Probably yeah. A fireproof safe will be airtight, so the system can only produce as much energy as whatever reagents you put inside.
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Where is “nothing is real, but good luck making use of that information”?
disorderly@lemmy.worldto
Fediverse vs Disinformation@lemmy.dbzer0.com•Workers who fall for ‘corporate bullshit’ may be worse at their jobs, study finds
271·1 day agoLittrell noted the workers who participated in the study all came from highly educated backgrounds in HR, accounting, marketing and finance, had bachelor’s degrees and even PhDs, which shows the findings go beyond simply assessing the intelligence of the study participants.
Actually, I’m not convinced that we’ve managed to eliminate that hypothesis. The only group that gives me pause is accounting.
disorderly@lemmy.worldto
World News@lemmy.world•France will never take part in operations to unblock Hormuz Strait amid hostilities, says MacronEnglish
9·7 days agoIt also says “never”, but yeah, it’s a pretty bland statement when you put the context back in (literally and figuratively).
disorderly@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•CEO Asks ChatGPT How to Void $250 Million Contract, Ignores His Lawyers, Loses Terribly in CourtEnglish
131·7 days agoHoly hell, the fact that those slack messages and that chatbot history ended up in court is mind blowing. I guess we should be grateful that this time, the bad guy and his hamfisted “Project X” got put in the spotlight.
disorderly@lemmy.worldto
Games@lemmy.world•Lutris now being built with Claude AI, developer decides to hide it after backlashEnglish
1·11 days agoYep, you and I are operating in orthogonal spaces. I genuinely envy you.
disorderly@lemmy.worldto
Games@lemmy.world•Lutris now being built with Claude AI, developer decides to hide it after backlashEnglish
2·11 days agoHaha, yeah I use it as well, and like I said it makes drafting the code a lot faster, but it dramatically slows down review and validation of fit for the business purpose.
If I could, I’d put the genie back in the bottle because having ICs dump thousand line MRs on each other and then finding out in gamma that it didn’t actually solve the problem is a ton worse than making a person actually think about what they’re gonna commit for a couple hours. But alas, if we don’t take a first draft with Claude or Gemini agentic tools for every ticket we’ll get PIP’d, so I guess the AI enthusiasts and their sponsors are happy.
disorderly@lemmy.worldto
Games@lemmy.world•Lutris now being built with Claude AI, developer decides to hide it after backlashEnglish
41·11 days agoI think that newer models of Claude are a lot better, but they are still just chatbots and they still just generate words. As anyone in the industry will tell you: typing out the code was never the slow part.
disorderly@lemmy.worldto
Linux@programming.dev•I traced $2 billion in nonprofit grants and 45 states of lobbying records to figure out who's behind the age verification bills
11·11 days agoAttorney-Client Privilege. Sorry, I should have just said it.
For anyone who might have avoided this part of the world, ACP makes communications between you and your counsel inadmissible in court. In big companies, it’s somewhat common to bring lawyers into discussions under the auspices of seeking legal advice, but primarily to ensure that if any artifact from that discussion were to be uncovered by an adversary, it couldn’t be used in a lawsuit.
disorderly@lemmy.worldto
Linux@programming.dev•I traced $2 billion in nonprofit grants and 45 states of lobbying records to figure out who's behind the age verification bills
16·11 days agoThat’s an impressive investigation.
It would be tough to find a better example of why lobbying in the US is fundamentally broken. An entity like Meta has ample funding to break up an operation into distinct cells that do not directly interact in public forums, while tracking the whole process in documents protected by ACP. I think it’s particularly telling that Meta lobbyists are quietly nodding along legislation pushed by “grass roots” activists and that Meta’s new OS just happens to implement the technology exactly as described in the law.
It’s that sort of coordinated effort that the RICO act was drafted specifically to address, but it’s perfectly legal.
disorderly@lemmy.worldto
politics @lemmy.world•Team Trump struggles to spin the worst job numbers since the Great Recession
49·14 days agoThe economy not only shed jobs in February, it also lost jobs in two of the last three months, three of the last five months and five of the last nine months. (During Biden’s term, there were literally zero months in which the economy lost jobs.)
And this is all before the imminent corrections when the AI bubble pops, which will take us from accelerating tumble to free fall. An astounding feat, given what this administration was served up.
disorderly@lemmy.worldto
politics @lemmy.world•The Iran War Shows Why It’s Time for Chuck Schumer to Go
11·18 days agoDescribing Chuck Schumer as “political opposition to the fascists” is a bizarre joke, neighbor.
disorderly@lemmy.worldto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•It might be a good thing for the Internet to get intrinsic resistance to DDoS attacksEnglish
23·18 days agoThis might seem like a very indirect response, and that’s because it is largely a notion I have after a couple years of observing the fediverse. My background is in infrastructure for micro services, which is a powerful source of bias, so take this with a grain of salt.
The fediverse is suffering from major problems caused by homogeneity, data duplication, and lack of meaningful coordination. It is completely unsurprising that it struggles to provide the level of service that most users expect. I’m not saying this to be mean, but because I’ve experienced these same growing pains in commercial settings.
The solution has always been to restructure product services in a way that separates concerns. Most of the big guys will, at a very high level, use an API gateway which handles security + authn, then forward requests to high level product services which in turn reach down to the data layer services (which are often ORMs with huge caches sitting on top of databases). Works great, usually.
The fediverse, from what I’ve seen, does not do this. Everyone sets up largely identical monolithic applications which share messages through the Pubsub protocol. Information is duplicated everywhere, and inter-instance communications are a liability not only in content but even in compute and persistence (you can absolutely get DDOS’d by a noisy neighbor). Individual instances are responsible for their own edge security, compute, and data. It’s just a lot to ask of a single person that wants to host a federated instance.
I think that a healthy federated internet will eventually require highly specialized instances at several layers, and for certain maintainers to thanklessly support the public facing services. One of the most obvious classes of these specialized instances, to me, would be the data layer and catching instances, which exist to ensure that content posted on one instance is backed up and served for other instances. It reduces the strain on public facing instances because they no longer have to host all the content they’ve ever seen, and it also ensures that if a public instance goes down, the content does not disappear with it.
This same principle could be used on “gateway” or “bastion” instances which enforce strict security on behalf of public instances. Public instances would block direct connections while treating requests from the gateway nodes as highly privileged. Each public instance would either find a gateway instance to protect it or handle its own security and inter-instance communications.
This obviously isn’t a complete solution, and it’s a hell of a long way from a technical specification, but my hope is that others who are looking at the weird and wonderful landscape of our new internet are having similar concerns and reaching similar conclusions.
disorderly@lemmy.worldto
Mildly Interesting@lemmy.world•The craziness of women's clothing sizes
3·22 days agoMy read was that waist size is the issue because the manufacturers have made it the issue. The idea you can derive the other dimensions as a function of waist size is clearly an assumption that has a limited range of validity, and there hasn’t been a broader effort to come up with something better.
disorderly@lemmy.worldto
A Boring Dystopia@lemmy.world•Trans people in Kansas are being ordered to surrender their drivers licenses
5·26 days agoIt’s true that this isn’t ex post facto, but in a sane interpretation of the law it would be discrimination against a protected class; a woman who was assigned female at birth grts preferential treatment under the law with respect to a woman who was not.


I assume you mean radio frequencies, and the answer is basically none. A grounded fireproof safe is basically a perfect faraday cage.
EDIT: Ok, I actually have a pedantic answer for this. If you put a microphone on a device inside the safe, you can signal it from outside by sending it vibrations, and you could encode a message in binary and thus technically send it a “digital signal”. If you wanted to be a little more analog you could use Morse code :)