From Pine View Farm

Geek Stuff category archive

Artificial? Yes. Intelligent? Not So Much. 0

Capable of perjury? You can swear on it.

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Geeking Out 0

Mageia v. 9 with the Plasma desktop. The wallpaper is from my collection.

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Artificial? Yes. Intelligent? Not So Much. 0

Qualified to provide medical care? You must be hallucinating, because they most certainly are.

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Artificial? Yes. Intelligent? Not So Much. 0

The dialog (at the 31-minute mark): Masterminds, as you call them, don’t go around with illuminated foreheads.

The closed caption: Masterminds, as you call them, don’t go around with illuminated for-ets.

The intelligence: Artificial. The stupid: Real. The question: What the heck is a “for-et”?

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Artificial? Yes. Intelligent? Not So Much. 0

Unbiased? Look under its hood and decide for yourself.

Jesus, Mary, and Joseph.

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Geeking Out 0

Debian v. 12 “Bookworm” with the Plasma desktop on a Thinkpenguin laptop. The wallpaper is from my collection.

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The Disinformation Superhighway 0

Gabby:  Let's go to the library.  Michael:  Why?  Any information I could ever want or need is on the internet.  So what's the different between the internet and a library.  Gabby:  In a library, the

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Artificial? Yes. Intelligent? Not So Much. 0

Trustworthy? I got a bridge in Brooklyn you can buy.

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The Enemy Below 0

On the roof, persons frolic in the social media fun park.  Underneath, social media companies undermine democracy, fuel polarization and disinformation, and mine user data, all for profit.

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One more time, “social” media isn’t.

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The Crypto Con 0

Froma Harrop explains how it works. A snippet:

Bitcoin’s price is fueled by the Greater Fool Theory — that the fool who buys it needs only find a bigger fool to pay more for it than he did. That’s how Beanie Baby mania worked.

Follow the link for details.

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Artificial? Yes. Intelligent? Not So Much. 0

Without precedent? Just ask these lawyers.

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The Neglected Neighborhood on the Back Streets of the Disinformation Superhighway 0

Picture of a street with a sign bearing a glowering Donald Trump and reading

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DOGE Ball 0

Security maven Bruce Schneier looks at how Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency (which, incidentally, is not a government department in any legitimate sense of the term) has compromised federal computer systems and concludes that it can legitimately be considered a cyberattack on “the sinews of government.”

Here is a little bit from his article:

But the most alarming aspect isn’t just the access being granted. It’s the systematic dismantling of security measures that would detect and prevent misuse—including standard incident response protocols, auditing, and change-tracking mechanisms—by removing the career officials in charge of those security measures and replacing them with inexperienced operators.

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Artificial? Yes. Intelligent? Not So Much. 0

Larcenous? You be the judge.

Caption:  Algorithm & Blues.  Image:  Robot holding a guitar and saying,

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Artificial? Yes. Intelligent? Not So Much. 0

As trustworthy as that phone call telling you that you owe money to Walmart when you haven’t set foot in a Walmart in a decade?* You should be so lucky.

_______________

*Based on a real life experience.

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Artificial? Yes. Intelligent? Not So Much. 0

Seductively manipulative? Darn tootin.

That’s why Bruce Schneier favors truth in packaging:

A person can be a friend. An AI cannot be a friend, despite how people might treat it or react to it. AI is at best a tool, and at worst a means of manipulation. Humans need to know whether we’re talking with a living, breathing person or a robot with an agenda set by the person who controls it. That’s why robots should sound like robots.

Follow the link for his reasoning.

(Slightly edited for more snark 2025-02-05 14:17 EST.)

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“Just the Fakes, Ma’am” 0

Security maven Bruce Schneier takes a look at why fact-checking fake memes on “social” media seems futile. A nugget:

People share as a form of social signaling. I send you a meme/article/clipping/photo to show that we are on the same team. Whether it is true, or misinformation, or actual propaganda, is of secondary importance. Sometimes it’s completely irrelevant. This is why fact checking doesn’t work.

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Addicted to Screens 0

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Artificial? Yes. Intelligent? Not So Much. 0

Up in your business? Darn tootin’.

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Artificial? Yes. Intelligent? Not So Much. 0

The dialog, spoken by a policeman: No fixed address.

The closed caption: I’ll fix the dress.

The dialog (in the same episode): Nottingham Shire?

The closed caption: Knotting, I’m sure.

The intelligence: Artificial.

The stupid: Real.

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