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11 votes
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Copilot can't stop emitting violent, sexual images, says Microsoft whistleblower
28 votes -
Kagi + Wolfram
43 votes -
You can not simply publicly access private secure links, can you?
11 votes -
Research paper compares LLM responses based on politeness of requests and finds quality difference
28 votes -
Nikon is acquiring US camera manufacturer RED
21 votes -
Microsoft to end its Android apps on Windows 11 subsystem in 2025
14 votes -
Google announces major update to combat AI-generated spam in search results
21 votes -
Meet Robbie, the walking talking robot guide dog
11 votes -
Generative AI - We aren’t ready
27 votes -
What are some interesting machine learning research papers you found?
Here's a place to share machine learning research papers that seem interesting to you. I'm no expert, but sometimes I skim them, and maybe there are some folks on Tilde who know more than I do?...
Here's a place to share machine learning research papers that seem interesting to you. I'm no expert, but sometimes I skim them, and maybe there are some folks on Tilde who know more than I do?
One paper per top-level post, and please link to arXiv (if relevant) and quote a bit of the abstract.
11 votes -
Facebook, Instagram, Messenger and Threads down in widespread outage
14 votes -
What a bunch of A-list celebs taught me about how to use my phone
47 votes -
Hewlett-Packard wants you to pay up to $36/month to rent a printer that it monitors
60 votes -
EU fines Apple €1.8bn over App Store restrictions on music streaming
26 votes -
How I accidentally made my link shortener into a malware honeypot
50 votes -
Does anyone know a search engine for news articles only?
I’m looking for a search engine just for news; kind of a Google News competitor but something independent. Any ideas? I know of Ground News, it’s already pretty good though it’s less search engine...
I’m looking for a search engine just for news; kind of a Google News competitor but something independent. Any ideas?
I know of Ground News, it’s already pretty good though it’s less search engine and more aggregator. Open to hear more.
18 votes -
Are there any affordable digital compact cameras out there with a zoom lens?
Most of my photo-taking is done with my Smartphone but it really lacks a proper zoom feature. I'd like to purchase a cheap compact camera with a zoom lens. Is there anything out there you would...
Most of my photo-taking is done with my Smartphone but it really lacks a proper zoom feature. I'd like to purchase a cheap compact camera with a zoom lens. Is there anything out there you would recommend?
edit
Bonus if it has a USB-C interface. I hate carrying multiple cords around.
14 votes -
The beautiful maths which makes 5G faster than 4G, faster than 3G, faster than…
12 votes -
Who created the skull trumpet gif?
37 votes -
KDE Plasma 6 is (mega) released
45 votes -
Is an ethical social media platform even possible?
I've long been uncomfortable using platforms that have a bad reputation with respect to: Human rights / genocide Disinformation Privacy All three of those can be connected with advertising...
I've long been uncomfortable using platforms that have a bad reputation with respect to:
- Human rights / genocide
- Disinformation
- Privacy
All three of those can be connected with advertising revenue, among other things. When I use platforms that are shady in this regard, I know I'm colluding with them and contributing to the problems they create. So it's been a relief to see new platforms like Tildes emerge, as well as those based on ActivityPub.
But even platforms that don't have overt advertising (Telegram?) do have a problem with hate groups that go unchallenged. And I know that if I was running an instance of an ActivityPub compatible platform such as KBin, I mightn't be able to keep on top of moderating things like disinformation.
So I suppose my question is, where do you draw the line? I've deleted my Twitter and Meta accounts and I'm exploring alternatives, but I'm not sure if I'm going from the darkness to the light, or just into shades of grey.
38 votes -
How to make your website available over Tor: A complete guide to EOTK, the Enterprise Onion Toolkit
9 votes -
White House urges use of type safe and memory safe programming languages and hardware
38 votes -
Elon Musk sues OpenAI, Sam Altman for breaching firm’s founding mission
27 votes -
FastSDXL.AI: Free demo that lets you generate AI images as fast as you can type
44 votes -
Happy Leap Day
21 votes -
Revealed: the names linked to ClothOff, the deepfake pornography app
26 votes -
Tumblr to begin selling user content to AI generative service companies, opt-out will be per blog
75 votes -
What is your favorite project that you worked on when first learning to code?
I went to university for computer science up until the pandemic started. It was great. I remember working on so many projects that were basic but a lot of fun and others that were a lot more...
I went to university for computer science up until the pandemic started. It was great. I remember working on so many projects that were basic but a lot of fun and others that were a lot more complex but still fun and rewarding. For example, one of the staples of beginner projects is Conway's Game of Life. I remember building that in HTML, CSS, and Java Script. One of my other favorite projects was a website for alum to visit to see alumni news and events, and also to lookup other alum.
What were your favorite projects when learning to code?
10 votes -
How the Pentagon learned to use targeted ads to find its targets—and Vladimir Putin
29 votes -
Journalist Tim Burke faces charges under the US Computer Fraud and Abuse Act
27 votes -
The business of winding down startups is booming
15 votes -
Indexing the information age - Over a weekend in 1995, a small group gathered in Ohio to unleash the power of the internet by making it navigable
13 votes -
Vending machine error reveals secret face image database of Canadian college students
72 votes -
I got paid $0.33 for confirming with Google that I got a haircut where I did and paid with a card
Who got the better end of that deal? It was in Google rewards. They were already involved in that transaction. How much is me matching their phone records really worth?
27 votes -
Google cut a deal with Reddit for AI training data
23 votes -
AT&T widespread cell phone outage in US
27 votes -
More "old web" sites?
I really love Tildes feeling of community, and how it feels like what the web used to feel like. Any suggestions for other sites like that?
72 votes -
Leak of documents on spyware developed by vendor for Chinese government
33 votes -
Stability AI announces Stable Diffusion 3 (currently in the early preview stage)
18 votes -
Resources for starting your own small website
23 votes -
Bluesky announces data federation for self-hosting
20 votes -
Kagi Smallweb [a website where each visit shows a random indie/small website, e.g. personal blogs]
77 votes -
Have a blogroll
7 votes -
RSS users - how do you use, organize and maximize your enjoyment of RSS?
It's not something I've thought about much until I had a conversation with someone who sets up their RSS reader, and uses it, completely differently to me. I self-host FreshRSS, and typically just...
It's not something I've thought about much until I had a conversation with someone who sets up their RSS reader, and uses it, completely differently to me.
I self-host FreshRSS, and typically just use the Web UI provided by that - sometimes I use Android RSS apps to consume from that, but I've never found one I like that much. But I just categorize my RSS feeds by broad theme, e.g. computing & tech, local news, programming, tech news, gaming, business and so on...
For the most part, I just browse through my main feed a few times per day and see if anything catches my eye. The only exception to this is that I have a few feeds in the 'Important' feed. One example is the forum related to a university project, where I need to know about entries pretty quickly.
The person I was discussing with never subscribes to anything noisy. No BBC, no Ars Technica, and really nothing that posts more than once per day. They split their feeds into "Important", "Casual", "Videos", "Podcasts" (I never thought to add Podcasts, as I use a separate map) and "Comics". They have it set up with the intention of reading everything that comes through.
I respect the curation effort that it must take to have an RSS feed where everything is interesting enough that you'd want to read it all. But for me, RSS is a method of discovering content. I don't need it too clean or overly curated. For the most part, I'm just going to skim it for interesting titles and subjects. The most curation I do is removing feeds after a while, if I notice I'm never interested in their content.
I'm very keen to hear how you use RSS.
46 votes -
Signal messenger releases 'usernames' so you no longer need to tell someone your phone number in order for them to message you
59 votes -
Downtime due to sign up spam
25 votes -
How Google is killing independent sites like ours
59 votes -
Google’s retiring of Internet archiving tool draws ire of China researchers
18 votes