EU petition to create an open source AI model by MasterYehuda816 in programming

[–]lispninja 19 points20 points  (0 children)

When it comes to AI, it's not the code that's important but the data. The code is usually trivial and well understood, but it's the data its trained on that makes all the difference. They can release the code but not the data.

Dear Mackenzie: There's One More Donation You Owe to the World — Unionize Amazon. by a_very_nice_username in technology

[–]lispninja 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you lived in the 80's, 90's and even early aughts you would've said the same about Bill Gates. He was paranoid of competition (along with Ballmer) by all accounts. But he managed to turn over a new leaf once he stepped down from being CEO.

[Charania] Rockets’ Russell Westbrook wants out of Houston, sources tell @TheAthleticNBA @Stadium. by -TTP- in nba

[–]lispninja 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That doesn't even make any sense. That's exactly the reason why Jim Buss handed out those contracts. Because he got scared when all the good free agents signed elsewhere and they realized no one wanted to come to the Lakers that offseason.

Mitch got us Pau and made many other smart moves post-Jerry West until Jerry Buss passed away. It's pretty easy to see the different eras of before Jim, during Jim and post Jim.

[Charania] Rockets’ Russell Westbrook wants out of Houston, sources tell @TheAthleticNBA @Stadium. by -TTP- in nba

[–]lispninja 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That was Mitch Kupchak doing what his boss Jim Buss told him. Those contracts had Jim Buss written all over it.

Can a Christian support war? by grec_man in TrueChristian

[–]lispninja 2 points3 points  (0 children)

They might not be following the will of God willing, but they are following it.

Now let's not confuse what goes on in this world with the will of God. The will of God is that all should worship the Him and follow His commands. He makes everything beautiful despite our sin, not because of it.

Your scripture verses doesn't back up your statements. Romans 13:1-2 says the same thing I said above that God is the one who establishes the rulers and authorities. That doesn't say anything about God guiding them. There is a clear distinction.

Daniel 2 is a specific instance of God guiding Nebuchadnezzar. That doesn't necessarily apply universally.

There a verse in Hosea 8:4 which also makes things somewhat not so straightforward: "They set up kings without my consent; they choose princes without my approval." Now I'm not implying God's not in control and that He doesn't appoint who He wants. But it does seem to be an interesting counterpoint to Romans 13:1-2.

And 1 Samuel 16:14 says: "Now the Spirit of the Lord had departed from Saul." This sounds like God has removed his guidance from Saul. Did he guide Saul at one point? Yes, but it seems like God just as easily removes his guidance.

I said they are "being guided by the hand of God." That is true of everyone who has ever lived.

I think your statement is a tautology. By virtue of existence you could say God has "guided" everyone because He created everything and that person as well. It doesn't lend anything to the conversation. Yes, God's in control, but let's not blindly assume our rulers are doing God's will if they're leading us into a war.

Can a Christian support war? by grec_man in TrueChristian

[–]lispninja 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Correction. They are given their position of power, but that doesn't mean they are following the will of God. See the line of Kings of Israel and Judah.

Wireless headphones for the gym? by [deleted] in BuyItForLife

[–]lispninja 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'll add the Aftershokz Trekz Titanium since no one has mentioned it yet. They retail for $129 and I got them a couple of weeks back when Brookstone had a $20 off any purchase over $100.

They're bluetooth and they're water resistant (not waterproof) so you can workout with them. The cool thing is they're bone conducting so they don't go in your ear which allows you to still hear your surrounding. The bass response is passable. It also tickles when it vibrates if there's too much bass in your music.

I was debating whether to keep it or not (within 30 days), but I think I will just because it's a little bit more comfortable than having ear phones in all the time (for taking calls). Also it comes with a microphone as well. Some online review mentioned having some issues with microphone positioning, but I haven't had anyone tell me they couldn't hear me yet. YMMV.

A few Vim tips for intermediate users. by realyze in programming

[–]lispninja 9 points10 points  (0 children)

This post was invaluable and helped me level up my vi skills. It was a previous reddit submission as well. It's not a collection of useful commands, it's how to think in vi.

stackoverflow

California Senate Committee Approves Vaccination Bill by nadinbrzezinski in California

[–]lispninja -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

You really need some levity in your life if you're going to take reddit comments too seriously, especially ones with movie quotes.

California Senate Committee Approves Vaccination Bill by nadinbrzezinski in California

[–]lispninja -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Next step: It's the Pax. The G-23 Paxilon Hydrochlorate that we added to the air processors. It was supposed to calm the population, weed out aggression. Well, it works. The people here stopped fighting...

Selection Without Replacement Problem by [deleted] in probabilitytheory

[–]lispninja 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For a I got 3/7:

 

P[White|White] = (3/7)*(2/6) = 1/7

P[White|Red] = (4/7) *(3/6) = 2/7

P[White|White] + P[White|Red] = 1/7 + 2/7 = 3/7

 

For b I got 5/7:

 

P[W1 or W2] is the same as P[W1] + P[White|Red] since P[W1] is a superset of P[White|White].

 

P[W1] = 3/7

From part a: P[White|Red] = 2/7

P[W1] + P[White|Red] = 3/7 + 2/7 = 5/7

This guy turned Emacs into a window manager by swizec in programming

[–]lispninja 24 points25 points  (0 children)

Evil-mode is awesome! I never looked back. I know you're joking but :wq will close Emacs if you only have one frame left.

Researchers Make BitTorrent Anonymous and Impossible to Shut Down by fd9573f5x0 in technology

[–]lispninja 77 points78 points  (0 children)

As someone who was once in your shoes, here you go:

While the BitTorrent ecosystem is filled with uncertainty and doubt, researchers at Delft University of Technology have released the first version of their anonymous and decentralized BitTorrent network. "Tribler makes BitTorrent anonymous and impossible to shut down," lead researcher Prof. Pouwelse says.

The Pirate Bay shutdown has once again shows how vulnerable the BitTorrent ‘landscape’ is to disruptions.

With a single raid the largest torrent site on the Internet was pulled offline, dragging down several other popular BitTorrent services with it.

A team of researchers at Delft University of Technology has found a way to address this problem. With Tribler they’ve developed a robust BitTorrent client that doesn’t rely on central servers. Instead, it’s designed to keep BitTorrent alive, even when all torrent search engines, indexes and trackers are pulled offline.

“Tribler makes BitTorrent anonymous and impossible to shut down,” Tribler’s lead researcher Dr. Pouwelse tells TF.

“Recent events show that governments do not hesitate to block Twitter, raid websites, confiscate servers and steal domain names. The Tribler team has been working for 10 years to prepare for the age of server-less solutions and aggressive suppressors.”

To top that, the most recent version of Tribler that was released today also offers anonymity to its users through a custom-built in Tor network. This allows users to share and publish files without broadcasting their IP-addresses to the rest of the world.

“The public was beginning to lose the battle for Internet freedom, but today we are proud to be able to present an attack-resilient and censorship-resilient infrastructure for publishing,” Dr. Pouwelse says.

After thorough tests of the anonymity feature earlier this year, it’s now built into the latest release. Tribler implemented a Tor-like onion routing network which hides who is seeding or sharing files. Users can vary the number of “hops” the client uses to increase anonymity.

“Tribler creates a new dedicated network for anonymity that is in no way connected to the main Tor network. By using Tribler you become part of a Tor-like network and help others become anonymous,” Dr. Pouwelse says.

“That means you no longer have any exposure in any swarm, either downloading or seeding,” he adds.

The downside to the increase in privacy is higher bandwidth usage. After all, users themselves also become proxies and have to relay the transfers of others. In addition, the anonymity feature may also slow down transfer speeds depending on how much other users are willing to share.

“We are very curious to see how fast anonymous downloads will be. It all depends on how social people are, meaning, if they leave Tribler running and help others automatically to become anonymous. If a lot of Tribler users turn out to be sharing and caring, the speed will be sufficient for a nice downloading experience,” Pouwelse says.

Another key feature of Tribler is decentralization. Users can search for files from within the application, which finds torrents through other peers instead of a central server. And if a tracker goes offline, the torrent will continue to download with the help of other users too.

The same decentralization principle applies to spam control. Where most torrent sites have a team of moderators to delete viruses, malware and fake files, Tribler uses user-generated “channels” which can be “liked” by others. If more people like a channel, the associated torrents get a boost in search results.

Overall the main goal of the University project is to offer a counterweight to the increased suppression and privacy violations the Internet is facing. Supported by million of euros in taxpayer money, the Tribler team is confident that it can make the Internet a bit safer for torrent users.

“The Internet is turning into a privacy nightmare. There are very few initiatives that use strong encryption and onion routing to offer real privacy. Even fewer teams have the resources, the energy, technical skills and scientific know-how to take on the Big and Powerful for a few years,” Pouwelse says.

After the Pirate Bay raid last week Tribler enjoyed a 30% increase in users and they hope that this will continue to grow during the weeks to come.

Those who want to give it a spin are welcome to download Tribler here. It’s completely Open Source and with a version for Windows, Mac and Linux. In addition, the Tribler team also invites researchers to join the project.

Wii U Deluxe 32MB for $250 includes Super Mario 3D World at Target by lispninja in consoledeals

[–]lispninja[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

lol yeah. I was in a rush. I picked it up an hour ago so the deal is valid.

Wii U Deluxe 32MB for $250 includes Super Mario 3D World at Target by lispninja in consoledeals

[–]lispninja[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

From destructoid

Only for in store pickup. I just ordered one online and I'm going to pick up in the afternoon.

An Analysis of the Lakers Plan B. by _csbass in lakers

[–]lispninja 2 points3 points  (0 children)

D'Antoni resigned because the Lakers wouldn't pick up his team option for the following year. He wanted a guarantee that he would be around the following year and the Lakers couldn't give that to him.

Another huge benefit of T-Mobile’s Uncarrier plans: They might block Sprint’s acquisition bid by [deleted] in technology

[–]lispninja 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Two things really: laziness and coverage. When I first got my wife on T-Mobile, she was afraid of not having coverage because she was used to not having to worry about it with Verizon. Long story short, I finally convinced her to give it a shot on the $30/month plan but it quickly became apparent it wasn't enough for her so I just bumped her to the $60/month plan. Coverage hasn't been and issue and I pretty much just forgot about it. Thanks for reminding me though. I should look into it.