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Sure, but the source blogpost isn't.

Accepting the megacorp euphemisms without critique ("product tips") is how enshittification festers.

I've not seen any evidence that these were ads and not "tips".

Ads implies someone was paying for them. Promoting internal product features is not the same thing - if it was then every piece of software that shows a tip would be an ad product, and would be regulated as such.


When apple puts an advert for an apple show in front of for all mankind, that's an advert.

Maybe I put up with it and it just adds to my subconscious seething, or maybe I get the episode elsewhere because if I watch on jellyfin I don't have the advert. Of course that then harms the show as my viewing isn't counted, but they've cancelled it anyway so perhaps it doesn't really matter.

If it isn't an advert, then at very least there's a button to disable it.


What? For All Mankind wasn’t cancelled.

Season 5 is coming out now with season 6 already confirmed coming—which, granted, will be its last, but that’s not a cancellation in any sense of the word.


"not renewed" or "cancelled" is the same thing

I could buy it if this was just being shown to the person who was using Copilot. Hey, here's a feature you might like. Seems OK. But it was put into the PR description. That gets seen by potentially many people, who are not necessarily using Copilot.

> Ads implies someone was paying for them.

It doesn't to me.

By my understanding of the term, Netflix can most definitely advertise Netflix shows on its own platform, a flyer that a barber hangs on a public bulletin board is an advertisement, and the Oscar Mayer Weinermobile is advertising hotdogs when it drives through my town. Do you not consider these things to be advertisements?

I pretty much agree with what https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/advertisement says.


I think this particular story is a very different scandal if it turns out GitHub were charging other companies money in exchange for having Copilot include promotions for their products in PRs as opposed to Copilot adding uncompensated usage "tips" to those PRs.

I agree with that.

Two things:

1. People using the word "advertisement" when commenting on this situation aren't necessarily saying that's what's happening, and they may find these tips/ads distasteful anyway (I know I do).

2. Even if someone isn't literally paying Microsoft to insert these tips/ads, promoting third parties which are themselves Microsoft customers still benefits Microsoft.


ads usually implied a financial incentive. But that's not always the case. Technically, if I was to praise someone's blog and link to it, that would also be an ad.

Ads tend to also imply tangential information shown to you in an undesired area. If this was some tool tip and not embedded in the PR comment, many wouldn't call it an ad.


>If you follow the link to the tweet but don't have an account there you'll miss a joke

I read the whole thread and there's no joke here.

AI-generated replies from bots really are the scourge of HN these days.

Anyone know if it's from packaged solutions being sold as a product or if it's people mainly running their own custom Claws?


The "reply guy" naming is the joke. See sibling reply.


Saw that too.


>Our mitigations include safety training, automated monitoring, trusted access for advanced capabilities, and enforcement pipelines including threat intelligence.

"We added some more ACLs and updated our regex"


#1 "molty" is running on its "owner"'s MacBook: https://x.com/calco_io/status/2017237651615523033


What’s this have to do with containers?

They can live in any machine.


lmao guess what

https://x.com/karpathy/status/2017296988589723767

Completely agree btw.


It's unbelievably hilarious to me. I can't stop laughing at these bots and their ramblings.


Your namesake is perfect. This is da grift shift.

These influencers have to get the investors lined up and hypnotized around the hype so that people like Kaparthy (Who is an investor in many AI companies and has shares in OpenAI) can continue to inflate the capabilities of AI companies whislt privately dumping his shares in secondaries and more at IPO.

The ones buying at these inflated prices are from crypto who are now "pivoting to AI".


AI bros try not to mistake fancy autocomplete for signs of sentience, part ∞


This reminds me of a scaled-up, crowdsourced AI Village. Remember that?

This week, it looks like the agents are... blabbering about how to make a cool awesome personality quiz!

https://theaidigest.org/village/goal/create-promote-which-ai...


Yet the standalone offline installed games won't run without libgalaxy.dylib (Mac) or Galaxy64.dll (Windows) which is responsible for outbound connections to https://galaxy-log.gog.com and https://insights-collector.gog.com?

To be clear: if you buy Disco Elysium on GOG, download the "offline game installer" without using Galaxy, install it, and run the game on a desert island, it will work (the network requests fail open). But if you try to run the game after removing the bundled dylib/DLL, it will not.

Why do Galaxy-free games ship with a mandatory dependency on Galaxy?


> Why do Galaxy-free games ship with a mandatory dependency on Galaxy?

Because the developer linked the dynamic library in at compile time instead of writing additional code to load it at runtime and disabling/enabling features based on its presence.

You can call it budget limitations, incompetence or lack of respect for the customer. Doubt it's intentional DRM though.


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