En norrlänning

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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: July 26th, 2023

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  • I’m aware that this isn’t how DNS works, but I’d imagine it is possible to have a DNS server that when it receives a query from the internet looks at the requested domain and translates it to an internal domain and in turn query that one, returning the result without revealing the internal domain. Something like a ALIAS virtual record provided by some services (but wont work against a internal DNS).

    As for Traefik acting as a reverse proxy for internal network addresses, yeah that’s the way it works. However in this case I have several instances of Traefik running on a subset of IP-addresses on a public subnet. So essentially we want to loadbalance several Traefik loadbalancers using DNS.






























  • Jag tror att det professorn syftar på är mindre att företag roffar åt sig vinster och vilken data som insamlas, och mer att avancerad AI kan vara skadlig i fel händer. Det är enklare att reglera ett fåtal större företag än att försöka tämja open-source modellerna. Specifikt det han konstaterar mot slutet, att man kan kringgå de intränade säkerhetsåtgärderna i befintliga modeller och köra på helt ocensurerade modeller.

    Generativ AI kan användas för att sätta turbo på propagandamaskiner, bedrägerier, deep-fakes, och mycket annat. På andra sidan så kan analytiska modeller användas av företag för profilering av befolkningen, likt Kinas Social Credit system fast fullt automatiserat. Jag kör vissa ocensurerade modeller på min dator med komponenter som är snart sex år gamla, och det är imponerande vad man kan få ut ur dem, och aningen oroväckande, och de modellerna är mycket mindre sofistikerade än de som professorn nämner.

    Därför så föreslår professorn att begränsa AI i open-source kontext, för så snart som det släppts ut på internet så går det inte att återkalla, likt vad som nu händer med Llama-2.



  • You might want to read this https://web.archive.org/web/20230921232415/https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2023/11/general-mark-milley-trump-coup/675375/

    During the George Floyd protests in early June 2020, Milley, wearing combat fatigues, followed Trump out of the White House to Lafayette Square, which had just been cleared of demonstrators by force. Milley realized too late that Trump, who continued across the street to pose for a now-infamous photo while standing in front of a vandalized church, was manipulating him into a visual endorsement of his martial approach to the demonstrations. Though Milley left the entourage before it reached the church, the damage was significant. “We’re getting the fuck out of here,” Milley said to his security chief. “I’m fucking done with this shit.” Esper would later say that he and Milley had been duped.

    For Milley, Lafayette Square was an agonizing episode; he described it later as a “road-to-Damascus moment.” The week afterward, in a commencement address to the National Defense University, he apologized to the armed forces and the country. “I should not have been there,” he said. “My presence in that moment and in that environment created a perception of the military involved in domestic politics.” His apology earned him the permanent enmity of Trump, who told him that apologies are a sign of weakness.