the fink and the furher
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neuracnu@lemmy.blahaj.zoneto Firefox@lemmy.ml•Mozilla Foundation lays off 30% staff, drops advocacy divisionEnglish251·8 months agoCurious.
I keep a close eye on the job listings posted to Mozilla’s job board. They don’t post new job openings very often, so I always want to be tuned in when new listing pop up. All of a sudden, a lot of new job openings have appeared for a company that just laid off 36 people…
Oct 30 2024:
Oct 31 2024:
Nov 1 2024:
- Staff Machine Learning Engineer, Gen AI
- Senior Software Engineer, Services
- Staff Test Engineer
- Senior Director of Product, Firefox Growth
- Senior Product Manager, Sync Ecosystem
- Staff Software Engineer, OS Integrations
- Senior Data Engineer
- Client Analytics Manager
- Senior Machine Learning Engineer, øDin GenAI Bug Bounty
- Staff Desktop Systems Specialist
- Staff Fullstack Engineer, Anonym
- Senior Staff Software Engineer, Ads
- Staff Machine Learning Engineer, Fakespot
- Staff Mobile Product Manager
Nov 4 2024:
- Senior Staff Fullstack Engineer, Solo
- Senior Software Engineer
- Senior Staff Product Manager, Search
- Principal Product Manager, Generative AI
- Senior Front-End Engineer, Firefox
Nov 5 2024:
neuracnu@lemmy.blahaj.zoneto Privacy@lemmy.ml•Someone Put Facial Recognition Tech onto Meta's Smart Glasses to Instantly Dox StrangersEnglish10·8 months agoI listened to the 404 Media podcast about this yesterday and the author argues that the subject of the article’s ire is intended to be the researchers themselves. Specifically, the bad ethics of testing this integration on non-consenting individuals (even though it was seemingly done with good intent).
Luckily the researchers realized what the fuck they had just made and pivoted the project to being about how to break the integration (ie: opt out of facial recognition systems and freeze your credit score).
Public service: the video this YouTube account uploaded before this one is titled “The Tiananmen Square ‘Massacre’ Never Happened”.
Remember folks, check your sources.
neuracnu@lemmy.blahaj.zoneto Privacy@lemmy.ml•Omnipresent AI cameras will ensure good behavior, says Larry EllisonEnglish23·9 months agohttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panopticon
The panopticon is a design of institutional building with an inbuilt system of control, originated by the English philosopher and social theorist Jeremy Bentham in the 18th century. The concept is to allow all prisoners of an institution to be observed by a single corrections officer, without the inmates knowing whether or not they are being watched.
Although it is physically impossible for the single guard to observe all the inmates’ cells at once, the fact that the inmates cannot know when they are being watched motivates them to act as though they are all being watched at all times. They are effectively compelled to self-regulation. The architecture consists of a rotunda with an inspection house at its centre. From the centre, the manager or staff are able to watch the inmates. Bentham conceived the basic plan as being equally applicable to hospitals, schools, sanatoriums, and asylums. He devoted most of his efforts to developing a design for a panopticon prison, so the term now usually refers to that.
neuracnu@lemmy.blahaj.zoneto Anime@lemmy.ml•What is everyone's most-enjoyed show so far this season? [Summer 2024]English2·10 months agoI think it technically counts as Spring, but Dead Dead Demons Dededede Destruction has me enraptured.
But if we’re talking about Summer alone, hands down, Dungeon People.
neuracnu@lemmy.blahaj.zoneto Technology@lemmy.ml•Signal has been blocked by Venezuela and RussiaEnglish222·11 months agoAsking the person you’re debating to look up your own citations is certainly one way to converse. But ok, let’s go for it.
In Aug 2023, Forbes published an article describing the proposal of “unfettered access” you referred to:
https://www.forbes.com/sites/emilybaker-white/2023/08/21/draft-tiktok-cfius-agreement/
In June 2024, the Washington Post reported that the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS) turned down the proposal and includes some broad reporting as to why:
The article isn’t very technical, but it mentions some interesting responsibility angles that the US wouldn’t want to back themselves into:
- throwing open some, but not all, doors to server operations and source code creates a mountain of work for the government to inspect, which would be a workload nightmare
- the US government’s deepest concerns seem to be about what data is going out (usage insights on the virtuous side and clipboard/mic/camera monitoring on the ultra shady side) and data coming in (bespoke content intended to influence US residents of China-aligned goals). Usage insights are relatively benign from national security perspective (especially when you can just mandate that people in important roles aren’t permitted to use it). Shady monitoring should be discoverable through app source code monitoring, which you can put the app platforms (Apple, Google, whoever else) on the hook for if they continue to insist on having walled app gardens (and if you trust them at all). The content shaping is harder to put your finger on though, since it’s super easy to abstract logic as far out as you need to avoid detection. “Here, look at these 50M lines of code that run stateside, and yeah, there are some API calls to stuff outside the sandbox. Is that such a big deal?” Spoiler: it is a big deal.
- the US can’t hold Byte Dance accountable so long as it remains in China. Let’s say the US agreed to all this, spent all the effort to uncover some hidden shady activity that they don’t like (after an untold amount of time has passed). What then? They can’t legally go after Byte Dance’s foreign entity. The US can prosecute the US employees, but it’s totally possible to organize in such a way that leaves those domestic employees free from misdeeds, leaving prosecutors unable to enforce misdeeds fairly. It’d be a mess.
The second article explains this somewhat, but I’m admittedly painting some conjecture on top regarding how a malicious actor could behave. I’ve got no evidence that Byte Dance is actually doing any of that.
But going back to the “influence the public” angle, I’m struggling to see how different TikTok is versus NHK America (Japan’s American broadcasts) or RT (American media from the Russian standpoint) aside from being wildly more successful and popular. But I guess that’s all there is to it.
I’d prefer our leaders also be transparent with us regarding their concerns about TikTok. The reductive “because China!!1!” argument is not compelling on its own.
neuracnu@lemmy.blahaj.zoneto Technology@lemmy.ml•Signal has been blocked by Venezuela and RussiaEnglish174·11 months agoDo you have any citation for that?
neuracnu@lemmy.blahaj.zoneto Technology@lemmy.ml•Signal has been blocked by Venezuela and RussiaEnglish339·11 months agoDoes ByteDance publish TikTok’s transmission protocol to demonstrate transparency?
neuracnu@lemmy.blahaj.zonetoLemmy Support@lemmy.ml•Youtube links pull in odd information, and no thumbnails.English2·11 months agoDo you have any additional info on this Hetzner problem/fix, or perhaps a link to the admin community or discussion thread where they were discussing it?
I’d like to be able to point my instance’s admin there (as we’re seeing the same problem on both lemmy.blahaj.org and beehaw.org).
Thanks!
neuracnu@lemmy.blahaj.zoneto Privacy@lemmy.ml•Wish From All Sides to Move On Gives Freedom to Julian Assange - The New York TimesEnglish17·1 year agoIncluding his sexual assault victims?
neuracnu@lemmy.blahaj.zoneto Anime@lemmy.ml•The Imaginary | Official Trailer | NetflixEnglish8·1 year agoThis trailer is trash compared to the original one used for film’s initial release in Japan: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-nW6LLojcUw
neuracnu@lemmy.blahaj.zoneto Firefox@lemmy.ml•Mozilla Firefox Blocks Add-Ons to Circumvent Russia CensorshipEnglish54·1 year agoI suspect this was a “do it or we’ll categorize Mozilla products as malicious software” situations. But some transparency from Mozilla would be nice.
neuracnu@lemmy.blahaj.zoneto Privacy@lemmy.ml•United Airlines launches personalized ads on seat-back screensEnglish13·1 year agoPost-it notes. One pack is enough for like a third of the plane.
Periodic office hours are tremendously helpful as well.
Block an hour, once or twice a week, for people to come by an ask you (and your team) about literally anything they want. And open it to everyone at your organization. Have your team stop answering one-off questions and tell people to bring it to office hours.
Team leads and tpms should help with logistics, messaging and hand-slapping.
The web version of themoviedb.org has been my go-to for a while now. No app though.
neuracnu@lemmy.blahaj.zoneto Privacy@lemmy.ml•Self-hosting keeps your private data out of AI modelsEnglish3·1 year agoI’m a big Zulip advocate. I was using it globally at my previous employer for a global org and it’s pretty great.
neuracnu@lemmy.blahaj.zonetoMovie News and Discussion@lemmy.ml•'Beetlejuice 2' Trailer: Michael Keaton and Jenna Ortega Star in New Beetlejuice SequelEnglish31·1 year agoQuick reminder; there’s a Lemmy community for a straight-dope feed of tv, movie and game trailers: !trailers@lemmy.blahaj.zone
There’s a GitHub project for that: https://gist.github.com/joostrijneveld/59ab61faa21910c8434c