[-] blabber6285@sopuli.xyz 15 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

This was definitely a fuckup from Slack but as I've understood it, the "AI training" means that they're able to suggest emoji reactions to messages.

Not sure how to think about this, but here's some additional info from slack: https://slack.engineering/how-we-built-slack-ai-to-be-secure-and-private/

Edit: Just to pick main point from the article:

Slack AI principles to guide us.

  • Customer data never leaves Slack.
  • We do not train large language models (LLMs) on customer data.
  • Slack AI only operates on the data that the user can already see.
  • Slack AI upholds all of Slack’s enterprise-grade security and compliance requirements.
[-] blabber6285@sopuli.xyz 4 points 8 months ago

I think that's rather odd comment. Naturally nobody wants ransomware. And there are good reasons.

Backups may exist, but do they work properly? Or are the backups encrypted too?

How old are the backups? They might be less than a day old. But less than a day might still mean a lot of extra work and financial loss.

There might be a lot of work restoring the backups. You might have a lot of different systems.

In one of the largest ransomware cases in history, Maersk worked for months to get systems back up and running and data up to date. The insurance payout for it was 1,4 billions. Which is at least indicative of the cost.

And Maersk had recent and working backups.

[-] blabber6285@sopuli.xyz 10 points 9 months ago

That's generally a good idea, however, there can be reasons not to do it.

The device could be infected in a way that it won't turn on again.

You might have an isolated management network that allows you to monitor the device and traffic (naturally ripping all cables also disconnects the management network).

And whatnot. But generally I agree.

[-] blabber6285@sopuli.xyz 8 points 9 months ago

Depends. If you're at home with a single endpoint, maybe.

But in cases like the image there's a lot of internal traffic and you'd want to stop the malware spreading internally. There might not even be internet connection at all.

Most serious infections are able to work within isolated internal network. You can stop data breaches by cutting external traffic but if you have ransomware you might want to cut internal connections too.

You might be able to stop the ransomware from triggering on some devices. That of course depends on the type of ransomware and whether it's triggered based on time, external command or something else.

[-] blabber6285@sopuli.xyz 11 points 9 months ago

I'm wondering what was the email usage like in the first place if you can just choose to stop sending to most people.

But to be honest, I've only sent handful of emails from my personal account within the same number of years.

[-] blabber6285@sopuli.xyz 18 points 10 months ago

Yeah, an incorrect cleaning procedure can cause a error that requires maintenance personnel to reset the error. They don't need to do anything else though, it's completely fine to just do the cleaning again. Stuff like that.

[-] blabber6285@sopuli.xyz 5 points 10 months ago

It's probably not an arbitrary explicit limitation just for the sake of it, they're likely using a cheaper component for the port.

[-] blabber6285@sopuli.xyz 4 points 10 months ago

But it does whether you think it should. That's the very reason why all political messaging is forbidden close to voting stations.

[-] blabber6285@sopuli.xyz 6 points 10 months ago

He did say "HOPEFULLY just innocent mistakes..." Which we all should hope whether we think all allegations are true or not.

[-] blabber6285@sopuli.xyz 9 points 11 months ago

There's different kind of "memories" when talking about metals but this is probably not related to that. What I suspect happened is cold fusion in a very clean environment without oxygen (or very low oxygen) where oxidation doesn't happen, allowing the very very small fractures to reattach.

[-] blabber6285@sopuli.xyz 7 points 11 months ago

Yeah and preventing that from happening in space is rather complex task. Especially on parts that grind against each other causing the existing oxidized layer to wear off.

[-] blabber6285@sopuli.xyz 1 points 1 year ago

Yeah thanks for the accurate number. It wasn't as ridiculous as I recalled. Should've checked it first.

Still unreasonably high (checked the Apollo post, he calculated it would be multiple times more than what average reddit user currently brings to table).

The purpose of my comment was to point out that the mentioned 10 million dollars would mean 4 million active users if it's monthly fee.

Theoretically anyone could make their own app with the api and pay the api cost directly.

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blabber6285

joined 1 year ago