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42 votes
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Is chain-of-thought reasoning of LLMs a mirage? A data distribution lens.
28 votes -
Reddit will block the Internet Archive
58 votes -
The Don Martin Dictionary: Onomatopoeia of MAD Magazine
10 votes -
Meta allegedly pirated terabytes of porn to trick the BitTorrent protocol into letting them pirate books faster
42 votes -
The biggest animal welfare victory of the 21st century, explained in one chart | Global fur production has collapsed. Here’s how it happened.
31 votes -
Meta violated privacy law, jury says in menstrual data fight
40 votes -
Critics claim gender clinics are seeing an excess of trans boys. New data show that isn't true.
20 votes -
The viral 'Tea' app just had a second data breach, and it's even worse
50 votes -
I hate the new internet. I hate the new tech world. I hate it all. I want out, and I can't be the only one.
I think most people would agree that the internet and technology in general have absolutely gone to shit over the past decade or so. There is no corner of the internet nor of the software world...
I think most people would agree that the internet and technology in general have absolutely gone to shit over the past decade or so. There is no corner of the internet nor of the software world that hasn't been affected by enshittification. Everything exists to serve you ads. Everyone wants to extract as much money from you as possible. Every website is in a race for the bottom as they try to find the lowest effort content that makes them the most money. Every piece of software is pushed out half-baked and/or stripped down to the bare minimum with the rest paywalled or with the devs pinky promising to fix it 5 updates down the road.
Every social medium is just bots. The front page of Reddit is easily 35% easily detectable bots at least and who knows what the rest is comprised of. And it's probably the one that's doing the best at the moment, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Tiktok, all of them are just bots and propaganda and engagement farming the whole way down. And the worst thing is, they're complicit. Hell, they're actively encouraging it and trying to find ways to make it worse. And I have no doubt Reddit will bend the knee soon enough too (they just banned /r/whitepeopletwitter because Musk made a tweet critical of the sub).
There's probably some element of rose-tinted glasses here, but the old internet was just so much better looking back. Like, early 2000's to maybe 2012, 2013 or so, that was the peak. No colossal data harvesting schemes feeding into algorithms designed to keep you engaged on their site 24/7 for the purpose of shilling you advertisements and selling your data, no mass propaganda, no Dead Internet Theory (which can hardly be considered a theory anymore). Yeah there was shit content, there was tons of it, but I can deal with shit content and petty forum drama and whatnot; what I can't deal with is all the multi-billion dollar corporations trying to shape the entire landscape of the Web into the perfectly minmaxxed cash-generating machine that does as little as possible for as much data and advertising as possible.
Modern software isn't much better. Windows and MacOS are filled with anti-user features, telemetry you just can't turn off, Windows will often just install shit on your computer without telling you. They turn your computer into a walled garden, where you can do what you want as long as you play by their rules, but without giving you any real control over what your computer does. Yeah you can delete system files and brick your laptop if you feel like it, but anyone who's ever tried to permanently disable Windows updates will know that in the end you're not the one calling the shots: Microsoft are. And... Like, that's insane, right? It's running on my fucking computer, it's my CPU doing the work, I want to know what the hell it's doing and not just the parts it lets me see, and if I want it to do something different then I should be able to make it so.
I hate it all. I'm tired. I want out.
These are my problems. Here's what I've done about it so far.
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Obsessive privacy on the web. No Google services. Firefox with as much telemetry turned off as possible. Protonmail and ProtonVPN for everything (and I'm considering getting out of those too with the pro-Trump stances they've been taking recently). As minimal an online footprint as I can get, I make as few accounts as possible and I don't use shared or even slightly related usernames (my username here is an exception as it's my Reddit username, and no, it's not my real name), I delete accounts whenever I can and I GDPR request the services afterward. Virtual cards for online payments as much as possible. Will probably make a Javascript whitelist at some point too. Is all of this overkill? Yes. Why do I bother? Because fuck them.
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As little social media presence as possible. Real life necessitates some amount of social media interaction of course, I have Facebook and Instagram but use them exclusively for messaging. I often see people excluding Reddit from social media but I don't fully agree, even if it's not exactly in the category it still targets a lot of the same psychological weak points in us, encouraging doom scrolling and shaping our opinions through echo chambers and propaganda (it's always important to remember that echo chambers and propaganda you agree with are still echo chambers and propaganda). I still use Reddit admittedly, but I've tried to minimise my usage as much as possible and I'm shopping for alternatives.
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Free and Open Source software as much as possible. I'm all in on GNU these days. Yes, it's a massive pain in the ass. My job unfortunately requires some Windows-only software so I'm running a dual partition but I'm trying to get as much of my computer usage onto Linux as possible (I use Arch btw). Like I said above, it's my computer, if I can't control what it's computing then it stops being my computer, it's at best shared between me and all the developers of the proprietary software I have installed on it.
That's my rant. It's been a long time coming.
There are still things I'm looking to change, especially with how I use the internet. Getting rid of Reddit is the next big step for me, I think. I just can't be bothered with it anymore, but there is still something about it that I love, every time I look through a small niche topic community, or an interesting new hobby sub I've never seen before with years of cool posts for me to go through. And yeah, I do still enjoy browsing through /r/all even when it's 80% shit and objectively bad for my mental health. But at this point the overwhelming mass of utter shit is just not worth digging through anymore. I'm tired.
Tildes is really cool. It reminds me of the old internet, the ideal usage of the Web. I open the site, I see a link to an interesting article, I read it, I give it a like, I read and/or contribute to the discussion in a comments section. I want more of this.
If anyone has any links to cool sites that I should check out I'd greatly appreciate it.
165 votes -
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Today is Overshoot Day
25 votes -
Radio geeks reveal how to access crucial hurricane data after US Department of Defense cut it off
29 votes -
Applying Chinese Wall Reverse Engineering to LLM Code Editing
8 votes -
Women's pockets are inferior
52 votes -
No, of course I can! Refusal mechanisms can be exploited using harmless fine-tuning data.
9 votes -
Moneyball was supposed to kill the human eye - the opposite is happening
7 votes -
The EU wants to decrypt your private data by 2030
50 votes -
Pay up or stop scraping: Cloudflare program charges bots for each crawl
46 votes -
An industry group representing almost all of Denmark's media outlets including broadcasters and newspapers has said it's suing ChatGPT's parent company OpenAI for using its content
13 votes -
South Pole Telescope releases most precise small-scale CMB data to date — consistent with standard model
11 votes -
Anthropic wins key US ruling on AI training in authors' copyright lawsuit
27 votes -
Cybernews research team has uncovered over sixteen billion leaked records since the start of 2025
37 votes -
Self-driving company Waymo’s market share in San Francisco exceeds Lyft’s
27 votes -
As consumers switch from Google Search to ChatGPT, a new kind of bot is scraping data for AI
28 votes -
COSMOS-Web unveils largest look ever into the deep universe with public data release
8 votes -
Farmers who don't farm: The curious rise of the zero-sales farmer (2017)
9 votes -
In a world first, Brazilians will soon be able to sell their digital data
16 votes -
Meta and Yandex are de-anonymizing Android users’ web browsing identifiers
22 votes -
Mysterious database of 184 million records exposes vast array of login credentials
25 votes -
Closed captions on DVDs are getting left behind
14 votes -
How data travels in F1
12 votes -
How Big Tech hides its outsourced African workforce
16 votes -
23andMe sells its most valuable asset to biotech company Regeneron, which promises to keep your DNA private
43 votes -
World's largest database of nanosatellites, over 4400 nanosats and CubeSats
8 votes -
Coinbase says cost of recent cyber-attack could reach $400m
17 votes -
Explaining the “Strava Tax”
12 votes -
Twilio denies breach following leak of alleged Steam 2FA codes
18 votes -
Inside the Svalbard vault that holds digital back-ups of some of humanity's great works of art, history and technology
14 votes -
Ubisoft sends data it collects from gamers in “Far Cry Primal” to Google, Amazon, and others
34 votes -
Covered California state insurance website sent personal health data to LinkedIn
21 votes -
Your phone doesn't listen to you but apps send screenshots home
44 votes -
Shopify required to defend data privacy lawsuit in California
18 votes -
Notorious image board 4chan hacked and internal data leaked
59 votes -
UK creating ‘murder prediction’ tool to identify people most likely to kill
23 votes -
I have no idea to advance in my career toward data science
I did a masters in data analytics, and then the niche I fell into in the working world was building dashboards, reports and spreadsheets of financial data for non-technical bureaucrats. Instead of...
I did a masters in data analytics, and then the niche I fell into in the working world was building dashboards, reports and spreadsheets of financial data for non-technical bureaucrats. Instead of ensuring data quality by technical means, my current company often just has me manually reviewing and checking financial data. This is pretty frustrating to me because I have no education in finance, and the things I miss or get wrong are so second nature to my boss that he doesn't even see them as something I should have been trained on. The only technologies I use are SQL server and excel. Any proactive steps I've made to automate processes has been discouraged as not worth the time.
I'm aware that most people spend years on tedious stuff before ever getting to work with more engaging technology, but honestly I'm starting to wonder if they've forgotten I'm not a finance guy. I want to move up in my career especially to escape my current role, but I'm feeling completely lost as to how. There's no obvious role in my company that could be a 'next rung of the ladder' to advance into, so there's nobody I can emulate to help chart a course. My boss had an unconventional path to his current role, and isn't really into manager stuff like career mentoring, so he's no help in that regard.
To anyone with experience in data science, what is the advancement supposed to look like? What are the key skills I should be developing? Am I being too averse to learning the subject matter of the data I'm working on? Any insight is appreciated!
13 votes -
How have US food prices changed? Our tracker can give you a sense.
13 votes -
Anti-Trans National Risk Assessment Map: March edition
22 votes -
Religious switching into and out of Islam
16 votes -
23andMe files for bankruptcy
46 votes -
Dive into 125 years of Audubon magazine covers, bird by bird
13 votes