

Written with a lot of “help” from Claude Sonnet 4 LLM
Thanks, but no thanks.
I’m all for showing and discussing personal projects, but I don’t see what meaningful discussion we could have over something taken out of a black box.
Written with a lot of “help” from Claude Sonnet 4 LLM
Thanks, but no thanks.
I’m all for showing and discussing personal projects, but I don’t see what meaningful discussion we could have over something taken out of a black box.
To clarify, this would only have been triggered if you asked Gemini to parse your calendar events:
Once the victim interacts with Gemini, like asking “What are my calendar events today,” Gemini pulls the list of events from Calendar, including the malicious event title the attacker embedded.
Is asking the bot to read your calendar events and “summarize” them really an improvement over just looking at the calendar yourself?
An article brought to you by the leading authority on cutting-edge computer science research: BBC.
What if AI didn’t just provide sources as afterthoughts, but made them central to every response, both what they say and how they differ: “A 2024 MIT study funded by the National Science Foundation…” or “How a Wall Street economist, a labor union researcher, and a Fed official each interpret the numbers…”. Even this basic sourcing adds essential context.
Yes, this would be an improvement. Gemini Pro does this in Deep Research reports, and I appreciate it. But since you can’t be certain that what follows are actual findings of the study or source referenced, the value of the citation is still relatively low. You would still manually have to look up the sources to confirm the information. And this paragraph a bit further up shows why that is a problem:
But for me, the real concern isn’t whether AI skews left or right, it’s seeing my teenagers use AI for everything from homework to news without ever questioning where the information comes from.
This is also the biggest concern for me, if not only centred on teenagers. Yes, showing sources is good. But if people rarely check them, this alone isn’t enough to improve the quality of the information people obtain and retain from LLMs.
I realised that about a minute after I posted, so I deleted my commented right away :)
deleted by creator
I use GroundNews. Their biggest value to me is that I can see the headlines for the same coverage from different sources before I read the text. A lot of times this alone is enough to tell me if there is actual content there or just speculation/alarmism. If I do decide to read the content, it’s a very easy way to get a few different perspectives on the same matter, and over time I start to recognise patterns in the reporting styles even when I’m not reading through GroundNews.
Another useful feature is that you can past an article link or headline and it will show you alternative sources for the same coverage. This doesn’t always find useful alternatives, but it’s a simple, easy way to do basic fact-checking.
And while most people here might not appreciate it, when they aggregate multiple sources, they also have an LLM-written summary of the content of the articles. The (somewhat ironic) thing about these summaries is that often they’re the least biased, most factual interpretation of the news compared to all the sources covering it. This is because the summaries are generated from all the content, so when the LLM finds weak or contrasting information, it won’t report it as a fact; when most of the sources agree, then it will summarise the conclusion. This is an excellent use for LLM in my opinion, but you can use GroundNews perfectly fine without it.
the guardian, a respectable centre-left news organisation
I don’t think The Guardian hasn’t been centre for at least 5 years now. It used to be a respectable news origanisation, yes, but today the vast majority of their articles are opinions posts.
Thanks for looking into it!
If you’re doing upgrades this weekend, do you think you could do Alexandrite as well? I’ve noticed that that’s also a few releases behind.
Could you give some examples of things that worked for you on Windows but couldn’t port over to Linux? I’m interested if they’re related more to games or just using Linux in general.
You should be happy. Mine does a different thing every time, no matter the setting…
Picocrypt is a very small (hence Pico), very simple, yet very secure encryption tool that you can use to protect your files. It’s designed to be the go-to tool for file encryption, with a focus on security, simplicity, and reliability.
Thanks! I think that’s the closest to what I was looking for, and it links to a couple more in the sidebar.
There are plenty of us technical folks here who have relevant experience and are keen on chatting, but lemmy is definitely generally pretty anti-ai.
I find this, too. Sometimes all it takes is for someone to start a thread and then a lot of good comments will be contributed!
How does GLM 4.5 (Air or regular) compare to more popular models? I picked its answer once on LMArena, but that’s all my encounters with it.
I would say it’s slightly more than this: The vast majority of Lemmy is comprised of only a few things—politics, tech, memes—and it’s hard to find discussions or opinions about almost everything else. The main value of reddit to me is (was?) that you could find a lot of input from people involved in a wide variety of fields, from niche hobbies to more generic areas of interest like history, philosophy, or medicine.
I’ve actually found that there are people on Lemmy with similar levels of expertise, and they’re willing to share it just as well, but they have fewer opportunities to do so, because very few threads get posted outside the 3 main topics. Several times I’ve come across useful and interesting insight, but it was in the comments of posts only vaguely related, so it would have been difficult to find intentionally if I hadn’t run into it.
So, perhaps, this is what could improve Lemmy: starting more discussions about different topics. Perhaps this will attract more people to read them, which might attract more people to post.
That’s a shame. Has the developer stated this, or is it just based on the lack of activity?
There seems to be a fork planning to continue the work. It was updated only a few hours ago.
Thanks a lot! This might just be enough to get me to actually try it!
Hi! I’m interested in trying Nushell at some point, although I keep putting it off…
Would you share your experience on a couple of items?
grep
or awk
?
Historically, Firefox has had fewer security measures than Chrome. For example, full tab isolation was only implemented recently in Firefox, many years after Chrome. MV3-only extentions in Chrome also reduce the attack surface from that perspective.
The counterpoint to this is that there are much fewer users of Firefox, so it less attractive to try to exploit. Finding a vulnerability in Chrome is much more lucrative, since it has the potential to reach more targets.