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Comment Total bullsh*t (a year to code and 30k lines?) (Score 3, Interesting) 111

I looked briefly at the site, it's pretty basic fullstack site with a CMS.

I fullstack web development to high school students (Django framework (Python), mySQL backend), and have had some of my students build similar data-driven sites, in a month or so after they've learned the core skills needed, and they're not working on it 40 hrs a week either since they have 5+ other classes. Granted I have some pretty motivated & sharp kids, but even an average programmer just out of college could build this thing in pretty short order, or should be able to.

30,000 lines of code for THAT? and a year to build? I call bullshit. Or is that's really 30k lines of code, it's a REALLY verbose inefficient 30k. What's he counting a bunch of json files / dictionaries he's using for data? I'm kidding, I'm assuming there's some kind of actual db behind it, but I just don't see where you'd need anywhere near 30k?

Clearly he's trying to sell something, oh right this guys who 'knows who to code' is part of the Y-combinator hype machine, yawn...

Comment Re:And we're screwed... (Score 1) 72

You as an individual may be ok, but I'm thinking more collectively as a society that we're going be screwed. Your point that "I'm being forced to herd a growing flock of ChatGPT-dependent morons." is what I meant, the next generation of IT staff/programmers/engineers might be these 'ChatGPT-dependent morons' responsible for software and systems down the road. It's terrifying.

Comment Total nightmare (Score 4, Insightful) 37

Another reason to use other options like duckduckgo, or other browsers (I still like Firefox even with its missteps).

The big problem with this too is that you reinforce echo chambers using your history, which isn't really a good thing, getting a range of perspectives even in search / AI results helps mitigate exaggerated beliefs or viewpoints (e.g. 'x is everywhere', 'y is always happening', 'everyone believes z')

I also wonder how long it will be 'opt-in' until they make it the default and you have to 'opt-out'

Total clusterfuck of an idea imo...

Comment And we're screwed... (Score 1) 72

This kind of short-sightedness will cost us. Some companies just want -- 'poof', magically experienced programmers/engineers and want 'someone else' to give them entry-level work to get them to mid-senior level. They don't want skilled and they don't want to pay/invest. Same reason company loyalty died a while back, no one wants to invest in their younger employees, and they also try to force out the most senior (e.g. expensive high-salaried) ones.

Between this, and now many young programmers/college students becoming so dependent on AI that they don't have actual knowledge (other than what they can look up), I think we're going to gave a massive skill gap in the next few years. Too many 'programmers' who won't actually know how to build and fix complex systems. More black boxes that no one understands...

I saw a funny comment here on another article, saying the best job security now is cybersecurity since there's going to be so much shit code and security holes out there that needs to be addressed and protected against -- it's pretty much guaranteed work.

Comment Re:Not what is happening (Score 1) 36

Fine, but the companies using/building/employing these tools are still culpable and should 100% be held responsible for any bad outcomes (e.g. suicide) that result from their 'services' (I use the term loosely).

People build these tools, which means they trained them, or hired someone to train them -- in either case, they are responsible for the data used in the training as well as the end result and the product. Don't give them an easy out.

Comment Businesses just don't care (Score 1) 31

As long as they have 'engagement' they don't give a shit what slop they're feeding you. I still use Facebook periodically (don't judge me! older family members still use it to keep in touch), and I've noticed the amount of shitty AI content on the feeds, suggestions, etc., has exploded in the last couple of months -- fake animals, fake people, fake incidents, etc. I use some extensions/add-ons to mitigate/block the worst of it, but it's still so much shit. Dead Internet indeed.

FB/Meta could undoubtedly do something if they wanted given their resources, but they don't care as long as people are on the platform, if they say otherwise, they're lying... shocking I know!

Comment Re:Expand enrollment (Score 1) 75

I've meet some crazy smart people from Harvard, average folks, and some that I was not impressed by.

I think that the varsity blues scandal and other recent admission policies that has come to light, showed concretely that some people sneak into place like Harvard and are NOT the cream of the crop, just wealthy and/or connected.

Comment College Board getting desperate to stay relevant (Score 1) 26

As more and more schools, including elite private schools which are often Ivy feeders -- drop AP courses from their curriculum, The College Board is just trying to stay relevant and justify its existence and keep revenue streams.

They've been adding more non-college level course to their AP curriculum, which is odd since they whole point of Advanced Placement originally was to offer courses supposedly equal to 1/2 or maybe 1 year college level 100 courses typically.

I'm a teacher with 20 years in industry prior, and taught AP CS A (the Java based course). Few years ago they added, AP CS Principles, it's is a joke, you can literally teach the course in Scratch, yes, drag and drop block coding, enough said. The curriculum is level the of what my schools taught for MS.

Both the schools I've taught at dropped APs in favor of their own Honors courses. It allows more flexibility, and including more relevant material. AP CS A for example doesn't include any basic I/O, kind of important . While I'd say maybe about 3/4 of the content is good, there's definitely stuff they could drop in favor of more used/useful concepts. They also overemphasize certain things imo.

I think the College Board has 'diluted their brand' for a while, and now more and more schools are not giving credit, or only giving credit for a 5. Or, they might give you general grad requirement credits, but not departmental credit, meaning AP CS A might give you so a few units, but schools won't let you skip out of intro/100 level.

Comment Expand enrollment (Score 2) 75

While their cost is certainly an issue, one of the biggest problems in higher ed (esp among so-called elite schools) if the stagnant enrollment size. The purpose of higher ed SHOULD be to educate as many eligible people as possible (notice I said eligible I don't mean let in people not meeting the standards), but schools like Harvard LOVE their low acceptance rate and 'elite' status, so they won't do it.

The US population has grown a lot since the 80s, but universities and college haven't kept up. Harvard has a massive fucking endowment, they could expand their offerings and enrollment if they chose to invest. They enroll a measley 2000 freshmen a year, how about adding 100 every year?

Comment Re:To learn, wouldnâ(TM)t an intelligence nee (Score 2) 74

"That would be like a scholar only reading things out of copyright"

If that scholar uses that work for their own research or paper, they have to credit or cite it -- HUGE difference than what's happening with LLM training, it's not in any way comparable.

AI companies are making serious money using prior works to build their models, with no compensation or even credit/acknowledgement to those who actually generated the content or data.

Not sure what's so hard to understand about that.

Submission + - Elon Musk claims of SSN fraud shows his ignorance of data (usatoday.com)

UnknowingFool writes: Elon Musk, the self-proclaimed top Path of Exile player, has tweeted his claims of fraud with the Social Security Administration records. Among his claims "cursory examination of Social Security showed people in there that are about 150 years old" and "just learned that the social security database is not de-duplicated, meaning you can have the same SSN many times over". His first claim is regarding the fact that there are 18.9M individuals in the database who were born before 1920 but not marked as dead. These are "vampires" according to Musk who are receiving benefits. The actual explanation is that the SSA has never received proof of death to flag these individual as dead. Especially who died before the digital age, these individuals' death records may not exist. Being marked as alive in the database; however, does not mean that these individuals are receiving benefits.

An audit in 2015 found that exactly 266 individuals over the age of 112 were receiving benefits. Of those 253 were found to be not actually over 112 with only 13 individuals recorded with the correct age. Social Security benefits however terminate at age 115.

As for his second claim of duplicate SSNs, without further context, it is difficult to assert that duplicate SSNs in a database is even a problem. For some types of data like contribution and payment records, duplicate SSNs is normal as one should expect multiple records can exist for one unique SSN.

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