StopHammoTime | 5 months ago | on: OpenAI's H1 2025: $4.3B in income, $13.5B in loss
StopHammoTime's comments
StopHammoTime | 1 year ago | on: The saddest "Just Ship It" story ever (2020)
StopHammoTime | 1 year ago | on: Auto insurance prices have gone nuts
In Australia, you are very at risk for jail for going over anything above 40km/h which is about 25mph. It’s considered reckless/dangerous driving. Your license would also be suspended for six months. I think we have excessive fines but the US seems to go in the opposite direction.
StopHammoTime | 1 year ago | on: Introducing Kagi Search's New Design
StopHammoTime | 1 year ago | on: Discord to start showing ads in the coming week
StopHammoTime | 1 year ago | on: ASML is threatening to leave the Netherlands
StopHammoTime | 2 years ago | on: French court issues damages award for violation of GPL
Yes someone may teach another person based on their memory, but even if that person still performs that work they still are legally required to license the work.
Yes, if the only thing they were doing was training, sure. But it’s not. They’re training and then presenting the data and given the way LLMs are trained, there is no guarantee a transformation even takes place.
At the end of the day LLMs should be licensed under the current copyright system. Maybe OpenAI need to donate some money to a few politicians for that to change.
StopHammoTime | 2 years ago | on: French court issues damages award for violation of GPL
I'm sure you've heard of covers? Well every cover that is published affords a royalty to (at least) the original authors of both the lyrics and composition. The artist may get some money, depending on how the work was licensed.
StopHammoTime | 2 years ago | on: How to do things if you're not that smart and don't have any talent
StopHammoTime | 2 years ago | on: Did a 1997 merger ruin Boeing?
Edit: in regards to maintenance a lot of airlines are outsourcing maintenance to bigger providers so that’s less of a deal than you’d think as well. Fuel really is one of the largest factors in this and an extra 5 years of expensive gas while waiting for a new plane may be too much for budgets to bear.
StopHammoTime | 2 years ago | on: Two pharmacists figured out that oral phenylephrine doesn't work
StopHammoTime | 2 years ago | on: A Lufthansa A350's frustrating Oakland diversion
A fuel emergency would never be severe enough that they would be forced to land at SFO in this situation. In fact, if they were truly forced to land the pilots would lose their jobs because they left it way too late. Oakland was always a reasonable option.
Finally, fuel emergencies are not actually a standard call. It is a thing that is adhered to in the industry as courtesy. Unless there is a malfunction with the fuel system (which would be a mayday call) then it is mostly avoidable.
StopHammoTime | 2 years ago | on: Ask HN: What apps have you created for your own use?
Do online ATC on VATSIM and hated being unprofessional. Gives you airport names, abbreviations, and helps with some calculations.
Surprisingly annoying to get airport data.
StopHammoTime | 2 years ago | on: If buying isn't owning, piracy isn't stealing
I go to re-listen to it last week and lo-and-behold, it’s not in my library. Even worse, I can’t even PURCHASE it again. It looks like they’ve just black-holed through production in Australia. If I lived in the US I could at least “buy” it again.
I just want to enjoy art and the worst part is it’s not even the artist doing these things. It’s money grubbing distributors. Middle men are actually the worst kind of people in existence.
StopHammoTime | 2 years ago | on: Gemini AI
StopHammoTime | 2 years ago | on: 23andMe confirms hackers stole ancestry data on 6.9M users
1) the large hack of Optus in which about half of the population had their credit card details stolen. 2) the large hack of Medibank in which the details of a large portion of private health insurance customer details were stolen. 3) I applied for a mortgage and found out every 2-bit mortgage broker is emailed 100s if not 1000s of sensitive ID documents every year and they definitely do not go through their email and delete them after the closure of deals. 4) Most companies in Australia only require a name, address, and, birth date to verify identity which is easily found with five minutes of searching most of the time. 5) I set up a pin with Telstra that should have blocked administrative changes on my account for years. One day I called in, got my password ready, and they didn’t ask for it. They just did it anyway. It was entirely futile.
IMO the only way that privacy will ever become respected is if we move the onus for fraud onto the actual victims of fraud: the companies. This is the whole ancient joke about someone’s identity being “stolen”. It wasn’t stolen, your verification procedures ultimately failed as a business and you are trying to divert responsibility to avoid having to suffer a loss. This is one of the reasons I use my credit card exclusively these days - if it used fraudulently I know that I can charge back, and that’s about the only mechanism I can use to truly prevent unauthorised access to my money.
StopHammoTime | 2 years ago | on: GCP Incidents
However, I will say if you are on Google Cloud and you have a positive interaction, make a big deal about someone helping you. Given the rarity it occurs, it’s not a big deal to really go out of your way to reward someone with some emphatic positive feedback. I’ve had four genuinely fantastic experiences and there’s always a message to a TAM that flows soon after. I hope more people like those I interacted with get rewarded and promoted.
StopHammoTime | 2 years ago | on: Shein Files for U.S. IPO
Anecdotally, I have heard that there is three towns where a predominant amount of Shein clothes are made and while people are free to leave, they’re paid in “company bucks” akin to company towns in the late 1800s/early 1900s US.
StopHammoTime | 2 years ago | on: Apple asked Amazon to block rival ads
The law requires explicit knowledge, so Amazon can get away with it.
I don’t agree with it, but lawmakers should be making these changes.
StopHammoTime | 2 years ago | on: A new home and license (AGPL) for Synapse and friends
Yes, they can relicense contributions to paid customers but that’s the case anywhere. People need to make money and that’s okay. The problem is when the publicly facing code is relicensed and a person who has contributed effectively loses the rights to run their own code. This solves that problem as long as that person continues to be a good open source citizen.
The AGPL rocks.
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