I agree, those ARE annoying things. But overall functionality is pretty solid IMO.
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Why? My experience is the opposite.
Llewellyn@lemm.eeto Technology@lemmy.world•The Best Use of AI Ever: A 'Grandma' Built To Waste Telescammers’ Time - DecryptEnglish0·6 months agoThere are on premise LLMs
Llewellyn@lemm.eeto Technology@lemmy.world•AI-generated poetry is indistinguishable from human-written poetry and is rated more favorably - Scientific ReportsEnglish0·6 months agoRhyming is a mnemonic device
Rhyming has other purposes: creation of additional sonic rhythm and restricting possibilities for making matter more distinct and interesting (as rules do for any game).
Isn’t that the point of capitalism?
I mean, when you need to operate chats via folder structure, wouldn’t it make Оutlook out of it?
Wouldn’t the folder structure kind of defeat the purpose of the messenger vs mail?
with absolutely no way to organize it, categorize it, order it, or in any way manage it other than deleting history
But you can pin any chat and you can reorder any pinned chat (and maybe even non-pinned ones - I haven’t checked).
I think not. The problem isn’t in service, the problem is in people.
Llewellyn@lemm.eeto Technology@lemmy.world•Bitwarden switches password manager and SDK to GPL3English0·6 months agobut no, everyone seemed to jump to conclusions
And I’m certain that it has served as the catalyst for the bitwarden decision.
Llewellyn@lemm.eeto Technology@lemmy.world•Bitwarden Makes Change To Address Recent Open-Source ConcernsEnglish0·7 months agoKeepass could have backdoors too. The difference is: authors of those backdoors are not from the same company, which I use as cloud storage.
Llewellyn@lemm.eeto Technology@lemmy.world•Bitwarden Makes Change To Address Recent Open-Source ConcernsEnglish0·7 months agoI find risk slightly bigger when you encrypt your private data with the product of the company and store that encrypted data on servers of the same company.
Why: because if they have some backdoor now or plans to introduce it in future, they have all the time in the world to apply that backdoor to your data. Without you knowing it.
Llewellyn@lemm.eeto Technology@lemmy.world•Bitwarden Makes Change To Address Recent Open-Source ConcernsEnglish0·7 months agoThat different FOSS client stores your data on their company’s server. It’s an important factor, IMO.
Llewellyn@lemm.eeto Technology@lemmy.world•Bitwarden Makes Change To Address Recent Open-Source ConcernsEnglish0·7 months agoIf it was backdoored, many people would be calling that out.
In theory. And not necessarily soon. Don’t forget the context of this thread: we compare bitwarden with keepass, which does not offer to you your password base on their server side.
Llewellyn@lemm.eeto Technology@lemmy.world•Researchers say an AI-powered transcription tool used in hospitals invents things no one ever saidEnglish0·7 months agoI have an even better idea: make tool creators and / or CEO of the company, using the tool, liable for all tool’s mistakes and hallucinations.
Llewellyn@lemm.eeto Technology@lemmy.world•Researchers say an AI-powered transcription tool used in hospitals invents things no one ever saidEnglish0·7 months agoWhich has the same concept as the LLM under the hood, hasn’t it?
Llewellyn@lemm.eeto Technology@lemmy.world•Bitwarden Makes Change To Address Recent Open-Source ConcernsEnglish0·7 months agoThey created the client. In theory, they can have some backdoors. And since you store your files on their side, risk is greater, imo
Llewellyn@lemm.eeto Technology@lemmy.world•Bitwarden Makes Change To Address Recent Open-Source ConcernsEnglish0·7 months agoencrypted is the key word
Llewellyn@lemm.eeto Technology@lemmy.world•Linus Torvalds affirms expulsion of Russian maintainersEnglish0·7 months agoPartially agree: money by itself do not maintain Linux. You need a man - willing and competent one.
We’ll see, whether empty positions would be filled or not.
Half Life 3