peter_vukovic | 7 months ago
peter_vukovic's comments
peter_vukovic | 8 months ago
peter_vukovic | 8 months ago
It would not. I said civilization "extracts resources, generates waste and disrupts ecosystems". A sponge does not disrupt its ecosystem. In fact, it keeps it alive.
> Non-native species often disrupt ecosystems when introduced somewhere new.
And how does this happen exactly? Non-native species do not just walk around - you need humans and civilization to move them around, and create exactly these kinds of issues.
peter_vukovic | 8 months ago
peter_vukovic | 8 months ago
All civilizations including ours have been doing it this way, so you can argue it is a part of the civilization. It’s a comforting fiction that humanity can fundamentally change its character, but the history proves otherwise.
peter_vukovic | 8 months ago
They can also be clean. Look at Earth. Don't see an argument here. We are discussing whether civilization pollutes or not, not whether planets are inherently habitable or inhibitable.
> We have seen it is possible.
Where have we seen it possible?
peter_vukovic | 8 months ago
peter_vukovic | 8 months ago
There is absolutely nothing special about beef. We could replace beef with palm oil, lithium, air travel, or even data centers. The same system logic applies: convert energy and resources into power, growth, and order, while displacing entropy elsewhere.
A clean planet is a planet without civilization. This is a factual observation, not nihilism.
peter_vukovic | 1 year ago
Does that mean some vendors will be treated unfairly? Of course.
Does it mean Apple users will remain happy? Absolutely.
If there is one OS that is anti-tinkering by design it is iOS, and yet people keep criticizing this intentional design decision that forms a large part of Apple’s moat.
peter_vukovic | 1 year ago | on: Our interfaces have lost their senses
peter_vukovic | 1 year ago | on: Founder Mode
The modes don't exist. You either figure out how to effectively manage the company in front of you, or you don't.
peter_vukovic | 1 year ago | on: Language is primarily a tool for communication rather than thought [pdf]
Our thoughts and ideas come from an unknown source. We might call it intuition, but scientifically speaking, it remains a black box.
Lethologica - a temporary inability to remember a particular word or name - is one evidence of this. You can have a fully formed thought in your mind, but be unable to express it with words.
peter_vukovic | 1 year ago | on: Meta Has Created a Way to Watermark AI-Generated Speech
The success of generative AI depends on producing human-like content, and the models are only improving. This means the signal used to detect the AI will only grow weaker, causing detection technology to fail more often, get more expensive, and end up with diminishing returns.
From a cost and accuracy perspective, Twitter's community notes system is a far superior solution, albeit a low-tech one.
What we need to do is regulate watermarking at all levels of the content pipeline: production, editing, and reproduction.
This involves prescribing mandatory watermarks for AI tools, ensuring they cannot be removed by digital editing software (and making it illegal to do so), and finally, ensuring all software dealing with the production, editing, or reproduction of content must display the watermark information to the users.
In practical terms, this means that if you get a video produced by SORA, it will have a watermark. If you use it in Adobe Premiere, Movie Maker, or another video editing tool, you will see but won't be able to remove the watermark. If you add filters, the tool might add a piece of history to the video clip indicating you made an edit. When you output a final video file, the watermark in your clip is preserved and displayed to anyone watching your video, including any editing notes added by your tool.
This is a tall order, but achievable.
It is not bulletproof by any means, and someone would inevitably find a way to crack the technology and remove the watermark.
But this happens in software all the time - the goal isn't to make the technology impossible to crack but to make it incredibly hard to do so, which protects the large majority of parties involved.
peter_vukovic | 2 years ago
peter_vukovic | 2 years ago | on: JavaScript Bloat in 2024
peter_vukovic | 2 years ago | on: Show HN: AboutIdeasNow – search /about, /ideas, /now pages of 7k+ personal sites
peter_vukovic | 5 years ago
peter_vukovic | 6 years ago | on: Clear is better than clever
peter_vukovic | 7 years ago
peter_vukovic | 7 years ago | on: The last thing libraries need is Silicon Valley “disruption.”