[-] tyler@programming.dev 49 points 3 weeks ago

Not to blame the rider because parking a fucking helicopter on a snowmobile trail is idiotic, but why the fuck was he wearing tinted goggles at night!?!?!

[-] tyler@programming.dev 41 points 4 weeks ago

Not that I don’t believe you but I’d love to cite this in future discussions, where did you get your stats from?

[-] tyler@programming.dev 38 points 1 month ago

Might not be a native English speaker.

[-] tyler@programming.dev 49 points 3 months ago

Can we please stop linking mastodon threads? Mozilla literally has an explainer article. https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/privacy-preserving-attribution

[-] tyler@programming.dev 52 points 3 months ago

Wait. They could before??? wtf

[-] tyler@programming.dev 59 points 3 months ago

It’s happening on lemmy too. People making posts in multiple subs saying that FF is super buggy, etc.

[-] tyler@programming.dev 48 points 4 months ago

Haha literally reads like an onion article.

[-] tyler@programming.dev 42 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago)

I informed my SecOps team and they reached out to Slack. Slack posted an update:

We've released the following response on X/Twitter/LinkedIn:

To clarify, Slack has platform-level machine-learning models for things like channel and emoji recommendations and search results. And yes, customers can exclude their data from helping train those (non-generative) ML models. Customer data belongs to the customer. We do not build or train these models in such a way that they could learn, memorize, or be able to reproduce some part of customer data. Our privacy principles applicable to search, learning, and AI are available here: https://slack.com/trust/data-management/privacy-principles

Slack AI – which is our generative AI experience natively built in Slack – is a separately purchased add-on that uses Large Language Models (LLMs) but does not train those LLMs on customer data. Because Slack AI hosts the models on its own infrastructure, your data remains in your control and exclusively for your organization’s use. It never leaves Slack’s trust boundary and no third parties, including the model vendor, will have access to it. You can read more about how we’ve built Slack AI to be secure and private here: https://slack.engineering/how-we-built-slack-ai-to-be-secure-and-private/

[-] tyler@programming.dev 55 points 6 months ago

This has nothing to do with being a walled platform. All these maintainers of all these lemmy servers would have to do the exact same thing if Nintendo came to them. And if they refused then Nintendo could go to the server host. And if that didn’t work you would end up in court. It has nothing to do with walled gardens and everything to do with Nintendo abusing dmca.

[-] tyler@programming.dev 41 points 6 months ago

JB and KG are the most wholesome people alive. They are truly just being themselves 100% of the time and it’s amazing.

[-] tyler@programming.dev 39 points 7 months ago

Kagi and sealngx figured it out just fine. Turns out if your goal isn’t to show advertisements then it’s not that hard of a problem.

[-] tyler@programming.dev 47 points 8 months ago

This thread is absolutely terrible. I’m very sorry op. As a software dev, I think I’ve hit the save button maybe ten times in the past 2 years. You are right that it should auto save by default. That’s just required in this day and age. People saying they don’t want auto save because they don’t want cats losing their work literally do not understand how auto save works in the vast majority of modern systems. A simple example is Google sheets, where you can literally see every change made to every character in every file throughout time. You’re not going to lose anything. Software devs solved this in their own tools literally decades ago. My job is literally editing text files all day long. I can’t remember the last time I lost data due to a crash or a cat or anything.

Some people even mention LaTeX which literally has a solution with Overleaf. If software doesn’t autosave in this day and age, it’s shit software.

What you have here is another case of Linux users jumping to defend the only things they have to defend, even if it’s absolute shit.

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tyler

joined 1 year ago