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10 years too late.

Of course, by materializing her memories, they are re-establishing or strengthening the neural pathways that would otherwise wither away with time. It's not necessarily grief-dependent memories when she "revisits" her loved ones but over time, the illusion becomes a weird trap that she would grow more aware of, creating an uncanny valley-like situation.

So not necessarily a "hell" but more like unneeded and distracting kitsch cluttering the shelves; turning your memories into cheap trinkets.


The pendulum swings and she no longer wants to revisit and so she see the doctor again to have the implants altered once more.

Or.

She is forever haunted and trapped by her revisits that she loses sense of reality.


Windows 11 is great once your strip out everything like their app store and Copilot and create an offline account (Windows Pro required).

So Claude will reject 9 out of 10 prompts I give it and lecture me about safety, but somehow it was used for something genuinely malicious?

Someone make this make sense.


LLMs are rather easy to convince. There’s no formal logic embedded in them that provably restricts outputs.

The less believable part for me is that people persist long enough and invest enough resources at prompting to do something with an automated agent that doesn’t have potential for massively backfire.

Secondly, they claimed to use Anthropic own infrastructure which is silly. There’s no doubt some capacity in China to do this. I also would expect incident response, threat detection teams, and other experts to be reporting this to Anthropic if Anthropic doesn’t detect it themselves first.

It sure makes good marketing to go out and claim such a thing though. This is exactly the kind of FOMO panic inducing headline that is driving the financing of whole LLM revolution.


there are llms which are modified to not reject anything at all, afaik this is possible with all llms. no need to convince.

(granted you have to have direct access to the llm, unlike claude where you just have the frontend, but the point stands. no need to convince whatsoever.)


I've never had a prompt rejected by Claude. What kind of prompts are you sending where "9 out of 10" get rejected?

Basic system administration tasks, creating scripts for automating log scanning, service configuration, etc. often it involves PII or payment.

If you ask it to help you write a bot/cheat for a video game it will usually refuse due to breaking the games terms of service, etc.

Stop talking dirty with Claude.

I've rarely had Claude reject a prompt of mine. What are you prompting for to get a 90% refusal rate?

How do you know it's safe?

It's C++ programs in a Userscript format, which are compiled with a bundled instance of clang. Windhawk shows diffs of version changes, and most programs aren't much longer than a couple dozen lines, so pretty easy to visually verify

I bet its mirrors of their own honeypot websites they submitted themself to remove records of websites they rather have memory-holed.

Rand Paul huh


Trillion dollar companies run their own NTP servers


Not sure why this comment is being downvoted. The trillion dollar companies not only run their own NTP servers but provide free public access to their pools

https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/whats-new/2022/11/amazon-ti...

https://developers.google.com/time/


Google is having a hard time conforming to their own javascript standards.


As far as I'm concerned, the iPad is just a web browser with some messaging features. There is no App Store.


iSH and a-shell offer some (emulated, non-JIT) Linux CLI functionality on iPad, which is quite functional for compiled apps, e.g. taskwarrior.


Yes, I've played around with a-shell but I consider it more of a toy than a tool. It's honestly kind of weird that Apple allows it.


Supposedly JIT is possible [1] for sideloaded apps, including UTM (QEMU). Apple does have the power to re-enable the hypervisor API in iOS at any time, perhaps after Google unifies Android+ChromeOS, including Debian Linux "developer" terminal VM. At least these emulation and JIT hacks let developers explore use cases for non-appstore software.

[1] https://onejailbreak.com/blog/stikdebug-ios/


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