Recent comments in /f/articles
Dogmantra wrote
Reply to Tracing Paper: Color printers mark printouts with barely visible codes that are used to track down currency counterfeiters, as well as everyone else. by oolong
yeah this stuff is very scary
it also makes me wonder if some malfunction with this is why all my printouts recently seem to have a little bit of yellow smudged right on the margins, hmm.
oolong wrote
really enjoyed this
"Although in theory one need only know the meanings of some subset of the words in a loop in order to infer the definitions of the remaining words, at the conceptual level the meanings of these words remain completely intertwined."
feels like no man is an island but for words
neku wrote
Reply to Meet Pisonia, the tree that eats birds by Moonside
gotta say that it doesnt really eat birds. it just murders them indiscriminately
Caribou wrote
Reply to Meet Pisonia, the tree that eats birds by Moonside
good for her
voxpoplar wrote
Reply to Meet Pisonia, the tree that eats birds by Moonside
I love fucked up plants thank you
Presidential_Afro wrote
Reply to Will Squid Soon Rule the Oceans? by Moonside
i hope squid rules all
Caribou wrote
Reply to Will Squid Soon Rule the Oceans? by Moonside
oh boy! I sure hope so
neku wrote
Reply to How to Know You’re Not Insane (And how a Cards Against Humanity Staff Writer was fired.) by hollyhoppet
i never really thought about it but of course your boss can put you into an asylum if they really want to if youre a minority in america. of course the Offensive But Woke card game involuntarily committed a black employee who spoke up to a psychiatric unit
oolong wrote
everything i want to say, boiled down to not all hakka people but when they say we're clannish, yes, all hakka people
hollyhoppet wrote
Reply to comment by Moonside in On Heteropessimism by Moonside
nice
Moonside OP wrote
Reply to On Heteropessimism by Moonside
The recent slew of articles I've posted is btw just the result of closing the million tabs I have open on my phone.
BIG_RAIN_THUNDERSTORM wrote
this article is a disgusting display of liberalism
i like how no explanation is given for why she jacked up the rent or kept the deposit on the woman leaving due to domestic violence, and that they spent these desperate families' money on a vacation
toasthaste wrote
Reply to comment by toasthaste in The Forgotten Trans History of the Wild West by hollyhoppet
The 80-year-old lumberjack whose agab was only discovered after he died, to the great surprise of his community, is, idk, making me feel things
toasthaste wrote
holy shit this rules
anand wrote
Reply to "I've spent the last few years trying to translate Kant's First Critique into an AI architecture." by mm_
This is really interesting!
I love the approach and am curious how they might best scale it up to bigger problems. Looks like they're working on hybrid models and I'm curious how those could leverage the advantages of neural models without losing the interpretability advantages here.
Moonside OP wrote
Reply to The case against summer camp by Moonside
I am impressed that someone upvoted this within a single minute.
devtesla wrote
Reply to Moving Beyond Misogyny by Moonside
this is great
neku OP wrote
This article does a good job of reminding me that the police system is fucking rotten from the bottom to the top. On the other hand, it's simple and predictable: cops investigate cops and find that cops are innocent.
Moonside OP wrote
Reply to Years Ago, Black Feminists Worked Together to Unmask Twitter Trolls Posing as Women of Color. If Only More People Paid Attention. by Moonside
This article is a bit old by now, but it's a worthy read. I think people on here know by first hand that right wing trolling was organized and coordinated even before gamergate, something much elided in discussions about the online part of the reactionary movements. And the frustration about not taken seriously about the danger of it brewing on 4chan and Reddit is all too familiar.
Moonside OP wrote
Reply to comment by mm_ in The euthanasia that wasn’t by Moonside
My take was somewhat more modest, it's an illustration how incredibly parochial English language media can be.
mm_ wrote
Reply to The euthanasia that wasn’t by Moonside
maybe dramatic but this was kind of a turning point for me in how i view news outlets, cause im not sure id been taken by something like this before
hollyhoppet wrote
Reply to comment by neku in [cw child abuse] My Cousin Was My Hero. Until the Day He Tried to Kill Me. "For years, I was drawn to his strength, his bravado, his violence. But then he forced me to come to terms with how that idea of masculinity poisoned his life — and mine." by neku
no worries, have a nice week!
neku OP wrote
Reply to comment by hollyhoppet in [cw child abuse] My Cousin Was My Hero. Until the Day He Tried to Kill Me. "For years, I was drawn to his strength, his bravado, his violence. But then he forced me to come to terms with how that idea of masculinity poisoned his life — and mine." by neku
o ya i totally should have added a cw. sorry it caught you off guard :(
twovests wrote (edited )
Reply to Cryptocurrency is an abject disaster by cute_spider_ni_srsly
I agree with the "disclosure" thing. I have about $1000 in Ethereum (which used to be $100), but I think it'll get a lot higher, so I haven't sold it yet. I've also made several donations on ERC tokens, worth about $300 total (summing for the value they were at the times of payment.) I don't have a significant amount of any other cryptocurrencies (except possibly Dogecoin from that old Reddit tip bot, back when Dogecoin was a joke.)
But there's a lot of wrong things in this article, which is disappointing because I generally like this author. But I don't think the author is being intentionally misleading.
TLDR of the parts I disagree with
Also, 'hard drives' are already used for many different proof-of-space cryptocurrencies. It's not "coming", it's already here.EDIT: I think the author is talking about a very new Proof-of-Space coin, Chia, which is causing HDD shortages.Ahem, here's my full reply, part by part:
The way this is written makes it sound like botnets have never existed and that free CI/CD (and similar services offering free CPU cycles) have never been abused. Like, the author is obviously aware of password databreaches and SHA256 hashes, but also asks "what kind of abuse would a CI platform endure?"
Like, the pieces are already in the blogpost. DDoS botnets, password cracking, etc. I can show you tutorials on how to install hashcat or jtr on Google Colab to crack passwords, but I don't know of any tutorials to use it to mine cryptocurrencies. I definitely agree that cryptocurrency mining has increased the magnitude of abuse and that absolutely sucks. But it doesn't weaken the author's point to acknowledge that these services have been subject to abuse since their inception.
Like, this gives the impression that the author is deep in some silicon valley nightmare bubbles. Does the author believe nobody was writing code for money before 2009? Has the author really not seen any open-source projects that aren't related to cryptocurrencies since then? Like, the author goes on to say "Which one are investors more likely to invest in? Hint: it’s the one that’s more profitable," and, yeah, this isn't a new problem either. They then go on to mention the DAO, which implies the author is pretty knowledgeable in this area, and then mentions how "they" forked the blockchain, as if it's something special only a reserved "they" can do.
The conspiratorial "they" continues on later, with this line:
Which is kind of wildly untrue. This point is the most misinformed, it's completely false. Like, I'm literally betting $1000 that the author is wrong here!
Ethereum is the second largest cryptocurrency and it's migrating to proof-of-stake. I'd love to know any reason why it wouldn't. Those with the big money are also willing to bet that, since they are extremely incentivized to move to proof-of-stake.
For starters, Ethereum on PoS is an eco-friendly, deflationary, and all of Ethereum's cool parts get better under PoS. Investors want those improvements to happen. More and more regular non-tech people will be interested in investing once that whole "eco-friendly PoS thing that will never happen" actually happens. You also have to keep in mind that regular people use Venmo and PayPal like it was a bank, and also don't know what FDIC means. Investors are extremely aware of how much money Proof-of-Stake can make them. But this huge profit incentive doesn't even matter, because it is strictly necessary to move to Proof-of-Stake, or it will die.
For context, Ethereum is effectively designed so that it will kill itself if Proof-of-Stake is not used. This is because of the "Ice Age", which makes mining exponentially more difficult over time. Within a few years, it will be impossible to mine new blocks. But there are currently two forks, one with PoW and one with PoS. Almost every new cryptocurrency you hear about is implemented on top of Ethereum, and most of them are running on the PoW fork.
It's not all just speculation and investment either. There are people running actual, useful software services for money on Ethereum, so there are actual software companies who's function entirely depends on Ethereum existing. So, even if you think it's all stupid, Ethereum is definitely going to finish its migration to proof-of-stake.
As a note, Ethereum's migration to PoS isn't a panacea. For starters, anyone can hard-fork and remove the difficulty bomb and keep mining if they want, but they'll be leaving the dApps and the other coins behind. But more realistically, they'll just sell their GPUs or repurpose their mining rigs for some other purpose, probably mining another cryptocurrency. The energy consumption will just be shifted out of Ethereum's hands.
As a final note, the author says "Rumor has it that hard drives are up next."
I think the author is being misleading here as well, because that implies it hasn't already happened yet. "Proof of storage" / "proof of capacity" cryptocurrencies have already existed for many years.EDIT: I believe the author is talking about the Chia coin, which is a proof-of-space coin, which is getting popular for some reason and is causing storage shortages already.