Readit News logoReadit News
anywhichway commented on 4chan will refuse to pay daily online safety fines, lawyer tells BBC   bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c... · Posted by u/donpott
blibble · 4 days ago
> This is why the US dropped tea into Boston to have it's own Freedom.

the 3% tariff on Chinese tea was seen as oppressive

don't look at what has been imposed this year (without congressional approval)

anywhichway · 4 days ago
That's absurd. That doesn't pass the sniff test at all for being remotely true that people would react like that to only a 3 percent tax.

I looked it up, and it was a 3 pence tax per pound. When tea was selling for 2 to 3 pence per pound. So yeah, a 100-150% tax combined with the fact that the East India Company was allowed to sell without paying the tax. That is very unjust and threatens their business a lot more than the tax alone.

anywhichway commented on IQ tests results for AI   trackingai.org/home... · Posted by u/stared
gpt5 · 9 days ago
The way human IQ testing developed is that researchers noticed people who excel in one cognitive task tend to do well in others - the “positive manifold.”

They then hypothesized a general factor, “g,” to explain this pattern. Early tests (e.g., Binet–Simon; later Stanford–Binet and Wechsler) sampled a wide range of tasks, and researchers used correlations and factor analysis to extract the common component, then norm it around 100 with a SD of 15 and call it IQ.

IQ tend to meaningfully predicts performance across some domains especially education and work, and shows high test–retest stability from late adolescence through adulthood. It is also tend to be consistent between high quality tests, despite a wide variety of testing methods.

It looks like this site just uses human rated public IQ tests. But it would have been more interesting if an IQ test was developed specifically for AI. I.e. a test that would aim to Factor out the strength of a model general cognitive ability across a wide variety of tasks. It is probably doable by doing principal component analysis on a large set of benchmarks available today.

anywhichway · 7 days ago
One potential issue with that approach is the factors wouldn't stay very constant across generations of AI models.

While a lot of people have used various methods to try to gauge the strength of various AI models, one of my favorites is this time horizon analysis [1] which took coding tasks of various lengths and looked at how long it takes to humans to complete those tasks and compared that to chance that the AI would successfully complete the task. Then they looked at various threshholds to see how long of tasks an AI could generally complete with a certain percent threshold. They found the length of a task that AI is able to complete with a various threshholds is doubling about every 7 months.

The reason I found this to be an interesting approach is both because AI seems to struggling with coding tasks as the problem grows in complexity and also because being able to give it more complex tasks is an important metric both for coding tasks or more generally just asking AIs to act as independent agents. In my experience increasing the complexity of a problem has a much larger performance falloff for AI than in humans where the task would just take longer, so this approach makes a lot of intuitive sense to me.

[1] - https://theaidigest.org/time-horizons

anywhichway commented on Hyundai wants loniq 5 customers to pay for cybersecurity patch in baffling move   neowin.net/news/hyundai-w... · Posted by u/duxup
themafia · 9 days ago
> I know the locks on my car are easily picked

They aren't actually. Which is why theives just smash your windows. In either case the alarm is going to go off so there's no advantage to them learning a complex attack on your lock cylinder when a piece of concrete will do.

Further there often were additional ignition interlock mechanisms that required the correct key code or a key with the correct additional hardware to be present for the starter cylinder to actually engage your starter.

> didn't know Hyundai owners were so entitled.

It's called a defect. It should be a recall. We have laws that cover this. They're pretty explicit. I didn't know Hyundai CORPORATION was so entitled as to think they were not subject to them.

anywhichway · 9 days ago
I agree Hyundai should fix this for free (would make up a small portion of the bad PR for having this issue in the first place), but don't forced recalls usually only apply to defects that cause safety issues?

I'm not sure this would fit the definition of a product safety defect.

anywhichway commented on Hyundai wants loniq 5 customers to pay for cybersecurity patch in baffling move   neowin.net/news/hyundai-w... · Posted by u/duxup
anywhichway · 9 days ago
I think your take makes more sense in a world where you actually own the car fully and have the freedom to do what you want with it. Even if someone was able to write this patch themselves without the source code, distributing it would require owners to root their devices, which isn't legal in all jurisdictions.

You don't expect Microsoft or Adobe to issue fixes any time someone finds a remote exploit that let's attackers gain control of you system though security issue in their software? I 100% expect this of my software vendors even for this purchase in the past. The expectations for software and hardware are certainly very different, but even for hardware we have laws that force companies to fix their hardware in some situations.

anywhichway commented on GPT-5 leaked system prompt?   gist.github.com/maoxiaoke... · Posted by u/maoxiaoke
ozgung · 18 days ago
I asked GPT5 directly about fake system prompts.

> Yes — that’s not only possible, it’s a known defensive deception technique in LLM security, sometimes called prompt canarying or decoy system prompts.

…and it goes into details and even offers helping me to implement such a system. It says it’s a challenge in red-teaming to design real looking fake system prompts.

I’d prefer “Open”AI and others to be open and transparent though. These systems become fully closed right now and we know nothing about what they really do behind the hidden doors.

anywhichway · 18 days ago
> sometimes called prompt canarying or decoy system prompts.

Both "prompt canarying" and "decoy system prompts" give 0 hits on google. Those aren't real things.

anywhichway commented on GPT-5 leaked system prompt?   gist.github.com/maoxiaoke... · Posted by u/maoxiaoke
ozgung · 18 days ago
I asked GPT5 directly about fake system prompts.

> Yes — that’s not only possible, it’s a known defensive deception technique in LLM security, sometimes called prompt canarying or decoy system prompts.

…and it goes into details and even offers helping me to implement such a system. It says it’s a challenge in red-teaming to design real looking fake system prompts.

I’d prefer “Open”AI and others to be open and transparent though. These systems become fully closed right now and we know nothing about what they really do behind the hidden doors.

anywhichway · 18 days ago
Getting GTP5 to lie effectively about it's system prompts while at the same time bragging during the release about how GPT5 is the least deceptive model to date seems like contradictory directions to try to push GTP5.
anywhichway commented on The Bluesky Dictionary   avibagla.com/blueskydicti... · Posted by u/gaws
anywhichway · 19 days ago
I noticed one of the cited bluesky posts was all in French, so one might argue that technically it didn't find the English word "mouch", but rather a different French word that happens to be spelled the same. But trying to sort that out seems unrealistically challenging. "Mouch" is only in the dictionary as an alternative spelling to mooch, so probably a pretty rare word to see in English.
anywhichway commented on If nothing is curated, how do we find things   tadaima.bearblog.dev/if-n... · Posted by u/nivethan
anywhichway · 3 months ago
> You then have to hunt around for the info

Have you considered that that might be the goal of releasing trickles of information about the film prior to its official release? It makes collected information feel more exclusive to super fans and encourages fans to interact with each other on social media providing fuel for Bjork focused communities. If collecting this information feels exhausting instead of exciting to you... why are you trying so hard to collect it? Just wait for the actual release.

> We need critics who devote their lives to browsing through the pile and telling us what is worth our time and what isn't.

I don't understand how you expect a critic to tell you whether its worth your time based on a collection of pre-release rumors and interviews. For deciding if its worth my time, I mainly want to hear from critics who have seen the upcoming media and I want to hear their opinion on what they saw. Why would I care to hear Ebert and Roeper's opinion on what the actors said in their press release tour? Unless it was something especially newsworthy and they wouldn't need to go digging for that. I just don't see how a critic's review would be enhanced by "devoting their lives to browsing through the piles".

anywhichway commented on Big landlords are colluding to raise rents, D.C. lawsuit alleges   axios.com/2023/11/02/dc-h... · Posted by u/janandonly
alephnerd · 2 years ago
This is smart that there is an attempt in the DC Superior Court as well.

There are a couple other lawsuits against Realpage with a similar premise as we speak at the United States District Court for the District of Columbia, United States District Court for the Middle District of Tennessee, and the United States District Court for the Southern District of California.

I think the federal district lawsuits were all merged and moved to United States District Court for the Middle District of Tennessee a couple days ago, so a number of state level litigations will be a good backup.

Essentially, it looks like there is a coordinated attempt to define algorithmic antitrust at the Supreme Court level. If the DC Superior Court and the Federal Court have a conflicting interpretation, this needs to be reconciled and seems like the type of case that would end up in the Supreme Court.

This has massive implications for AdTech, FinTech, and multiple other industries, probably way more impactful than the Google FTC suit.

Edit: My Interpretation from my comment below

If a subset of companies use the exact same algorithm for price discovery, is there a form of price-fixing? This is the key question being argued.

If the courts rule against Realpage, then any form of algorithmic price discovery en-masse could be found to be anti-competitive.

This might mean you can't use TheTradeDesk and Google Adsense en-masse for example. Basically, as of today, a lot of price discovery is now automated by a majority of companies using a handful of vendors for this.

Lawyers of HN (looking at your raynier) please hold me accountable for my explanation.

anywhichway · 2 years ago
One potentially critical line from the article:

> Failure to impose the RealPage rents could lead to landlords being expelled from the organization, according to the suit.

Makes this arguably much more over the line than just a bunch of landlords that happen to use the same pricing algorithm. Landlords being pressured to not use the algorithm however they want, say setting their price $100/month below the algorithm, under threat of losing access to the algorithm may be what ultimately loses this trial for them. If that is the case, we may not get to a ruling that resolves the legality of the more general practice of many people using the same pricing algorithm.

anywhichway commented on How will states pay for roads when gas taxes evaporate?   wsj.com/politics/policy/h... · Posted by u/lxm
rickydroll · 2 years ago
I suggest road tax measured by miles and vehicle mass. it would be a good incentive for dropping vehicle mass.
anywhichway · 2 years ago
Miles seems like it might not be worth the added cost of administration. Also note that road damage as a function of weight goes up by roughly a power of 4. Doubling a vehicle's axel load causes 16x the road stress, though that may be in line with what you were suggesting and may even add weight to your point.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fourth_power_law

u/anywhichway

KarmaCake day99February 21, 2013View Original