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Me too!

Good luck, but I am not sure about the direction.

I mean, for a while, I thought something like Substack (and not Fediverse) could disturb things a little, but I suppose it and many others have already been killed by slop. So, if you do verified identity management, which is good for certain purposes but perhaps not for others, I suppose you should also do decentralized trust management, and with an ability to delete nodes from a personal but federated trust chain. (And feel free to adopt the idea also for science; it would be very much needed.)


Ref.:

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48433267

(T. Cowen has had some similar ideas, I think.)


So can you provide something the "lab" made?

I forget things all the time, and many of them I regret afterwards (e.g., because they were some good ideas, papers, blog posts, code, whatever). Three things come to mind: old-fashioned README files within directories you are working on (whatever you are working on); having local git repositories and committing frequently (i.e., also beyond code); and, for some things, old-school pen and a notebook.

"We thus advocate for calm growth in your vulnerability exposure management teams and processes, rather than a panic-driven narrative."


"Far Out Company is dedicated to unearthing the work of under-appreciated artists of the 1960s and ‘70s counterculture."

For once, we have a business idea with a mission!


Go, GPTZero!

"I hope that this is good news."

Me too, but the issue is more nuanced. Google's bots are already being blocked by some mainstream sites due to the crappy "AI-search" (a.k.a. LLM-summarization), which, of course, is a wet dream for Google and the like. Some are starting to block Google's crawlers also for small personal sites:

https://utcc.utoronto.ca/~cks/space/blog/web/DoYouNeedGoogle...


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