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44 votes
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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 -
eBay privacy policy update and AI opt-out
eBay is updating its privacy policy, effective next month (2025-04-27). The major change is a new section about AI processing, accompanied by a new user setting with an opt-out checkbox for having...
eBay is updating its privacy policy, effective next month (2025-04-27). The major change is a new section about AI processing, accompanied by a new user setting with an opt-out checkbox for having your personal data feed their models.
While that page specifically references European areas, the privacy selection appears to be active and remembered between visits for non-Europe customers. It may not do anything for us at all. On the other hand, it seems nearly impossible to find that page from within account settings, so I thought I'd post a direct link.
I'm well aware that I'm anomalous for having read this to begin with, much less diffed it against the previous version. But since I already know that I'm weird, and this wouldn't be much of a discussion post without questions:
- How do you stay up to date with contract changes that might affect you, outside of widespread Internet outrage (such as recent Firefox news)?
- What's your threshold -- if any -- for deciding whether to quit a company over contract changes? Alternatively, have you ever walked away from a purchase, service, or other acquisition over the terms of the contracts?
46 votes -
Claude can now search the web
17 votes -
Privacy is also protecting the data of others
25 votes -
End-to-end encryption - How we stopped trusting clouds and started encrypting our data
15 votes -
Mayo Clinic's secret weapon against AI hallucinations: Reverse RAG in action
8 votes -
Show Tildes: we built the world's first legal AI API
22 votes -
Firefox's new Terms of Use grants Mozilla complete data "processing" rights of all user interactions
58 votes -
Meredith Whittaker said Signal intends to exit Sweden should its government amend existing legislation essentially mandating the end of end-to-end encryption
26 votes -
Experience with data protection laws (GDPR, ePD, CCPA, etc..)
This is a topic I keep revisiting. It's constantly evolving, with new laws in different parts of the world happening pretty often. And also there's a lot of grey area with vague or incomprehensive...
This is a topic I keep revisiting. It's constantly evolving, with new laws in different parts of the world happening pretty often. And also there's a lot of grey area with vague or incomprehensive language that hasn't yet been tested in courts.
I recognize that it's a bit of a niche topic, but I think there are a lot of us at Tildes who have to think about it. After all it potentially impacts anyone maintaining or building a non-platform web presence. It also applies to less obvious things like running an advertising campaign that involves media requested from a server you control (which can therefore potentially log requests).
For my part, I've needed to research laws relating to PII in order to come up with policies and practices in various contexts. In broad strokes it's pretty simple but as you get into details what I continue to find is that there are a lot of conflicting opinions both from professionals and lawyers. A lot of it is still open to interpretation.
I'm wondering what kinds of experience other tildenauts have around data protection and PII? Have you implemented solutions? Do you wonder about it for your own websites? Have you been involved with it at companies where you've worked? Do you have questions about it?
13 votes -
Apple stops offering end-to-end encrypted iCloud storage in the UK due to government spying demands
64 votes -
Larry Ellison wants to put all US data in one big AI system
24 votes -
How US school cyber attacks get hidden from those impacted and the public
10 votes -
What really happens inside a dating app
19 votes -
Brazil bans Sam Altman's tech firm Tools for Humanity from paying for iris scans
23 votes -
US Federal Trade Commission takes action against GoDaddy for alleged lax data security for its website hosting services
19 votes -
Candy Crush, Tinder, MyFitnessPal: See the thousands of apps hijacked to spy on your location
65 votes -
Google faces US trial for collecting data on users who opted out
39 votes -
How AI is unlocking ancient texts — and could rewrite history
16 votes -
Seeking advice re learning the basics of data analytics
I was contacted by a recruiter regarding a job in my field but they wanted someone with data analytics skills. I'm taking this as a sign that I should improve my skill set. Does anyone have advice...
I was contacted by a recruiter regarding a job in my field but they wanted someone with data analytics skills. I'm taking this as a sign that I should improve my skill set. Does anyone have advice for where or how to start with a very small budget?
Thanks for your help.
13 votes -
More US telcos confirm Salt Typhoon breaches as White House weighs in
20 votes -
MasterCard sells my transaction data in "anonymised" form; but I get targeted spam related to credit card use. How does it work?
26 votes -
Chatbots urged teen to self-harm, suggested murdering parents, Texas lawsuit says
24 votes -
Are ‘ghost engineers’ real? Seeking Silicon Valley’s least productive coders.
23 votes -
Make it ephemeral: Software should decay and lose data
24 votes -
Inside the world's largest AI supercluster xAI Colossus
4 votes -
Thinking on storage
9 votes -
Your chatbot transcripts may be a gold mine for AI companies
25 votes -
LinkedIn is the latest to automatically opt you in to AI training
35 votes -
Paypal opted you into sharing data without your knowledge
90 votes -
Tips for managing a low-storage laptop?
I bought an M2 Macbook Air at the start of this year for uni. I only planned to use it for uni work as I have another 'more powerful' laptop that I use for everything else, but I kinda love the M2...
I bought an M2 Macbook Air at the start of this year for uni. I only planned to use it for uni work as I have another 'more powerful' laptop that I use for everything else, but I kinda love the M2 and want to make it my daily driver laptop. Battery lasts for ages, screen is great, it's thin and light, etc. The problem is - as you might guess - I only got the 512GB model and if there's one thing Apple hates, it's people having control over their hardware, so no expandable storage. I can't afford to upgrade the entire laptop, so I need to work with what I have. Here's what I want to use it for:
- Graphic design: Adobe software, high-res images, typefaces, etc.
- Music production: Ableton Live 11 Suite, sample packs, plug-ins, project folders, etc.
- Music library: uncompressed .m4a files because iTunes hates Vorbis 😢, ~80% of my library (I don't have everything downloaded yet) is 25GB.
- Web-browsing: Firefox... this one isn't really relevant but I feel like I should include it for completeness.
Does anyone have any tips to stretch this 512GB as faaaaaar as it can go? I have a 2TB external SSD, but I'm wary of keeping anything important on it because it's small and I don't want to accidentally lose a bunch of stuff. I can spend a bit of money (maybe 30usd) if anyone has a good idea that requires buying something, but I can't spend any ludicrous amounts, I already did that to get the laptop!
15 votes -
Prison inmates in Finland are being employed as data labellers to improve accuracy of AI models
22 votes -
The great data integration schlep
14 votes -
Data security help - SOC2ish
Hi Tilderinos, I head up a small startup and we're looking to get some support for our data security. Up until now we've worked with small mom and pops that didn't have any requirements, but a few...
Hi Tilderinos,
I head up a small startup and we're looking to get some support for our data security. Up until now we've worked with small mom and pops that didn't have any requirements, but a few of our new clients have full data security teams and our infrastructure and policies/protocols aren't up to snuff. We reached out to a few consulting firms and they quotes us between $80-100k to get things set up and run us through a full SOC2 review. As a small company we don't really have that type of budget, more like $40-50k. I stumbled upon Vanta and Drata as alternatives and had meetings with their sales folks last week. Both of their offerings from setting up our protocols to monitoring and getting us through a SOC2 were only $16k.
Are platform based companies like Vanta or Drata enough to get us off the ground while we're still getting set up? Has anyone worked with them before and have any feelings one way or the other? Should we be signing on with a security consulting company - be it at a lower rate if we can negotiate it?
This is all quite new to me and any insight folks here can provide would be incredible useful.12 votes -
Inside Iron Mountain: It’s time to talk about hard drives
23 votes -
Oracle's $115 million privacy settlement: What consumers should know
22 votes -
Is Google training AI on YouTube videos?
17 votes -
US judge rules $400 million algorithmic system illegally denied thousands of people’s Medicaid benefits
27 votes -
Top companies ground Microsoft Copilot over data governance concerns
23 votes -
Google must destroy $5 billion worth of user data illegally collected in Incognito Mode
55 votes -
Condé Nast joins other publishers in allowing OpenAI to access its content
8 votes -
Microsoft will train AI on user data
44 votes -
Inside the "three billion people" National Public Data breach
71 votes -
Websites are blocking the wrong AI scrapers (because AI companies keep making new ones)
18 votes -
Google halts its four-plus-year plan to turn off tracking cookies by default in Chrome
36 votes -
Google dropping plan to remove ad-tracking cookies on Chrome
22 votes