@twosky2000

6 Followers
34 Following
462 Posts
Scared script kiddy
Likely breaking up my views in this(public), afterdark, politics and opensource(with ai as a tool).
  • Claude code source "leaks" in a mapfile
  • people immediately use the code laundering machines to code launder the code laundering frontend
  • now many dubious open source-ish knockoffs in python and rust being derived directly from the source

What's anthropic going to do, sue them? Insist in court that LLM recreating copyrighted code is a violation of copyright???

RE: https://neuromatch.social/@jonny/116324676116121930

Part 2 of exploring The Claude Code Source Leak Exclusion Zone continues here.

(the reply tree under the prior thread is getting expensive to render and the bottom no longer renders unless you're logged in lol)

end of prior thread: https://neuromatch.social/@jonny/116345400731237947

Krita’s Maintainer is awesome!
biblically accurate USB-C PD communication

@jonny I saw it as the new doomscrolling, rewarding enough but never finished and it's easy to land on very skewed views.

I still am interested in llm text generation, as it is somehow similar to my internal monolog: always more available, human logic and other stuff.
Not that LLMs are the answer, but that they have similarities in story telling rather than function.

@whitequark

This is very close to where I parted ways with the FSF. There's always a tension between enabling people to create the desirable thing and enabling people to make the undesirable. Their view is that it should be very hard to make the undesirable thing, and slightly easier to make the desirable thing. My view is that you should make it so easy to make the desirable thing that people always have a choice and then, once the desirable thing exists, you can apply other pressures to get rid of the undesirable thing.

I don't think deskilling is the right framing for a lot of these things, it's about where you focus cognitive load. There's a line from the Stantec ZEBRA's manual (1956) that says that the 150-instruction limit is not a real problem because no one could possibly write a working program that complex. Small children write programs more complex than that now. That's not a loss to the world, the fact that you don't have to think about certain things means you can think about other things, such as good algorithm and data structure design.

There was research 20ish years ago comparing C and Java programs and found that the Java programs tended to be more efficient for the same amount of developer effort, because Java programmers would spend more time refining data structure and algorithmic choices and improve entire complexity classes, whereas C programmers spend the time tracking down annoying bug classes that are impossible in Java and doing microoptimisations. Of course, under time pressure, Java developers will simply ship the first thing that works and move onto new features rather than doing that optimisation. C programmers would take longer to get to the MVP level and their poorly optimised code was often faster than poorly optimised Java.

I see LLMs as very different because they don't provide consistent abstractions. A programmer in a high-level language has a set of well-defined constraints on how their language is lowered to the target hardware and can reason about things, while allowing their run-time environment to make choices within those constraints. Vibe coding does not do this, it delegates thinking to a machine, which then generates code that is not working within a well-defined specification. This really is deskilling because it's not giving you a more abstract reasoning framework, it's removing your ability to reason.

Letting people accomplish more with less effort, in an environment where their requirements are finite, ends up shifting power to individuals, because it reduces the value of economies of scale.

As an aside, we use impossibly bright, impossibly blue light to inscribe tiny runes on sand, producing constructs that obey our commands (well, sometimes...) and communicate with us through literal liquid crystals.

This is not a fantasy setting. I'm just describing the real world

(well I'm leaving out 1000s of in-between steps, but still)

FUN FACT: the "nano" prefix ultimately descends from Ancient Greek "nanos", which means "dwarf".

Consequently, translating "nanotechnology" as "dwarven machinery" is arguably defensible.

87/365 Just like @Jess.Stetson I have a triple mash up for #FotoVorschlag #Caturday and #MemeOfTheDay

After 16 months of being bedridden, I'm finally recovering, but this month has been the perfect storm of broke & bills. I'm trying to keep 6 people housed and fed, so any money you can spare would be greatly appreciated!

https://ko-fi.com/fooneturing #mutualaid #mutualaidrequest

Support Alice Averlong ❤️

Become a supporter of Alice Averlong today!

Ko-fi