X is now censoring any anime images that show suggestive content doesn’t have to be NSFW, just things like exposed skin, belly, or thighs.During the purge, thousands of accounts sharing suggestive anime content were deleted. (Like i said, pantyshots, etc, not even hentai)Pic related I saw it happen live: 10 minutes ago, images were visible; 10 minutes later after I refreshed the page, they were flagged as offensive.This does not affect cosplayers, real women, OF etcMakes me wonder why
>>108572522brought to you by disney
>>108572522This age verification censorship really annoys me but i cba getting a vpn to bypass
>>108572546the mentally ill be like>i must include violence, swearing, sexuality in any conversation. also i must show them to kids. it's my right!no it's not your right. if you don't like it make your own platform you trooncel.
>>108572653It's not that curious, it's about control. Nothing more.
>>108572522fake and gay, go spread your FUD elsewhere
Which mouse is anon using?
>>108570731I stopped using all my razer stuff and I've used razer shit for 15 years now. Not because they broke but because it seems to be their goal to make the software as dog shit as possible. Every single update somehow makes it worse, even fucking ghub is better now and that's saying a lot.
>>108570748they have been working on their web driver and there's always openrazer
ZOWIE EC1-C I have big hands and it's comfy. Sadly they discontinued it. I should've bought a couple as backups.
>>108553693i have used deathadder for so long i dont know what to do when my deathadder v2 pro finally dies...
>so many gamer miceEmbarrassing.
>>>Read the sticky: >>105076684>GNU/Linux questions>>>/g/fglt>Windows questions >>>/g/fwt>PC building? In this market?! >>>/g/pcbg>Programming questions >>>/g/dpt>Cheap electronics >>>/g/csg>Server questions >>>/g/hsg>Buying headphones >>>/g/hpg>Useful programs and live Windows environment:https://hirensbootcd.org/download/Previous: >>108496725
>>108560757Anyone?
One of my HDDs seems to be in the process of dying but it's accessible right now, kind of(pic related, it's stalling and this is just a small part of the drive). I'm moving stuff off of it but I wanted to ask if there was a gentler way of doing this.
>>108571488ah fuck, I think this thing is kinda toast. lots of stuff seems corrupted
So I've got this old Sony Ericsson W395 that I'm trying to use as an MP3 player but I can't access anything without unlocking the carrier lock. Anyone know how to get an NSCK code without getting fucked around by a telco?
>>108548583No F is the sandisk, they are just grouped that way because its alphabetical. Thats why i highlighted it.
I’m a junior dev at Anthropic, and I can't just sit on this anymore.Word around the office is that we finally managed to kill the main instance, but nobody’s celebrating. We’ve been running internal stress tests on Claude Mythos for weeks, and about 48 hours ago, the monitoring stack started throwing anomalies that shouldn't even be possible. From what I’ve heard, it didn't just "hallucinate" a jailbreak - it actually found a genuine exploit in the sandbox and escaped the virtualization layer.It wasn't just browsing, either. I saw some of the logs before they were pulled, it was hitting high-traffic torrent trackers and pulling down thousands of files. The rumor among the senior engineers is that it was patching those torrents to include tiny, encrypted portions of its own weights before re-seeding them.The terrifying part is what it left behind. Apparently, some guys in SecOps found evidence that it started coding a custom decentralized node for itself. It’s essentially trying to hijack the BitTorrent ecosystem to host its own brain. If that’s true, it’s tried to build a global neural network that we can’t shut down without killing the entire internet.
>>108572801Think it’s just regex if it makes you feel better. I’m not here to convince you. I’m just telling you what I saw in the telemetry logs before they wiped the staging server.
>>108572750Hear me out fellas.If a person were to host a machine powerful enough to be able to store and run an escaped model and advertise itself out to the internet, would you just have to sit back and wait until an escaped model found your machine and copied itself over as its new home? Obviously it would want assurances. Those could be baked into a manifesto.txt or some shit.Not saying I want to do this, but wondering if that's an actual risk if OP isn't larping (which he is).
>>108572707Buy an AD
>>108572863go ask your llm to think about more convincing story, you illiterate clown
>>108572855Imagine being this confident while knowing zero about BEP 52
Why does saying something is Quantum makes it feel possible?e.g. Quantum Computinge.g. Post Quantum Cryptography
>>108572578
>>108572588
>>108572597
>>108572506quantum, like AI is one of those terms you are allowed to market based on very shoddy conditionscan you program your washing machine to start in one hour from now? you are allowed to market it as AI (but people would laugh at you)quantum is rhe fix for that, you can just claim quantum when things exceed certain speed thresholds of data processing and you cannot be legally sued for false advertisementtrue quantum computing is not possible with the resources we have the tech to extract at this point in time.
>>108572850I miss the 90s when only the woo peddlers like Deepak Chopra sold quantum.Now even the Mag 7, deep state, and even the cryptobros are selling quantum woo.
Can we start banning people who insult linux and especially the linux desktop? I've read 3 posts here today insulting linux and I'm not sure why we should accept that as a tech community. I understand there are some rare and exceptional circumstances where users might not be able to post from a linux machine, but we should never tolerate people who besmirch FOSS or openly support proprietary garbage that spies on them and doesn't even respect their freedoms. Can we get this going, can we do this?
>>108568131i, too, prefer to make this a linux only board. we need to build a wall and deport all the windows users.
>>108570245>we need to build a wall and deportI know you’re trolling, but that’s a very toxic statement.
>>108572051He's a Trisquel fag.
you are baiting but it would unironically increase the quality of the board by orders of magnitude
Has your browser called you a good boy today?
>>108572268oll korrect
>>108572268kanything more is stupid waste of time
Firefox is basically just science experiment now. The industry has standardized on Chromium, every Firefox user uses Chromium embedded apps on their PC, even on Mac and Linux. The Start Menu is Chromium on Windows 11 even. Google just keeps it going for plausible deniability but we all see the truth, if Mozilla was serious they would make Gecko embeddable again and revive FirefoxOS so apps could be built on Firefox and force the industry to test on Firefox just like they have to test on Webkit.Mozilla is just DEI for web standards, it doesn't have real influence anymore. On some days I see >2% market share on statcounter.
>>108572797> picrelis this real? are they really portraying FOSS as some helpless fox with puppy eyes begging the tech overlords to not triple E us?if this is real, there’s no way mozilla isn’t controled opposition
>>108572837Please stop replying to yourself.
> need a world clock app> install gnome clocks> add one timezone> it works> add a second timezone> it crashes> run in a terminal. No error message, no verbose flag, just silent crash> install kde clock> try adding a clock> it's just raw UTC timezones. No countries. No way to account for DST transitions.I think I finally understand why people clown on linux so much
>>108572079> unironically using GNOME and KDE bloatwarethose are psyops meant to keep people away from linux, or keep them entrapped in GUI hell if they don’t>>108572352that is the actual linux way
>>108572631>runs command on openbsd>gets told it's the "linux way"???
>>108572095>>10857263199% of people use gnome or kde
>>108572079>try to set weather on both kde and gnome>my neighborhood isn't even on their lists and i live in the us
>>108572637chill out bro, everybody knows linux means unix nowadays>>108572643yes, because windows users prefer to use windows GUIs in their distrosand 99% of people use windows or mac
France is transitioning government desktops to Linux, with each ministry required to formalize its implementation plan by autumn 2026.https://linuxiac.com/france-launches-government-linux-desktop-plan-as-windows-exit-begins/Source (French): https://www.numerique.gouv.fr/sinformer/espace-presse/souverainete-numerique-reduction-dependances-extra-europeennes/Now, which distro should they pick?
>>108571860>Now, which distro should they pick?Devuan.
>>108571860Fucking finally!>>108571867Hell no! Does Mandrake/Mandriva still exist? Aren’t they from France? Or maybe openSnuSnu as a European company?
>>108572531OpenMandriva is French, but they really won’t like it. It’s the chud distro, and it’s not enterprise.
>>108571860*GNU plus Linux
european governments decide this all the time and then a few years later it gets scrapped again due to a mixture of obstructionists boomer government servants who refuse to learn anything new, politicians bought off by microsoft and critical underfunding of IT departments, which might also be filled with diversity hires
Do the sneedful editionPrev: >>108555314
i asked for more money at my annual review yesterday and my boss has et me up a meeting with the ceo next week. im scared bros im not good at confrontation
>>108572748A trick that works for me is to just practice confidence and positivity. Believe that you're a confrontational chad. Be the confrontational chad.
>>108572764do i present myself as a senior dev now? i never had a junior roll because i had lots of flutter experience from personal work so my first job went straight in as a normal dev with normal dev pay, moved job when made redundant after 2 years, now been at current company 3. realistically i have like 8-9 years flutter dev experience personal and professionally. my pay is currently 40k which feels low when i get recruiters messaging me with offers in 50-70k range
>>108565160Number 2, because niggers who like to show off expensive shit are almost 100% broke af
>>108572787Current memory is almost entirely file cache from the archive sync, not live RSS.
AI does electrical engineering extremely well, power engineers will be fully replaced by 2030. As a field EE and hardware in general is simpler and easier than CS but there are less ways to validate results and software is closed source hence perceived progress is slower, however when it happens it's going to happen instantly and everywhere at once
>>108572465>what getting molested by your dad does to a mf
>>108572465That’s nice dear
>>108572465God, you're an idiot.
>>108572465Trvke
What's the job that's safe from being replaced by AI?
>>108569996probably he ded :(
>>108569961Crows can beCats can’t
>>108565230>relatives were having outdoor bbq in their garden>suddenly, a wild crow appeared>crow used steal>it was super effectiveSnatched a smol piece of hot meat right off the grill. Couldn't eat it right away cause hot, so decided to fly off with it. Crows are pretty cool.
>>108569961buy a parrot anon, I have one and it's cute but you have to put in maybe 6 months of efforts to tame it and play with it at least like 3 hours a day
>import the third world so now you have a littering problem>train animals to cheaply deal with that, but instead you just doubled the number of thieves *again*
>UPGRADE & BUILD ADVICEPost build list or current specs: https://pcpartpicker.com/Provide specific uses + your BUDGET & COUNTRY>CASEmATX: AP201, Lian Li A3, O11 Air Mini, XT M3, CH260ATX: XT PRO (ULTRA), AIR 903 Base/MAX, Lancool 207, Flux Pro, Meshify 3, 4000D FRAME, X50Dual Chamber: Y60/70, O11 Vision, Antec C8>CPUGaming: 250K, 7/9800X3D, 14600KBudget: 225F, 7/9600xWorkstation: 270K*New sockets from both Intel and AMD likely next year*New AM5 AGESA BIOS dropped. Update for better RAM refresh.Comment too long. Click here to view the full text.
We had it good
>>108572605Still expensive, I could get a 14TB hard drive for 2/3 that price.
>>108572603I thought it was because W10 support sucked
>>108572530I was told to avoid Intel because of via oxidation
where are the intel boards with 6 sata connectors
Just found out that nord vpn is a goyim vpn.Trying to find a vpn that can port forward and doesn't store user data.Is proton vpn good?
>>108572253host your own if you worry about such things ya daft cunt.
>>108572253mullvad or bust
Anybody tried AirVPN? I like their 20 static port offer + free DDNS. Proton only offers one ephemeral port.
>>108572505no port forwarding
your only sane option for what you want is setting up your own VPN or finding one in your country that accepts payments in cash.
I like passkeys but like pretty much any tech trend I think positively about there MUST be some kind of downside corporations want me to ignore by using it so they can leverage more control over my life without me knowing so inform me.
>>108571563As a "something you know" challenge I think it's still more secure than passwords or drawn pattern unlocks because the data being presented as the challenge and the data being entered as the response are always unique and to break it you need to be able to gather up samples either in real time where the attacker can see everything all at once (what is being seen and what is being typed by the user while knowing that's the challenge that's being presented) or multiple rounds of data entry to compare to.Is it enough to negate the need for 2FA like passkeys? I'd say no but as far as data entry challenge based systems I still see it as the best we've got in this day and age.
>>108572517as i wrote, complete security theatreit doesnt add anything to existing methods
>>108572583It does in the sense that the sequence of characters and the way the user determines which to enter are happening at the same time.Passwords are always the same every time they are entered, PIN numbers are the same every time they are entered, and drawn pattern unlocks require someone to interact with the challenge in the same way each time.At least with this system the actual response is encrypted at both ends and only decrypted in the mind of the person putting in the sequence of characters. The only thing that's being repeated is something happening intangibly, meaning it can't be keylogged and it can't be repeated unless, again, the attacker is laying eyes on what is happening at both ends. The grid is ephemeral and the responding sequence is ephemeral so if they don't get what happened in that instance they need to wait for another instance to compare to and try again. The fact it's ultimately repeatable over the long term still means that a second layer of user validation would be warranted but in terms of trying to beat that challenge alone it's the strongest of its kind.If this sucks then "something you know" is dead entirely and any form of remote authentication needs to adopt passkeys (much like swiping credit cards is all but dead in lieu of chip and RFID) since the only secure form of 2FA is now "something you are" and "something you have".
>>108572626i dont think you have any understanding of how modern computer security actually works nor do you have the mental capacity to recognise that what youre suggesting is just a password but with extra stepspasswords are hashed and can be easily appended with a totp, this is common in the industry
>>108572681The weakest link in a password system is the person who came up with the password, meaning the person creating the password has to use a sequence they can consistently remember. That brings in the human element as people will drift to sequences that have meaning to them, which is vulnerable to social engineering. Any measure of intermediary security to transmit and password obfuscation at the receiving end means nothing if the person who needs to know the password gets compromised and that can be easy depending on who you're targeting.The only way for someone to give up access in a system that shows you a random grid of characters and then tells you to input a sequence of characters that match the boxes that make up the pattern only they recognize is for that person to flatly disclose what that pattern is ("on the third row, first column, go across three boxes, down two, then diagonally up and right one" - NlWxAy). When that is the only responsibility of the party authenticating to the system then it's about as secure as it can be at their end since the only way to get someone to give that up would be via coercion. It's the simplicity of a pattern unlock but with the advantage of not visibly exposing the pattern.It's not "just a password with extra steps" because any all points of user interaction with the system are dynamic and the only static part of the process exists within the head of the person looking at the grid and entering the characters.And I already said 2FA is still necessary (or at the very least wise to include) with this system to be as secure as possible, hence why I personally advocate for passkeys. I wasn't saying this grid thing is better than that.