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OpenAI Is A Bad Business


OpenAI, a non-profit AI company that will lose anywhere from $4 billion to $5 billion this year, will at some point in the next six or so months convert into a for-profit AI company, at which point it will continue to lose money in exactly the same way. Shortly after this news broke, Chief Technology Officer Mira Murati resigned, followed by Chief Research Officer Bob McGrew and VP of Research, Post Training Barret Zoph, leaving OpenAI with exactly three of its eleven cofounders remaining.

This coincides suspiciously with OpenAI's increasingly-absurd fundraising efforts, where (as I predicted in late July) OpenAI has raised the largest venture-backed fundraise of all time $6.6 billion— at a valuation of $157 billion.

in reply to Jure Repinc

ChatGPT Plus is likely, for many people, a “lifestyle product.” And the problem is that, when people lose their jobs or inflation hikes, these products are the first to get slashed from the household budget.


So I have a slightly different experience here. When I lost my job recently I actually ended up signing up for ChatGPT plus. I abused the ever living hell out of 4o to crank out tailored cover letters and matching resumes. I was able to roughly triple my job search productivity until I got a job three months later.

Was it worth it? For that timeframe (3 months, $60) hell yeah since the mental labor of handcrafting cover letters for each job listing is extremely taxing and takes some of the awfulness out of the entire job hunt.

in reply to Gork

Can you share a bit about how you used it? I've used Copilot a bit to try the same thing, but it makes so many errors that I spend too much time editing and fixing them. Also, after running quite a few cover letters, I found that the text was repetitive and unnatural in a way that made it really obvious that it was an LLM writing the letter and not a person.
in reply to sevan

It helps when you've fed a few that you've made by hand to start in the same thread for it to use as an example (and format), along with one of your resumes. Then copy and paste the job description and have it generate a cover letter for you.

Keep it all in one massive thread, if it makes a mistake, correct it and tell it to apply those changes to future ones as well (in my case it kept saying I had over ten years of experience when in actually I just had ten, so I had to correct that behavior).

Since it's an AI it will sometimes hallucinate, this usually happens if there are terms in the job description that aren't in your resume... either have it regenerate (if it will take more than a few minutes to edit) or strip out the offending sentences. Some will need very little editing, especially if the job description closely aligns with what you have on your resume.

Oh and be polite because it now knows all your skills and can probably murder you in your sleep lol

in reply to Gork

Thanks, I'm guessing the benefit of subscribing is to create that persistent relationship. The free version from MS that I'm using times out after a while. I definitely get the problem of it making up experience for me when it encounters something in a job description that isn't referenced anywhere in my info. Honestly, I'd probably get more interviews if I just let it make up stuff, but I'm guessing that might become a problem for me later. :)
in reply to Jure Repinc

I feel like if ChatGPT were the only LLM on the market, they’d have a real path to profitability, but it’s not even the best LLM on the market. And the open source models are nearly as good, meaning the vast majority of people who need an LLM can run it on their own hardware.

It’s kind of like trying to make a profitable business out of offering a special sauce that isn’t as good as your competitors sauce, and is barely better than the free sauce from Taco Bell. Oh and it costs you millions of dollars to produce a single bottle.







Svartsjukedrama bakom våldsamheter. Enligt uppgifter i Afronbladet är flera våldsdåd i Stockholms den senaste tiden riktade mot en man som ska ha tillhört eller samarbetat med Hagsätranätverket. Det är emellertid inte han som drabbats utan släktingar till honom.

blog.zaramis.se/2024/10/07/sva…


in reply to ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆

Again, a sovereign currency issuer doesn't need foreign or private financial capital. It can create it at will. It only needs the real people and resources needed to do the work that it wants to do. If it's got the labor, knowhow and materials, it can just print the money and get that economic activity started. Especially if it doesn't need to import anything.
This entry was edited (3 months ago)
in reply to Avid Amoeba



Some Intel Linux Driver Maintainers Have Left The Company


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in reply to captainkangaroo

Two things are happening: intel is trying to figure out how to deal with likely existential problems and their extremely mature product base doesn’t need those maintainers enough to offset supplying early retirement/buyout.
in reply to captainkangaroo

Another news, water is wet. People leave and join companies every day.

The amount of Intel products impacted is limited to specific models. Also Intel is now committed to replacing damaged hardware. If you update the microcode it will fix the issue and if you aren't experiencing crashes you are good.

This entry was edited (3 months ago)




PulseAudio hotkeys script


I've been using volumeicon for a long time, to enable the audio hotkeys on my laptop. But the problem is that if you plug in a USB or bluetooth headset, it doesn't automatically switch to it as the default. You'd have to kill the service and restart it.

So I wrote a script that can offer me all the same functionality, and just mapped my audio hotkeys in my WM.

Thought someone might find the source useful.

This entry was edited (3 months ago)
in reply to Dr. Wesker

But the problem is that if you plug in a USB or bluetooth headset, it doesn’t automatically switch to it as the default.


How about module-switch-on-connect?

in reply to nmtake

The problem wasn't PulseAudio, it was volumeicon. For instance, when I'd pair a bluetooth headset I would start getting audio through it, but my hotkeys would still be trying to adjust the previous sink. I'd have to kill and restart volumeicon for it to work again.
This entry was edited (3 months ago)
in reply to nmtake

I figured if I could eliminate the middle man in under 55 lines I may as well. I'll always jump at the opportunity to reduce my package reliance.
in reply to Dr. Wesker

Hey thanks, I've been delaying writing something similar and now I dont have to :)


Google removes Kaspersky's antivirus software from Play Store


Over the weekend, Google removed Kaspersky's Android security apps from the Google Play store and disabled the Russian company's developer accounts.

Users have been reporting over the last week that Kaspersky's products (including Kaspersky Endpoint Security and VPN & Antivirus by Kaspersky) are no longer available on Google Play in the United States and other world regions.

Kaspersky confirmed the issue on the company's official forums on Sunday and said that it's currently investigating why its software is no longer available on Google's app store.

Source: bleepingcomputer.com/news/secu…

in reply to W4nd3r3r

Google removes widely-known Kasperky spyware from Play Store


Fixed that

in reply to W4nd3r3r

Translation : A spy company removes a spyware from a a spy store


Neo-Nazis head to encrypted SimpleX Chat app, bail on Telegram


Dozens of neo-Nazis are fleeing Telegram and moving to a relatively unknown secret chat app that has received funding from Twitter founder Jack Dorsey.

In a report from the Institute for Strategic Dialogue published on Friday morning, researchers found that in the wake of the arrest of Telegram founder Pavel Durov and charges against leaders of the so-called Terrorgram Collective, dozens of extremist groups have moved to the app SimpleX Chat in recent weeks over fears that Telegram’s privacy policies expose them to being arrested. The Terrorgram Collective is a neo-Nazi propaganda network that calls for acolytes to target government officials, attack power stations, and murder people of color.

Source: arstechnica.com/tech-policy/20…



Israel’s War on Healthcare


This entry was edited (3 months ago)



Can someone explain to me how to use pass?


Can I use it fully offline?

How do I back it up to USB drive?

What does the day-to-day operation of Pass compared to Keepass look like?

I am trying to learn it as I want to use it, as I think that keepass is bloated for my use case, and I would appreciate any help here.

This entry was edited (3 months ago)
Unknown parent

lemmy - Link to source
Ephera
It's a password manager that's conceptually kept as simple as possible. It's essentially just a bunch of GPG-encrypted files in a folder structure. But you can then get various GUIs and apps to interact with it, if you prefer.


Scientists Have Created Hybrid Intelligence


in reply to ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆

The major breakthrough here is a method for interfacing brain like organic tissue (that they had already developed) with electronic components. They’re using the brain tissue in a similar fashion as a neural network based AI and training it to relay signals to electronic components in response to certain stimuli, if I understood the article correctly; I skimmed quite a bit though.
This entry was edited (3 months ago)


in reply to abbotsbury

I guess there is a lot of things you can do under those masks.
in reply to Daze

What happens at the furry parties, stays at the furry parties


Need help: USB unlock LUKS on Alpine Linux


This entry was edited (3 months ago)

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in reply to The Hobbyist

in reply to chameleon

This entry was edited (2 months ago)


Introducing Kühlmak, my layout analyzer and optimizer