1. Label every commit at least partly written by AI.
2. Disclose the model used and if it was selfhosted or from a 3rd party service.
3. Disclose any conflicts of interest (if any).
(post edited because I discovered how to use "return" on Feditext)
I think some large open source advocacy organization should try to make an (optional) ethics code for AI use in open-source, so projects could advertise that they use AI in some restricted way (or that they don't use AI at all) so people can have some kind of transparency regarding AI use in open source.
I propose the following transparency guidelines:
- do you want to use google to sign in?
- do you want to add a passkey?
- do you want to add a 2FA token?
- we know you have 2FA but we've sent you an email instead
- this login attempt seems suspicious we've sent you a text about it
- can you click on these buses?
- you failed to click on the buses click on these bicycles instead
- should we save these details for next time?
- do you accept these trackers?
- you can opt out but we've decided it's legitimate interest anyway
- would you like to see a list of our 847 partners we share your data with?
- can we send you desktop notifications?
- can we access your location?
- do you want 10% off for signing up to the mailing list?
- do you want me to translate this page?
- hi I'm your friendly chatbot how can I help?
- oh no you can't buy this, reach out to us for a quote!
- do you wantโ
I'm tired boss
@homelab I remade my website to use a systemd service for building and serving the site (using Jekyll). But since Jekyll is installed only for my user, I need to run the service as the user, so I can't log out. How can I circumvent this? I want to build the website and serve it automatically without needing to log in and keep myself logged in...
Does anyone here know some static website generator that has good autodeploy features for Linux servers? My previous website is used Hugo with NixOS, and had "limited" autodeploy updating from a Github repo, but it was very bad, and broke very frequently.
I'm back from China. Soon I'll use my air-dielectric variable capacitor that I bought in China to make a magnetic loop antenna for ham radio in my apartment.
Recently, I bought a Sony Walkman WM-R202 for cheap (broken, of course) on XianYu (chinese ebay/olx). I replaced the driving belt, cleaned it, and lubricated it. Now it works perfectly (except for the reverse play function, which for some reason plays at a different speed than forward play).
@gutenberg_org Do you guys have some kind of translation project for Public Domain books? I was thinking of trying out doing some translation for Public Domain portuguese-language books to english and vice-versa.
The Brazilian government has a website where they archive Public Domain books in portuguese, so it wouldn't be hard to find books to translate.
This has escalated quickly.