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mrcwinn · 2 days ago
I clicked through this link and the writing reminds me of the early days of GPT-3.5. What is this?
trilogic · 2 days ago
Hi, the author here. I can confirm that writing is not my best skill, plenty to criticize on it. All the rest (like the content and facts) should matter though, that was the point of the article.
ghostly_s · 2 days ago
The "content" is indecipherable due to your awful writing. no idea what point you're trying to make, it seems to repeatedly contradict itself
stronglikedan · 2 days ago
If you wrote it, then there's no shame in asking ChatGPT to gussy it up a bit for your target audience.
bogwog · 2 days ago
There's a lot of wtf here. Are you an AI agent?

* This article is barely-readable AI slop. If writing is not your best skill (and that's putting it mildly), why are you publishing a blog like this?

* You have an ad for an AI app on every page of your website. Couldn't you use that to fix your writing?

* Clicking 'Explore' on the top of the page opens a pop-under to office.com for some reason? I also clicked the text of one of your articles, and it sent me to kaspersky.com, probably another ad.

I'm not normally judgemental to people with poor writing skills, but that doesn't seem to be what's happening here. This feels malicious.

Aaronstotle · 2 days ago
I don't necessarily blame people for using AI to help them write or spruce something up, however I find the tone particularly off-putting.

These excerpts show off that "AI"-tone I'm sure most people see.

>The San Bernardino case is gone from headlines. >But the backdoor? It’s in your phone. >It’s in Google’s servers. >It’s in Meta’s messages. >It’s in the legal system that always wins. >Apple’s 2016 stand wasn’t forgotten. >It was buried under the next headline. >But it’s still true.

puchatek · 2 days ago
I noticed the somewhat confused flow of the post as well. Reads a bit like a stream of consciousness. It could just be that the author didn't proofread what they wrote down over the course of the night. But I think your AI suspicion is a more likely explanation given the times we're in.
bsimpson · 2 days ago
I've never used a browser reading mode until just now.

As I understand, they're meant to hide all the cruft so you can see the content.

I did it for some paragraph breaks, because that site is formatted as legibly as one big run-on sentence.

schmookeeg · 2 days ago
FTR I had no problems reading this. I think the writing style conveyed a gritted-teeth tension and added to the seriousness of the subject for me.
godelski · 2 days ago
I switched from Android to iPhone for this reason (months ago). Not because Apple doesn't have faults (boy does it have a lot it then) and not because GrapheneOS isn't actually a better alternative. I switched because I wanted to send a market signal.

This is what I hate about all this. We have to play these stupid games because everyone is using data in stupid ways. Everything has become incredibly myopic. Yes, I could buy a Google phone and root it but Google takes their sale and uses that to justify that their actions don't change things. But in the world we are in there's really just two choices: Apple or Google.

Which is why I find the fighting comments here so dumb. Fight me, go ahead. But if you are going to just know I hate them both. Think of it like a presidential election if you will. I'm at "any functioning adult" at this point. Yes, that means they're nonexisting.

What happened to the old days? When programmers were the counterculture. When we believed in unfettered freedom. When we believed in encryption by default. When did that dream die? We've never had more of a chance of this dream succeeding due to technological advancements yet we've never been so far because of will. Was it the money? Was it that we got too hung up in tribalism? Or was it that we are petty as fuck and let perfection destroy good enough for small open source companies but don't hold these megacorps to the same standards? Is it the complexity of the system and how there's no actually good choice? Is it just that we're too dumb? Maybe we just like the cyberpunk style so much we just wanted to make it a reality ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

bitpush · 2 days ago
Apple being a better choice is just marketing. They bend over backwards the moment something is at stake. They made a big deal with FBI, because it was an easy decision. When it is a tough decision, Apple is the first to kiss the ring.

See Apple in China. They need China for manufactoring and for the market, and no qualms about "privacy is human right" there. They say nothing about it there.

Atleast Google had the balls to pack up and leave China. I'll respect Apple the day when they sacrifice profits for their principles. It is all empty talk otherwise.

godelski · 2 days ago

  > Apple being a better choice is just marketing.
Did you even read my entire comment or just the first line? FFS this is the entire fucking problem.

bigyabai · 2 days ago
> Apple’s 2016 stand wasn’t forgotten.

> It was buried under the next headline.

> But it’s still true.

Yeah right. Just in 2017 they started backdooring Chinese iCloud servers for the CCP: https://www.nytimes.com/2017/07/12/business/apple-china-data...

fundad · 2 days ago
I was thinking the same thing. What if making gold trophies isn't enough and DOJ wants a backdoor? The appearance of values can't be that important anymore because we are witnessing decisions by the company and CEO in his personal capacity.
throwaway290 · 2 days ago
Since 2022 they rolled out icloud end to end encryption meaning whoever runs the data center in china doesn't get to snoop if you switch it on.
bigyabai · 2 days ago
Chinese iCloud servers do not have HSMs, which means that the encryption keys are all stored server-side, domestically, in plaintext.

Enabling data protection will not save you if, like in China, your government demands backdoored servers.

andy_ng · 2 days ago
Actually many people criticizw Apple's AI power, but they forget that the reason Siri is stupid because Apple want to (or at least they explicitly show) protect your privacy.

Iphone AI core is basically Edge AI, which means they deploy it inside the Iphone, not relying on a remote cloud. This can help protect customer data, but it also means they can not update their AI with new training data, and the Chip is kinda small so the model is not smart.

Just know this fact so ppl won't criticize Apple without knowing the sacrifice to protect their privacy

tshaddox · 2 days ago
Nah, a lot of Siri requests really on Apple servers to fulfill. Supposedly they have recently supported more requests types entirely on-device, but 2 years ago I lived in an apartment with an underground parking garage and I constantly has basic requests like creating timers and reminders fail due to spotty cell service.
throwaway290 · 2 days ago
Which iphone was it? One of the newer ones which are advertised "built for Apple Intelligence"? I'm pretty sure that's their selling point and they even have a separate chip for it, if it still needs to connect then that's pretty stupid.
Someone · 2 days ago
> Iphone AI core is basically Edge AI, which means they deploy it inside the Iphone, not relying on a remote cloud

https://support.apple.com/en-gb/guide/iphone/iphe3f499e0e/io...:

“For more complex requests that require more computational capacity, Apple Intelligence can use Private Cloud Compute, which extends the privacy and security of your Apple products like iPhone into the cloud to unlock even more intelligence. Private Cloud Compute uses larger, server-based models powered by Apple silicon.“

andy_ng · 2 days ago
but it's core is still edge AI, which can not compare to other AI models with larger parameters that can be called via API, right?
andy_ng · a day ago
don't know why this comment is downvoted by so many :)
trilogic · 2 days ago
Apple doesn´t have a good reputation regarding privacy. I have to agree though that they fight for it. It is strange that siri is obsolete, comparing company evaluation, and compared to other tech giants. Also facts show a real battle, harder than other companies. My best thoughts to TIM COOK.
vlovich123 · 2 days ago
Are you evaluating in a vacuum against some ideal company/community efforts or against their commercial competitor Google when you say that they don’t have a reputation for privacy?
throwfaraway4 · 2 days ago
This legit sounds like a bot reply
andy_ng · 2 days ago
yeah men, I am not a fan of Apple too, just don't agree if ppl critize them thoughtlessly