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19 votes
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10x engineer - Midlife crisis
14 votes -
Microsoft is adding AI facial recognition to OneDrive and users can only turn it off three times a year
I didn't watch the whole video and I'm not familiar with the channel so I don't want to make this a link post, but here's the source: The Lunduke Journal I watched up to the point where the author...
I didn't watch the whole video and I'm not familiar with the channel so I don't want to make this a link post, but here's the source: The Lunduke Journal
I watched up to the point where the author explains how Microsoft tends to turn on all the privacy invading settings every time they push an update (not surprising). I guess if I had to use Microsoft products, I'd try to disable automatic updates and just do them twice a year in one go, while also turning off the settings I want off. Would it be practically feasible? I don't know. Having to go to those lengths to use some software just seems ridiculous.
48 votes -
Tech companies are finding out everything is political
33 votes -
Cory Doctorow: Tech-like apps can obfuscate what’s really going on, sloshing a coat of complexity over a business that allows its owners to claim that they’re not breaking the law
39 votes -
AI eroded doctors’ ability to spot cancer within months in study
42 votes -
Social media probably can’t be fixed
38 votes -
The prodigal techbro
8 votes -
How to not build the Torment Nexus
28 votes -
Open AI announces $1.5 million bonus for every employee
22 votes -
No, AI is not making engineers 10x as productive: curing your AI 10x engineer imposter syndrome
27 votes -
Six-month-old, solo-owned vibe coder Base44 sells to Wix for $80M cash
13 votes -
Sincerity wins the war
8 votes -
Getty Images and Stability AI face off in British copyright trial that will test AI industry
21 votes -
Hit hardest in Microsoft layoffs? Developers, product managers, morale.
35 votes -
What we in the open world are messing up in trying to compete with big tech
19 votes -
Software engineer lost his $150K-a-year job to AI—he’s been rejected from 800 jobs and forced to DoorDash and live in a trailer to make ends meet
34 votes -
Tech companies apparently do not understand why we dislike AI
49 votes -
Apple and Meta first companies to be fined a combined 700 million euros for violating EU Digital Markets Act (DMA)
45 votes -
OpenAI is a systemic risk to the tech industry
35 votes -
Finland's bid to win Europe's start-up crown – country has spawned twelve unicorn businesses (firms worth a billion dollars or more) like Oura, Supercell, Rovio, and Wolt
16 votes -
‘The terror is real’: an appalled US tech industry is scared to criticize Elon Musk
36 votes -
Joe Edelman: "Is anything worth maximizing?", a talk about how tech platforms optimize for metrics
Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GyVHrGLiTcc (46m20s) Transcript: https://medium.com/what-to-build/is-anything-worth-maximizing-d11e648eb56f (10,314 words with footnotes and references)...
Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GyVHrGLiTcc (46m20s)
Transcript: https://medium.com/what-to-build/is-anything-worth-maximizing-d11e648eb56f (10,314 words with footnotes and references)
Excerpt:
...for simple maximizers, its choices are just about numbers. That means its choices are in the numbers. Here, the choice between two desserts is just a choice between numbers. We could say its choice is already made. And that it has no responsibility, since it’s just following what the numbers say.
Reason-based maximizers don’t just see numbers, though, they also see values. Here, there’s a choice between two desserts — but it isn’t a choice between two numbers. See, it’s also a choice between two values. One option means being a seize-the-day, intensity kind of person. The other means being a foody, aristocratic, elegance kind of person.
My personal thoughts about this talk: it's a kind of strange, kind of dubious philosophical and multi-disciplinary reflection on metrics for organizations, especially metrics for tech companies, and on the pitfalls of optimizing for metrics in what the speaker argues is too "simple" a way.
I don't entirely trust the speaker or the argument, but there was enough in the talk to stimulate curiosity and reflection that I thought it was worth watching.
18 votes