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Comment Surveillence State is coming.. (Score 1) 24

...whether we like it or not.

Every few weeks we hear about another call to arms to try and stop a proposal for big brother to spy on all of us in {location}, and each time it's narrowly defeated.

Eventually it's going to pass and it won't be repealed before being implemented. Once that happens it'll never go away.

Whoever manages to setup the full digital ID + ban on all encryption + enforced always-on GPS tracking + internet wide tracking will be able to install whoever they want in power and never, ever let go. No citizen's militia will ever stand up to modern military technology once it's there, and those who control the keys to power know it.

Comment Re:When private companies think deregulation is ba (Score 0) 25

The stock markets see crypto as something that makes them irrelevant if implemented properly.

There is absolutely no reason why all stocks couldn't be token based. There are technical solutions to ALL criticisms whether or not the politics or optics are aligned with this fact.

The stock exchanges make money from selling market data, listing fees, trading fees and selling hosting services to give people who use their markets an advantage if they are willing to pay for infrastructure in the same location to lower latency. All of these things are threatened by decentralized finance.

I'm not saying I trust the current implementation of any crypto product or think that as-is the frameworks we have are good. Just saying this is a fundamental threat to stock exchanges' and their relevance.

Comment Re:"Windows is evolving into an agentic OS," (Score 2) 69

I'm doing my part!

I'm two months in and after the first couple of days I haven't booted up windows other than to check how I had something setup or if I could find an old file in weeks now.

I don't see a reason to keep windows. If I need an office document format I can use web versions. Almost every game just works at this point and the performance deltas are tiny.

The downsides are nothing compared to the benefits imo. It's still tough for the typical non-technical user though to make a change like this because they aren't exposed to it so young like they are to windows and ms office and google stuff today.

Comment Clickbait, the other white meat (Score 2) 66

items that cost more than what the marketplace sales cap are now below the market cap because they are more easily earnable while deleting tons and tons and TONS of items costing $20 before, now $100 from the store.

The "value" erased is like saying a stock on the stock market is worth 2 billion dollars less, but Valve doesn't earn any profit from skins traded via 3rd party sites, and that's what is hit here.

First party transactions are now generating loads of revenue from transaction fees, bringing the market back to Valve and away from sketchy third party sites.

At the end of the day I can't comprehend why people are paying for this stuff though. It's just a texture which you could trivially mod in before, at least when I was big into CS in 1.X days and CS:S.

Comment They didn't want to pay the nvidia tax anyway (Score 1) 96

The prices are bogus and set by a company with margins that are practically unheard of. Thus far, the lion's share of value with "AI" is going to Nvidia and it's investors. They require an additional license to use their hardware with hypervisors which is additionally predatory - it's akin to charging someone a license for using an AMD cpu or Intel CPU, direct from AMD or Intel, and if you don't pay you can't run a VM or a container.

It makes sense to nationalize GPU production and to ban this one company from the China side anyway. Whatever the pain is now to adapting to hardware not running CUDA is a one time pain. Once built out they have zero reliance on a single source that is controlled by the US charging prices that are easily ten to twenty times what they should be, if not much more.

Once their solution is cheaper and better and available to the western market, it will serve as a launchpad for state backdoors into all kinds of computer systems just like what almost certainly exists in all US based chip companies hardware but could never be admitted.

Comment Re: Would be a weird plot (Score 2) 47

I donâ(TM)t know much about cellular infrastructure, but on the day of the Boston Bombing there was basically no cell service in a huge area from everyone trying to reach everyone.

It worked out of the city, but in the city near back bay and even beyond it nothing worked.

I suspect in a future emergency that makes the news, combined with normal user phones, the same thing could happen regardless of how much improvements have been made.

Comment Imdb feels like it's been going this way (Score 0) 50

for a while.

I don't think online reviews should be trusted anymore. Advertisers have found all the tricks to make ratings look one way or another.

It really sucks because I just want good legitimate information, but everywhere I find we're just bombarded with sponsored content. This trend of 'influencers' is a perfect example.

Comment Fun math (Score 1) 14

So they have 1428 W2 workers, and 500 contractors, 1928 employees. They just let 700 people go, so now they're down to 1228.

Effectively they've removed 37% of their workforce. That's a lot of employees.

I assume this is really a ploy for meta to buy almost a thousand AI devs for pennies on the dollar compared to what their salaries would have commanded to be hired directly to meta.

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