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Techcrunch reports that AI coding tools have "very negative" gross margins. In other words, they are losing money on every user.

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    K
    Yeah, you have to be braindead trust a game developer with any kernel level software. I think a more secure solution would be some kind of virtualized environment to run the game within, which the developer could have full control over, but I doubt that will ever come about.
  • It shocked the market but has China's DeepSeek changed AI?

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    It's not the BBC's job to be an authority. Their job is to report what the (relevant) authorities are saying: DeepSeek challenged certain key assumptions about AI that had been championed by American executives like Sam Altman, CEO of ChatGPT-maker OpenAI. "We were on a path where bigger was considered better," according to Sid Sheth, CEO of AI chip startup d-Matrix. Perhaps maxing out on data centres, servers, chips, and the electricity to run it all wasn't the way forward after all. Despite DeepSeek ostensibly not having access to the most powerful tech available at the time, Sheth told the BBC that it showed that "with smarter engineering, you actually can build a capable model". That said, seems suspect that an AI startup CEO is getting this much airtime. I would have preferred an industry analyst or an AI researcher.
  • It's rude to show AI output to people

    Technology technology
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    F
    I gave advice, advice rarely follows what you've experienced or people wouldn't feel the need to give it.
  • America's largest power grid is struggling to meet demand from AI

    Technology technology
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    Let's add solar!.... People never ask questions at night when they're sleeping. Sounds pretty ideal to me.
  • Hastags killed

    Technology technology
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    klu9@lemmy.caK
    £ says: "The fuck they are, mate!"
  • Could Windows and installed apps upload all my personal files?

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    rikudou@lemmings.worldR
    Yes, every application has access to everything. The only exception are those weird apps that use the universal framework or whatever that thing is called, those need to ask for permissions. But most of the apps on your PC have full access to everything. And Windows does collect and upload a lot of personal information and they could easily upload everything on your system. The same of course applies for the apps as well, they have access to everything except privileged folders (those usually don't contain your personal data, but system files).
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    Was it Biden? Obama?
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    avidamoeba@lemmy.caA
    Does anyone know if there's additional sandboxing of local ports happening for apps running in Private Space? E: Checked myself. Can access servers in Private Space from non-Private Space browsers and vice versa. So Facebook installed in Private Space is no bueno. Even if the time to transfer data is limited since Private Space is running for short periods of time, it's likely enough to pass a token while browsing some sites.