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Posts
5
Comments
385
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Honestly, making the basic effort to try it was the hardest part…but I found pretty much all my main communities have slowly started gaining momentum here to the point where I maybe check Reddit once a week now?

    Like Lemmy works great, and seems to just being gaining more and more steam.

  • Plus it helps leave the door open for a potential partnership if Nintendo ever decides to bring some of their games to PC. I think it will happen at some point because there is both a growing frustration with having to re-buy your library with every new Nintendo system and a lot of profit to be made on PC if you approach it like Sony has.

  • I didn't like Tutanota and am currently trying out Proton mail. I went through a stretch where I had not logged in to Tutanota (the site) for like 4-6 weeks (was checking from my phone mostly) and it deleted my account for inactivity...which being an encrypted, privacy focused website meant the recover process was super difficult.

    Ultimately I decided they were a bit too fringe and not fully cooked yet and went with Proton Mail.

  • I speculate it's to monetize specified versions of their product to market it to different industries and professions. If you have an AI that can do everything well you can't really expand that much. You can either charge a LOT and have a few customers, or a little and have a bunch of customers and nothing in between. Conversely, by making specific instances tailored to different fields and professions, you can capture big and little fish. Just my guess though, maybe they accidentally made Skynet and that's the real reason!

  • Most insurance companies strive to avoid excessive profits, honestly and aim for a combined ratio of something less than 5% profit. It's a fairly competitive field, getting greedy results in losing policies and is very price reactive. Consumers can change pretty easily and do so regularly.

  • They are a business and their business model shows they can't make profit in Florida any longer. It would be morally unjustifiable to continue operating in Florida, to their employees and shareholders.

    These aren't non-profit companies.

  • We're expecting multiple AI agents to be working concert on different parts of a theoretical attack, and you nailed it with thinking about the networking piece. While a lot of aspects of a cyber attack tend to evolve with time and technical change, the network piece tends to be more "sturdy" than others and because of this it is believed that extremely competent network intrusion capabilities will be developed and deployed by a specialized AI.

    I think we'll be seeing the development of AI's that specialize in malware payloads, working with one's that have social engineering capabilities and ones with network penetration specializations, etc...all operating at a much greater competency than their human counterparts (or just in much greater numbers than humans with similar capabilities) soon.

    I'm not really even sure what will be effective in countering them either? AI-powered defense I guess but still feel like that favors the attacker in the end.

  • I work in Cybersecurity for an F100 and we've been war gaming for shit like this for a while. There are just so many unethical uses for the current gen of AI tools like this one, and it keeps me up at night thinking about the future iterations of them to be honest.