Monthly Archives: February 2021

Most Teen Bullying Occurs Among Peers Climbing the Social Ladder

Source: Hacker News

Article note: ...What kind of garbage-ass self-serving model have the "anti-bullying" folks (who conspicuously always seem to be at very least "socially-aggressive" themselves) been using that this is news?
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Google Workspace for Education storage policy changes

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Uh-oh. I've been RCloning encrypted backups into my academic Google account (Workspaces? Apps? whatever they're branding it this week), I might actually have to pay for my offsite bulk storage if UK starts paying attention to how much storage we use.
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Pfizer and Moderna vaccines prove 92 percent effective with just 1st dose

Source: The Week: Most Recent Home Page Posts

Article note: Oh hell yes, this makes me feel _very_ good about the 1st dose of Pfizer I got this week (In-person teaching put me oddly high on the list, not complaining).

Just one dose of the Moderna and Pfizer two-shot coronavirus vaccines is seemingly nearly as good two.

In a study published Thursday in the New England Journal of Medicine, a pair of Canadian-based researchers suggested an amendment to the determined efficacy of the Pfizer vaccines after just one shot. While Pfizer and BioNTech reported their vaccine was just 52.4 percent effective at preventing infection after the first dose, the researchers noted that this data includes results from within the first two weeks after inoculation, "when immunity would have still been mounting." After two weeks, that efficacy mounted to 92.6 percent, matching the first-dose efficacy of 92.1 percent reported from the Moderna vaccine as well. After two doses, the Pfizer vaccine is 95 percent effective, and Moderna's is 94 percent.

The Canadian-based researchers' interpretations of the Pfizer results led them to suggest in the letter that vaccine distributors delay giving people the second dose. This would let distributors get first doses to more at-risk people instead of leaving them "completely unprotected" — something the researchers called "a matter of national security that, if ignored, will certainly result in thousands of COVID-19–related hospitalizations and deaths this winter in the United States."

Another study from January led Pfizer and BioNTech to say Wednesday that they are unsure if the vaccine will be effective at protecting against the B.1.351 variant first found in South Africa. The study published in the New England Journal of Medicine found the vaccine was still capable of neutralizing the virus within the B.1.351 strain, and that trials haven't shown the variant reduces the vaccine's protection in people. Still, the companies may end up creating a booster shot to ensure the vaccine remains effective against the highly transmissible strain.

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Facebook news ban is “arrogant,” Australia will not be “intimidated,” PM says

Source: Ars Technica

Article note: Man do I hate being in the position of agreeing with something obnoxious Facebook does, but pay-to-link is a big problem for the Internet, governments being coerced to set up protection rackets for entrenched fourth estate entities (basically by and for Rupert Murdoch) is also a big problem for society, and we should vigorously nip that shit in the bud.
News is still very much happening both around the world and in Australia... but you wouldn't know it if you're one of the tens of millions of Australian Facebook users.

Enlarge / News is still very much happening both around the world and in Australia... but you wouldn't know it if you're one of the tens of millions of Australian Facebook users. (credit: Brent Lewin | Bloomberg | Getty Images)

A long-simmering battle between tech firms and the government of Australia became explosive yesterday when Facebook announced that it would block all linking of news publications inside the country. Not only has this change affected Australian and international news publishers, but Facebook's wide net has also caught up governments, nonprofits, and basically anyone else in Australia who posts non-news content to the platform.

Australian lawmakers have been considering a bill that would require Internet platforms such as Google and Facebook ("digital platform corporations") to negotiate in good faith with news outlets ("registered news business corporations") to link to their content. If the outlets and the platforms can't reach a deal on their own, they would have to go to baseball-style arbitration, where a neutral third-party arbitrator would decide whose offer is the better one.

The bill would at first apply to only two companies: Google and Facebook. Both, as you might expect, have expressed consistent opposition to the bill. (Microsoft, operator of remote second-place search engine Bing—which captures between 2 and 3 percent of the market—does not oppose the rules that would apply to its largest competitor.)

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Nvidia announces mining GPUs, cripples hash rate of RTX-3060

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Bahahaha. Nvidia is trying to cripple their drivers to get cryptominers off their gaming line and on to "dedicated" (marked up) parts. Same tier of skeezy as when they altered their driver license to try to force people lured by CUDA dependencies and cheap GPUs for compute onto artificially-differentiated compute parts (I bet this latest crippling will also be a problem for compute users). This is going to have a bunch of motivated hackers reverse engineering in their visibly-shitty drivers and firmware, and it's not going to go well for them.
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Fuzix: Unix on a Raspberry Pi Pico #RaspberryPiPico #Unix @hjalfi

Source: adafruit industries blog

Article note: Fuckin' cool. An only slightly feeble V7 clone on the Pico. Also, I find their notes about the Pico's C SDK very promising - I've been thinking about where I'd like to move UK's intro embedded lab long term and the quality and simplicity of documentation makes the Pico suddenly kind of appealing. We're on Keil in legacy mode which is foul + TI TivaC Cortex M4 right now because there is a good, cheap book for it, major contenders ST CubeIDE + STM32 or TI CCS + TivaC, but maybe I should be looking at the Pico.

David Given blogs about porting Fuzix, a small V7 Unix clone, to the new Raspberry Pi Pico microcontroller:

Working with the Pico was an experience: the documentation is excellent, as is the C SDK. The SDK provides a set of libraries which are thin wrappers around the underlying hardware, making most features utter simplicity to use. Unlike the ESP8266’s libraries, the Pico SDK is unopinionated and doesn’t require you to use any of its features: if you want to talk directly to the hardware, you can (and in fact there’s library support for doing just this).

There are some high-level features like a heap, stdio emulation, multicore primitives, etc which I’m not using, but if you don’t use them you don’t pay for them. For my embedded-systems brain it’s the ideal ratio of functionality to complexity.

The Fuzix port provides:

  • user binaries using up to 64kB of code and data each (this could be expanded, as there’s plenty of spare RAM)
  • up to 15 processes
  • a proper Unix filesystem
  • SD card support, used for both the filesystem and swap space
  • serial console on UART0
  • the full set of Fuzix core binaries work — fsck, Bourne shell, the standard Unix tools, a vi clone, etc, plus some simple games

If you’re looking for the source code, I’m currently upstreaming it piece by piece to the main FUZIX repository. Until that’s done, look in my own fork.

If you just want a binary to flash and try for yourself, here’s one: Raspberry Pi Pico Fuzix binaries

Poorly put-together, bugridden and unsupported Fuzix binaries for the Raspberry Pi Pico. Instructions are enclosed, more or less.

See more in the post here.

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New type of supply-chain attack hit Apple, Microsoft and 33 other companies

Source: Ars Technica

Article note: Oh this is super dumb. Automatic dependency management tools, which are always a clusterfuck, automatically matching malicious packages uploaded in the public namespace over top of internal company-use packages whose names are easily inferred.
New type of supply-chain attack hit Apple, Microsoft and 33 other companies

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images)

Last week, a researcher demonstrated a new supply-chain attack that executed counterfeit code on networks belonging to some of the biggest companies on the planet, Apple, Microsoft, and Tesla included. Now, fellow researchers are peppering the Internet with copycat packages, with more than 150 of them detected so far.

The technique was unveiled last Tuesday by security researcher Alex Birsan. His so-called dependency confusion or namespace confusion attack starts by placing malicious code in an official public repository such as NPM, PyPI, or RubyGems. By giving the submissions the same package name as dependencies used by companies such as Apple, Microsoft, Tesla, and 33 other companies, Birsan was able to get these companies to automatically download and install the counterfeit code.

Automatic pwnage

Dependencies are public code libraries or packages that developers use to add common types of functionality to the software they write. By leveraging the work of thousands of their open source peers, developers are spared the hassle and expense of creating the code themselves. The developer’s code automatically downloads and incorporates the dependency, or any update to it, either from the developer’s local computer or from a public repository.

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Scott Alexander is not in the Gizmodo Media Slack

Source: the ANOVA

Article note: Here's the solid take. This is a case of a media entity using their power-levers to try to convince people to look down on tech bros for their awful myopic superiority complex and ladder-climbing bullshit, instead of looking down on the media for their …awful myopic superiority complex and ladder-climbing bullshit.

Recently, after months of threats and intimidation tactics, the New York Times published a hit piece about Scott Alexander and his blog SlateStarCodex, by something named Cade Metz. You can read Alexander’s response here.

I’ll cut to the chase. The piece is an expression of a constant dynamic in media and the Times in particular: the establishment media believes that it is the world’s noble and benevolent arbiter of truth, and the kind of people who work for the Times are immensely disdainful of and actively hostile to anyone who seeks to inform or persuade the public who does not write for one of a dozen dusty legacy publications and who did not go to one of 20 or so elite colleges. Scott Alexander built up a large and immensely influential readership completely on his own, writing a blog that, whatever its faults, stepped far outside of the narrow and parochial currents that Very Serious Media refuses to leave. This was a threat, a challenge to people like Cade Metz who think that it is their divine right to be the ones to tell the story. So Metz set out to destroy Alexander, with the full backing of the official paper of crossword addicts and columns about bootstraps and dynamism. I’m sure a lot of ink has been spilled about this story, and more will come. Understand: Cade Metz wrote this story because he had to punish Alexander for writing an influential publication with no backing from the important people. Whatever anyone else says, that is the reality.

Metz, in his usual style of casual condescension and utter capitulation to dominant narratives, writes “many in the tech industry… deeply distrusted the mainstream media and generally preferred discussion to take place on their own terms.”

Boy, I wonder why! Perhaps – this is too crazy to contemplate – perhaps it’s because the mainstream media has been a complete and utter failure in its most basic functions for decades, an absolute cesspit of bad reporting, warmongering, deference to power, coverage slanted towards the interests of the rich and powerful, obsession with meaningless cultural trends and complete disinterest in stories of immense importance, a totally collapsed line between editorial and advertising, a greying workforce that knows less and less about the world and which is utterly resistant to learning…. People really hate the media, and they do because the media sucks at its job. Don’t take my word for it! Of all of the industry’s many pathologies, the funniest is its members’ inability to understand why they’re so hated, given that they have done nothing but fail for my entire adulthood. If the industry engaged in self-reflection, they might figure it out. But… they won’t.

For a good example of journalistic failure, look to, well, Cade Metz. As Alexander points out in his response, among other basic acts of dishonesty Metz just directly and unambiguously lies about Alexander and Charles Murray. He says that Alexander has praised Murray, and that Alexander has acknowledged that Murray has promoted the race-and-IQ stuff. (Unlike me, despite what you’re likely to hear on the internet.) This is written in a way designed – designed, now, as this is not at all accidental – to make it seem like what Alexander was agreeing with Charles Murray about was race science. But this is completely untrue. Alexander was agreeing with Murray that telling people to train themselves out of poverty is gross and cruel. (A major theme of my book.) Metz doesn’t care.

As Scott Aaronson says, “The trouble with the NYT piece is not that it makes any false statements but just that it constantly insinuates nefarious beliefs and motives, via strategic word choices and omission of relevant facts that change the emotional coloration of the facts that it does present. I repeatedly muttered to myself, as I read: “dude, you could make anything sound shady with this exact same rhetorical toolkit!””

All Metz had to do was to connect Alexander to Murray through any means necessary, and he knew that this would fool his audience, white Crown Heights residents with BlackLivesMatter signs in the windows of the brownstones they own which are appreciating fast enough to drive countless black people out of the neighborhood. These people aren’t clicking links to investigate the truth; they’re just looking to have their beliefs parroted back to them. What else is a newspaper for?

I guess it’s worth taking a second to address that. I am amazed that this is even a conversation: the New York Times is of course an entirely partisan publication, one which is in utter thrall to the Neera Tanden wing of the Democrat party. It’s the house paper of affluent class-never liberals, the kind of people who give to charity but quietly vote against tax increases in public referendums, the kind of people still will pigeonhole you at a party to insist that they like the Wire more than you do, the kind of people who go from Bowdoin to Teach for America to a year finding themselves by fucking and drugging their way across Echo Park, only to wind up in a Park Slope townhouse that really wasn’t as expensive as you think! and send their kids to private school so that they can concentrate on their careers in UX design and advertising. Those kinds of people. They’re the New York Times. A Ross Douthat column every two weeks can’t change that. Again, it is just baffling to me that some people pretend this is even a question. (Poor Ben Smith has to pretend that it’s a question because, well, his paycheck is signed by the Times. What’s your excuse?)

I try to avoid looking at Media Twitter as much as I can; spending more than a few minutes in that space leaves one needing to decontaminate as if recently exposed to radiation. So I don’t know for sure if this is true. But I’m going to make the easiest bet in the world and say that media Twitter loves Metz’s piece. And they loved it because, again, Alexander is not one of them. He’s not in the New York media social rat race, so he’s not a part of their culture. He’s not on Slack. He doesn’t tell the same tired, shitty jokes that journalists make on Twitter literally from the minute they get up to the minute they go to bed. He’s not performatively filling his feed with only women writers and artists, because he’s just not that interested in cishet men anymore, man. He doesn’t make references to whatever shithouse bar in Nolita media people used to go to after work to snort coke. He doesn’t use Twitter as an outlet to scream his dedication to BIPOC to the world, knowing this will look good on his resume. He’s not a thirty three year old white person who speaks like a Black teenager, like half the journalists on Twitter. And most importantly, he jumped the line. He didn’t get paid $250 a week by Refinery79 for 60 hours of work for two years to climb the latter. He had the audacity to think that he could circumvent the system and challenge the official narratives.

I used to watch the naked social climbing going on, and it was the source of my disgusted fascination with Media Twitter. The fundamental thing that you need to understand about media Twitter is that it is a somewhat grosser, more explicit version of what media socializing is in real life: an endless, white-knuckled effort in pure careerism and influence trading. You ever see someone in the media announce that they’re changing jobs on Twitter? It is the weirdest fucking thing I’ve ever seen. I guess I understand the need to announce your career changes, but why do people always respond with absurd hyperbole on Twitter? “You are the greatest and best person in the world!” You don’t have their email address? You can’t text your congratulations? If you aren’t close enough to the person to do that, why are you congratulating them at all? And don’t even get me started on launching an independent tweet of your own (being sure to tag them, of course). DM them with your sincere happiness for them! I guarantee it’ll mean more. Do people who work at Geico do this shit?

REBECCA: I’d like to announce that I’m transferring to the motorcycle division.
JENNIFER: (standing up, loudly) REBECCA IS THE MOST AMAZING HUMAN I HAVE EVER ENCOUNTERED. OUR LOSS IS THE MOTORCYCLE DIVISION’S GAIN.

It’s a culture that’s full of bizarre rituals that only make sense if you understand that none of it is sincere, that all of it is motivated by the desire for social and professional gain.

You have to understand: most writers are losers, or at least, they secretly think of themselves as losers. They were losers in high school and never got over it and were surprised to learn that they couldn’t get their novel about Facing Adulthood with My Multiracial Friends in Bushwick published and so didn’t get the literary celebrity they felt they deserved. So they dive into the media ecosystem where they are delighted to find exactly what they were looking for: a new high school, a replacement for the one where they were a fucking loser, where this time they’ll be the quarterback, they’ll be the head cheerleader. And so they get up every morning and jockey for rank. They horse trade. They seek favor. They amplify work they don’t really respect because the person who wrote it is more popular or successful than them or both. They pretend that terrible, terrible jokes told by terminally unfunny people are entertaining, because they know the other person will reciprocate.

Anyone with the audacity to write from outside of that world is a target.

You will have noticed an explosion in the use of the terms “conspiracy theory” and “misinformation” lately. Ostensibly a response to the pathetic rump that is QAnon, this is the establishment media grasping at power nakedly. If you haven’t rode the Q train lately and you aren’t on Slack and you don’t tweet incessantly about how fucking deep I May Destroy You is, if you don’t participate in media rituals, if you don’t have a blue checkmark, you’re probably writing misinformation. You may have noticed that many people now cast SubStack as a hive of the alt-right and conspiracy theorists, despite the incredible ideological diversity of the platform. SubStack is a threat to the hegemony of establishment media, and so it must be politically toxic. Joe Rogan is reviled not because he and his guests say some stupid shit – and they do – but because he is immensely popular outside of the official channels, he is decidedly not part of the culture of media or overachiever culture in general, and his show is massively more successful than their terrible podcasts.

A piece like this could never make a difference, and not just because I’m a lonely voice on a lowly WordPress. Metz will never have to consider that what he’s done is fundamentally dishonest and utterly lacking in integrity (to say nothing of prose style, because Jesus, that man cannot write), because he writes for the fucking New York Times, dude! People at the Times are so stuffed with self-regard and self-congratulation for working at the paper that lied us into the Iraq War that they can’t engage in genuine self-inquiry. That’s why people fight so hard for those jobs, after all. Writing for one of these places means you never have to say “I’m sorry.” I’m sure Metz will land a book deal where he gets to repeat his utterly dishonest horseshit.

And Media Twitter, forget it. Again: Alexander is an outsider. His readers don’t pay the Times for access to their shitty recipes. He’s probably never heard of Clubhouse. Unlike everyone on Media Twitter, he’s got a real job. He’s a lost cause. They will always hate him because he’s indifferent to climbing their rancid social hierarchy, the thing they care about the most in the whole world.

I hate Silicon Valley, significantly more than the average member of the media who is critical of it, and would enjoy it if all the individual companies burn to the ground. I disagree with much of what Alexander publishes; in fact he has emailed me in the past to ask why I’m so mean. And since it’s 2021, people will assume that this post is a declaration of allegiance to a particular cultural group, as there is nothing but culture war, but I am not a part of that world and no one within it would think I was. Rationalism is almost totally contrary to my philosophy and ethic of the world. I don’t think rationality exists. I don’t fuck with the libertarianism and techno triumphalism endemic to that space. I believe in human failure above all else. We will not build utopia with formal logic because the world is broken and we are broken within it.

But as many problems I have with them, none of it matches my contempt for the media, for The New York Times, and for Cade Metz. Some people with similar politics to mine lament the possibility of the NYT folding. This is bizarre even if you think the Times has value; its digital subscription business is booming and it is in vastly better financial shape than many publications that have virtues they don’t, such as intellectual integrity, writers who are thoughtful and talented rather than self-obsessed Ivy League automatons driven by naked ambition, and a willingness to say things their readers don’t want to hear. Personally, I don’t. Think the Times has value, that is. It’s a mouthpiece of the very worst parts of the Democratic party whose reporting is immeasurably worse than in my youth, which folds at the slightest ripple of disapproval on Twitter and which has the audacity to cover itself in shit-eating, self-impressed artificial gravitas despite somehow failing even worse than the governments it covers. When the New York Times dies it will be a profoundly positive day for journalism and for all of us. Let a thousand new flowers bloom.

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Statement on New York Times Article

Source: Hacker News

Article note: Between the Donald G. McNeil Jr ouster and subsequent gaslighting, and the whole slate-star codex saga, it's getting real hard make the case that one shouldn't assume everything coming out of the NYT is ideology-over-facts garbage. And it is _not_ a good time for nominally-respectable media outlets to be getting in the mud with the qtards.
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Supermicro spy chips, the sequel: It really, really happened, and with bad BIOS and more, insists Bloomberg

Source: The Register

Article note: Shit, Bloomberg is doubling down on their claims about the whole Supermicro hardware implant thing.

Server maker says latest article is 'a mishmash of disparate allegations'

Following up on a disputed 2018 claim in its BusinessWeek publication that tiny spy chips were found on Supermicro server motherboards in 2015, Bloomberg on Friday doubled down by asserting that Supermicro's products were targeted by Chinese operatives for over a decade, that US intelligence officials have been aware of this, and that authorities kept this information quiet while crafting defenses in order to study the attack.…

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