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In most red team contexts, the implants don't talk directly to the actual C2 - the implants talk to listening posts (often behind redirectors/transient reverse proxies) and then the listening posts request commands from the C2 server.

We’re supposedly mere years away from superintelligence, but it’s still literally impossible to just send a file between two clients without configuring intermediate network hardware or performing some hack to get around NAT (which can still fail and then require an intermediate server) if both clients are behind CGNAT.

It’s genuinely disheartening to see so many people here not even begin to try to understand how much we’re missing by not having effortless end-to-end connectivity, in favor of expensive cloud services. This literally used to be what the “Internet” is - we’re definitionally not on one without this.


I certainly can validate this anecdote, I also had to learn almost everything about IPv6 myself.

Considering that practically the only metric of economic success in the US oligarchy is the price of the flat-screen TV you'd imagine they'd at least work by now. At at least one price range.

I've got a "smart" TV that I didn't want, but that's the only thing they offer in my price range anymore. Maybe 5 years old. Stopped connecting to Wi-Fi, an actual hardware problem. Bricked. Opened the TV, cleaned the contacts and uncreased some wire strip. Has been working ever since. Most people would have thrown it out and bought another. But I'm the bad guy for using incandescent light bulbs.

It's funny too because the show doesn't even need most of the screen real estate. The most impactful scenes are kept to the middle third of the screen so that they can be cropped in vertical video for edits on TikTok and Instagram. That's on top of the repetitive dialogue crutch, designed so that you don't even have to stop scrolling on your phone to follow the plot on your TV. It's all slop now.

It's a symptom of complete failure of this industry that maintainers are even remotely thinking about, much less implementing changes in their work to stave off harassment over false security impact from bots.

The frequently repeated keystone lie that Europeans have equivalent or greater rights, freedoms, and protection from authoritarianism than Americans, which is and has always been objectively and completely false.

Citation? Every democracy index I've ever heard of rates most of Europe as more democratic than the US. (Eastern Europe will typically be rated lower, all of the former USSR states seem to be struggling with various degrees of corruption or similar problems)

The most commonly used index for example:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Economist_Democracy_Index


Even assuming that index is of any worth, Democracy is not the same thing as rights, freedoms, or protection from authoritarianism

Well according to press freedom indices many European countries and the US are quite similarly ranked. Some countries better some countries worse.

Some countries have stronger institutions against dictatorships than others but unfortunately we have seen that even the US isn't immune and that slides auch as in Poland and Hungary are possible.

There is always hope that things can turn around (as in Poland even though the road is hard and there are setbacks)


As an european living and feeding of mostly US sources online, I completely agree. In the US people do really have freedom of speech. This doesn't exist in the EU. Just try to say 1/10th of what you can say in the US and you'll be thrown behind bars in the EU.

The biggest one being that most newspapers in the EU are state-controlled, Pravda-style, propagandist outlet pushing pro-EU narratives. Once you live across several EU countries and speak several languages, you can see how all the topics are synched and pushing the exact same narrative.

Basically: the EU is very good at producing people repeating that the EU is great.

To me the biggest problem is that the EU Commission is way too busy turning the EU into a totalitarian nightmare instead of trying to compete economically with the US and China. As a result in 17 years China's GDP went from $4 trillion to $20 trillion, surpassing the GDP of the eurozone (which only grew 25%: 25% vs 400%).

That's an abysmal failure and the EU is sinking and it shows anywhere you go to in the EU: cities are becoming shitholes at an alarming speed. And everything is done to try to damage control and prevent people from talking about what is ongoing.

The EU is heading straight into a wall (actually it already hit it).

I want out.


>I want out.

Asia is not so bad. Try Japan.

I do not miss Europe, so you could say it worked out for me.


Well, when fascists are in power, paper won't help anyone. But at this point, as a European I enjoy enumerated human and civil rights from multiple constitutions and several international treaties, which are directly enforceable by courts at the state, national, and European level.

The human and civil rights guaranteed by the US constitution are a complete joke in comparison, and most of them are not guaranteed directly constitution, but by Supreme Court interpretation of vague 18th century law that can change at any time.


You seem to have missed the Bill of Rights. Which is odd, because whenever we tell you during online arguments that our rights are guaranteed, you all say that absolute rights are dumb and it's actually more sophisticated and European to not have them.

Not that courts, legislators, and administrations haven't tried and succeeded in abridging them somewhat in any number of different ways for shorter or longer periods, but the text remains, and can always be referred to in the end. They have to abuse the language in order to abridge the Bill of Rights, and eventually that passes the point of absurdity.

No such challenge in Europe. Every "right" is the right to do something unless it is not allowed.


>weather predictions

wrong

>OCR

less accurate and efficient than existing solutions, only measures well against other LLMs

>tts, stt

worse

>language translation

maybe


>>weather predictions

>wrong

https://www.noaa.gov/news-release/noaa-deploys-new-generatio...

?

>>OCR

>less accurate and efficient than existing solutions, only measures well against other LLMs

Where did you hear that? On every benchmark that I've ever seen, VLM's are hilariously better than traditional OCR. Typically, the reason that language models are only compared to other language models on model cards for OCR and so on is precisely because VLM's are so much better than traditional OCR that it's not even worth comparing. Not to mention that those top of the line traditional OCR systems like AWS, Textract are themselves extremely slow and computationally expensive. Not to mention much more complex to maintain.

>>tts, stt

> worse

Literally the first and only usable speech-to-text system that I've gotten on my phone is explicitly based on a large language model. Not to mention stuff like Whisper, Whisper X, Parakeet, all of the state-of-the-art speech-to-text systems are large-language model based and are significantly faster and better than what we had before. Likewise for text-to-speech, you know, even Kokoro-82M is faster and better than what we had before, and again, it's based on the same technology.


> Unless you're exclusively using ChatGPT without a screen it's not a fair comparison.

Neither is comparing text output to streaming video


Compare generative AI video to streamed video, and generative text to streamed text etc. The differences are closer to an order of magnitude. The comparison to be made is the processing power required to deliver the content, not to display it.

I like hacker news but I don't think this site is worth getting paged over lol


You might be underestimating HN's popularity.


> You might be underestimating HN's popularity.

I think you're confusing popularity with criticality. I'm sure everyone in here can withstand a few hours without browsing the page.


If you like the thing you're managing, then its health is critical for you, not your users.

It's dang's baby at this point, and this is a good thing, as long as HN doesn't affect his life in ways he doesn't want.


> If you like the thing you're managing, then its health is critical for you, not your users.

Get a grip and go touch some grass. Even FANGs understand the concept of business hours SEV.


Aw, please don't cross into personal attack. You can make your substantive points without that.

https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html

Edit: it looks like you've been breaking the site guidelines quite a bit, unfortunately. Could you please not do that? We end up banning accounts that keep doing it and I don't want to ban you.


I have a pretty firm grip on life and touch plenty of grass both literally and figuratively.

However, when something I care about crashes and burns once in a blue moon, I make sure to put the fire out, at least to make it survive till regular hours. Things I care about can be both business and personal, and nobody bugs me for them.

Maybe we shouldn't make any assumptions about people we don't personally know, while we are at it.


> However, when something I care about crashes and burns once in a blue moon, I make sure to put the fire out, at least to make it survive till regular hours.

You are free what you choose to do with your personal life.

Meanwhile, it is pretty obvious that it's pointless to demand or expect personal sacrifice to maintain unrealistic levels of high-availability in services that are far from critical. I mean, do you honestly believe that these messages you and I are writing are so important to get out that someone must sacrifice their personal time to ensure it is served to the world in this very instant instead of, say, 3 or 6 or 13 hours? Absurd.


It looks like I failed to convey what I've tried to say in the first comment. Let me reiterate one more time.

    - I believe dang sees HN as his baby, so *voluntarily* monitors it as a critical infrastructure *for him*.
    - I personally like this kind of commitment from people who like their job, however *I don't expect or demand it in any way*.
    - I also hope that attention doesn't affect his life. *Especially negatively and/or in a crippling way*.
I don't care whether this site is down for 6 seconds or 6 hours. I just wanted to commend him for liking what he's doing this much. I demand nothing from any service provider I use. Let it be a small, one person operation or dang or Amazon/Google.

I also keep servers up in my daily job, and some are more important than others, but none of them requires me to wake up 5AM to solve a problem (by design). So I don't demand anything from others something which I won't do.

As long as nobody is dying, nobody should stop, drop, and work on something else regardless of time, date and location.


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