NuclearDolphin

joined 3 years ago
[–] NuclearDolphin@lemmy.ml 19 points 1 month ago (4 children)

The primaries that definitely happened and had a diverse range of positions on Palestine.

[–] NuclearDolphin@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 month ago

please take me to the gay factory

[–] NuclearDolphin@lemmy.ml 5 points 1 month ago (10 children)

Ignoring all your weird patronization of the global south...

If you don’t like America, then get off Lemmy. Because guess what? Lemmy was largely developed by an American. Yes, I know it involved collaboration with developers from other countries, but the primary origin is still American.

No idea if the main developer, comrade dessalines, is American, but they have a Che Guevara profile pic.

Here's a snippet from the US atrocities section of their essays repo:

"If there is a country that has committed unspeakable atrocities in the world, it is the United States of America. They don't care for human beings." - Nelson Mandela

Two of the other original devs are Nutomic and SleeplessOne1917. Nutomic has a Fidel Castro pfp, and SleeplessOne1917 uses the year of the October revolution in their username. Safe to say the devs of Lemmy do not like America. They also admin lemmygrad.ml

Might want to check your assumptions (and western chauvinism)

If you ~~don't~~ like America, then get off Lemmy. Because guess what? Lemmy was largely developed by ~~an American~~ based communist revolutionaries. Yes, I know it involved collaboration with developers from ~~other countries~~ the great satan, but the primary origin is still ~~American~~ Marxist-Leninist.

FTFY!

[–] NuclearDolphin@lemmy.ml 1 points 4 months ago (1 children)

"My obscure hardware setup doesn't work out of the box on Linux, an OS where the OEMs have made no effort to make drivers compatible with or support in any way."

"Linux is broken because I have to run a shell command to install a package."

(you don't actually have to, but they think so because that's what the tutorial on page one of Google recommended.)

They need help with the basics, and Linux people, who are more comfortable with the system, recommend running some command because it is the quickest way to get what they want. The noobs then believe this is the only way to do the thing, and then believe Linux isn't "user friendly" because nobody posted a walkthrough of how to do it graphically with up-to-date screenshots that works for all distros on all desktops.

This isn't a Linux problem. It's an education and communication problem.

Most Windows users refuse to do anything to install software besides mashing 'next' after running some random .exe they found on the internet. The same people will defend Windows by saying it's easy to work around one of Microsoft's 900 horrible decisions forced on you by opening regedit and creating like 5 DWORD registry keys in some meaningless path. They will not see the irony here.

Running a terminal command is not required for half the shit they want to do, but they believe so, because they haven't bothered to familiarize themselves with how things work on Linux. They never learn this because they throw their hands up the first time their Windows workflow breaks down.

These people would have a million fewer complaints if beginner distros

  • Included the Dconf app by default.
  • Included a graphical util for editing JSON, YAML, INI, etc. files by default.
  • Included a systemd service manager app by default.
  • Published their packages as downloadable links on their website so that installation can work like running .exe files (security concerns aside)
[–] NuclearDolphin@lemmy.ml 2 points 5 months ago

no the best is UngoogledChromium (at least on desktop)

[–] NuclearDolphin@lemmy.ml 1 points 5 months ago (1 children)

yeah but your average user is gonna install some shit that they won't vet. someone will 100% putting malware there

[–] NuclearDolphin@lemmy.ml 1 points 5 months ago

*letting a corporation decide how you're gonna use your computer

[–] NuclearDolphin@lemmy.ml 23 points 5 months ago (1 children)

Notice these same people don't come out of the woodwork upon the mere utterance of "El Salvador" or "Bukele" like they do with "Venezuela" and "Maduro" even as Trump is deporting legal citizens to CECOT.

The words "dictatorship" and "authoritarianism" are clue words for followers of western publications to turn off their brains. They want to sort countries, parties, and leaders into neat little "good guys" and "bad guys" bins. These words allow them to do that with minimal effort, circumventing the need to understand the societies involved. Questioning that framing takes research effort and "sympathizing with authoritarians" so they never do it.

[–] NuclearDolphin@lemmy.ml 5 points 6 months ago

Naked in my neighbor's Suburban

[–] NuclearDolphin@lemmy.ml 3 points 6 months ago

Literally one of the few problems that "AI" is actually really useful for solving.

Turns out that when their little marketing gimmick comes at odds with implanting a rootkit on your machine, they choose the latter. The whole hype around "AI" is excitement about subverting your agency in favor of their own. Kernel level spyware directly injects their own agency without the expense of training and running cheat detection models.

All the useful applications that can really benefit people have been neglected in favor of LLMs that can more easily serve as data mining SaaS platforms.

[–] NuclearDolphin@lemmy.ml 4 points 6 months ago

If they are running ramdom commands from the internet in a privileged terminal, then this will quickly stop them doing that.

does this

"omg Linux is not user friendly"

[–] NuclearDolphin@lemmy.ml 3 points 6 months ago (1 children)

They just buy the data en masse from data brokers. All of the process is civil rights theater.

 

Greetings Hexbears!

I just pounded out this long ass comment in a thread inquiring about why leftists tend to oppose GenAI and LLMs, when I realized the post was already over a week old and no one will probably read it. Thought it was insightful enough to reshare and, given your reputation, figured people here would find it interesting to read.

I recently finished reading Capital, and many of these thoughts jumped out at me during my reading. Interested in hearing what you think or if you have any critiques or addendums.

Anyways, here's the text:

I haven’t seen any comments here that adequately address the core of the issue from a leftist perspective, so I will indulge.

LLMs are fundamentally a tool to empower capital and stack the deck against workers. This is a structural problem, and as such, is one that community efforts like FOSS are ill-equipped to solve.

Given that training LLMs from scratch requires massive computational power, you must control some means of production. i.e. You must own a server farm to scrape publicly accessible data or collect data from hosting user services. Then you must also own a server farm equipped with large arrays of GPUs or TPUs to carry out the training and most types of inference.

So the proletariat cannot simply wield these tools for their own purposes, they must use the products that capital allows to be made available (i.e. proprietary services or pre-trained “open source” models)

Then comes the fact that the core market for these “AI” products is not end users; it is capitalists. Capitalists who hope their investments will massively pay off by cutting labor costs on the most expensive portion of the proletariat: engineers, creatives, and analysts.

Even if “AI” can never truly replace most of these workers, it can convince capitalists and their manager servants to lay off workers, and it can convince workers that their position is more precarious due to pressure from the threat of replacement, discouraging workers for fighting for increased pay and benefits and better working conditions.

As is the case with all private private property, profits made by “AI” and LLM models will never reach the workers that built those models, nor the users who provided the training data. It will be repackaged as a product owned by capital and resold to the workers, either through subscription fees, token pricing, or through forfeiture of private data.

Make no mistake, once the models are sufficiently advanced, tools sufficiently embedded into workflows, and the market sufficiently saturated, the rug will be pulled, and “enshittification” will begin. Forcing workers to pay exorbitant prices for these tools in a market where experience and skills are highly commoditized and increasingly difficult to acquire.

The cherry on top is that “AI” is the ultimate capital. The promise of “AI” is that capitalists will be able to use the stolen surplus value from workers to eliminate the need for variable capital (i.e. workers) entirely. The end goal is to convert the whole of the proletariat into maximally unskilled labor, i.e. a commodity, so they can be maximally exploited, with the only recourse being a product they control the distribution of. AI was never going to be our savior, as it is built with the intent of being our enslaver.

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