They admitted it back then, too.
Living 20 minutes into the future. Eccentric weirdo. Virtual Adept. Time traveler. Thelemite. Technomage. Hacker on main. APT 3319. Not human. 30% software and implants. H+ - 0.4 on the Berram-7 scale. Furry adjacent. Pan/poly. Burnout.
I try to post as sincerely as possible.
They admitted it back then, too.
Everybody uses computers for different things.
At last, a fellow sysadmin! Nice work.
I was wondering that, too. I’ve got a pair of GTX 1660 Supers in Leandra running a simulation, and they’ve been crunching away for nine days now.
Because they’re processing data all the time? They’re doing work?
My work laptop has been up for 26 days, 17:24. My primary server at home has been online for 42 days, 21:27. Personal laptop - 45 days, 20:51. The primary server of my exocortex has been online and crunching away for 278 days, 19:48.
It probably means that more people are hacking on it and getting their PRs accepted than are working on SquashFS. What constitutes software that is still alive these days is pretty badly skewed toward “if you don’t release four x.y.z releases every day your software is dead” these days.
https://www.startmail.com/ (7 day free accounts)
https://mailfence.com/ (free personal accounts)
Don’t pay for it, get a free account.
When you get right down to it, it’s all risk management.
It’s part of the Fediverse, so if you’re on a Pixelfed instance you can see other servers running Mastodon, et al. Pick an instance that seems like it feels nice to you.
Reading that gave me a fucking headache.
https://elblogdelnarco.com/ is the one everybody seems to go to first. Be careful, there’s some pretty fucking horrifying stuff in there.
This is the Internet, there’s no shortage of targets.
It says pretty explicitly that it only runs on the user’s machine.
Nuance is deader than Elvis.
Why don’t you ask them? They’re very responsive to their community of users.
I just took a spin through their news blog and changelog and didn’t see anything about it in the latest release, so it’s probably not out yet.
There’s a difference between LLM slop (“write me an article about foo”) and using an LLM for something that’s actually useful (“listen to the audio from this file and transcribe everything that sounds like human speech”).
Look at how Mexican narcobloggers do it. Many of their sites are hosted at places like Blogger. They keep backups of everything they write (those sites let you download site archives from your control panel). They access everything over Tor using TAILS. They delay what they post compared to what happened, to make it more difficult to correlate who was within range of an event (i.e., witnesses) and when they posted it. They don’t post from home but go elsewhere.
They don’t tell anybody they’re narcobloggers. At all.
And you can run it over SSH on servers.