have left them high and dry. That's why the devs gave it a long deprecation period.

[–] technom@programming.dev 1 points 6 months ago

The OP can make the same argument after replacing sudo with doas or su.

[–] technom@programming.dev 0 points 6 months ago (1 children)

There are other applications that use suid (like newuidmap). And there are programs that use capabilities (like ping). I'm pretty sure that this logic will be used to justify assimilating those applications too. But I'm sure that the crowd will cheer them on as if they did something revolutionary.

[–] technom@programming.dev 4 points 6 months ago

That's rich, coming from a company that sued a child whose website domain name was mikerowesoft.com. (His name was Mike Rowe, and the site was about the software he made).

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