Follow Slashdot blog updates by subscribing to our blog RSS feed

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror

Comment Hardly anyone run's Linus' Linux (Score 4, Insightful) 66

You run RedHat's Linux, Debian's Linux, Ubuntu's Linux, SCO's Linux.

Linus is the master of main. But every distro changes and compiles their own version. When Linus goes away, the most powerful closenit group of kernel maintainers will end up winning the battle royale to become the masters of universe. The surviving losers will try to dominate their branch. But the most actively maintained garden will have the best bush. You will end up with the popular branch, and every distro patching and compiling their own version.

Comment People with outdated browsers living in DCs (Score 2) 86

My site gets a lot of traffic by people using quite outdated browsers, all those IPs trace back to data centers.

I've created fail2ban rules to for certain patterns. Once those IPs are blocked, different IPs with the same behavior show up.

It is not just Perplexity.

Comment Journalists? Archivists? Historians? (Score 2) 166

Jobs which should not make up things, but properly record, and make available events which occurred which were recorded.
Definitely not something you want to replace with bullshit generators.

Als could make the work of them easier, saving time to dig through the increasing amount of information.

Comment Re:Just like humans: How we train them. (Score 4, Insightful) 55

Als don't work like that. They have already been trained on more code that any group of humans will be able to digest. They have been trained on a huge quantity of code. But the quality of the code they have been "trained" on is not of the quality you need to produce secure code. These Al do not understand what secure code it, and you cannot tell them like you can tell a human. All these Als can do produce what they have commonly seen within a provided context, and that most common part, is insecure.

Slashdot Top Deals

The clearest way into the Universe is through a forest wilderness. -- John Muir

Working...