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Or maybe they shouldn't revoke the very accounts researchers are required to use to communicate exploits to MS?

We, the users? Absolutely. But will the big AI companies last even half a decade without new products? Doubtful.

Indeed,now it is sweet spot for senior engineers: smart enough to accelerate, dumb enough not to fully autonomously act.But it won’t last long…

I think to everyone but a nepo baby it's clear that the children of the rich don't deserve their wealth.

Wow, someone downvoted me? The definition of the word "deserve" is:

> To deserve means to be worthy of, entitled to, or to have a valid claim to a reward, punishment, or treatment based on your actions, qualities, or circumstances

So you genuinely believe that nepo babies, despite not taking actions or creating any circumstances to earn their wealth .... nevertheless deserve to have it anyway?


I flip that around. People who have worked, earned, invested, AND paid taxes their whole life “deserve” to be able to give it to whoever they want.

It's less that about the recipient deserving to receive it, and more about the giver deserving to give it.

Humans don't like Jehhovah's Witnesses (or anyone else who interrupts their Saturday morning to try and push an agenda) ... so of course AIs will too.

All AI knowledge came from human sources.


Next.js: the technology no one actually likes using anymore, but we're all stuck with it because we have projects based on it.

"AI generated video that's impossible to detect" is already something many companies are working on; it's hardly Google-specific.

YouTube scale is Google specific

It already is quite impossible. Just generate something decent with lower quality. Then maybe take screen recording of the output. Voila.

Then "low-quality for no reason in year the 2026 and beyond where phones shoot at 8k" become part of the heuristics.

Would be a fairly weak heuristic, with most social media images/videos already being like that.

Being pedantic for no reason is one of the heuristics I use to judge how annoying yn users are

I find it super ironic that we're basically here: https://xkcd.com/1683/ now. The 90s and 00s tech people would be very disappointed :-))

People in the Education field have known that stress hampers learning for a long time ... but it's still nice to see empirical results.

People who study human memory have also known this for a long while. That is not the novelty of the finding. The novelty is the bridging of a memory paradigm of transitive inference which I believe has been shown to critically depend on hippocampal binding operations, and the effect of stress on that memory supporting hippocampal operation. I've been out of the memory field for about 10 years now moving on to autism research, but was very much exclusively in the hippocampal-dependent memory research field during my phD work. This is a good research team, and I have colleagues who have worked with some of the authors (e.g. Allison Preston). In any case, this is the type of study that is much much much more focused on current theory of a hippocampal operations supporting memory than non-hippocampal contributions (e.g. encoding / retrieval mnemonics, etc). The point is that the take home for scientists in the field won't be much like what a news clip might write about the study (but props to the submitter for giving the actual study link!)

As an interesting (and yes, a bit sad) twist on that notion - and, if I may say so, coincidentally a bit of a bridge between my comment-fellow SubiculumCode's two different areas of research - my personal empirical experience was that between ages 6-13 I had a stepfather who routinely dispensed physical punishment/discipline.

One of the harshest applications was around academic performance. If I had any bad marks, or a teacher reported sluggish work or improper behaviour, it wasn't good.

And whether as result of personal talent (ha!), or simply through being beaten and fear-driven into learned intensity, you'd better believe I was the top of my class or close to it most of the time.

But the stress part-destroyed my social abilities and integration (as opposed to academic learning), and along with other unusual childhood stressors and instability I suffered, is the biggest reason why later I spent most of my adulthood walking my own path - to the extent of being considered autistic.


Yet elite universities revel in making learning experience as stressful as possible.

Not just elite! But don't worry, there's a councilor thats on hand that if you hold off on your mental health crisis for a few weeks and see you once.

Of course they do - they're in the credentialing business.

There is some real world value to selecting for people whose learning is more resilient under pressure

Is it worth sacrificing / compromising entire careers (or in some cases lives) over? Quite the high overhead little data collection.

Credentials being positively correlated with resilience and having learned things would be great.

It's too bad that's not what the institutions are doing.


What is it?

I don't know about that. Even Harvard has a big grade inflation problem. And non-elite colleges are trying to make it as effortless as possible to get a degree.

grade inflation is the right thing to do as long as employers and post graduate schools keep looking at grades or gpa. if you do strict "fair" evaluation you put your students at a disadvantage compared to same level students at other schools that grade more relaxed. grades should be feedback not something to compare with others instead we should set up a standard state exam (pass/fail, unlimited cheap retakes) to decide if you get a degree. but until that happens keep on inflating

People in the education field have casually dismissed substantive studies for a long time, too.

The study itself acknowledges prior research in the area, and is far beyond mere empirical results confirming a hunch educators have had (and insufficiently addressed) for a long time.


Yeah, I too get all my unbiased analysis of the best coding AIs from ... THE MICROSOFT NETWORK!?!?

Tell me you're a politician who has no understanding of technology, but you feel you have to do something FOR THE CHILDREN ... without telling me that.

"Well every technical person I talk to says this is impossible to implement, and gives me open source software as an example. Simple fix to preserve my bill, that won't in any way completely undermine it ... exclude OSS!"


The California law is trivial to implement on pretty much any Unix or Unix-like system.

Open source models are for rich people: only they can afford the hardware needed to run them.

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