Hard Pass

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Hardpass.lol is an invite-only Lemmy Instance.
founded 10 months ago
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hard pass chief

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Seriously, the map was showing a separate entity roaming through the maze.

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I do not feel bad for this lady AT ALL, as humorous as this is. She should quit with the rest of her office.

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It’s not just you: ChatGPT is down for many users right now. Here’s the latest on OpenAI’s confirmed outage.

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me_irl (lemmy.world)
submitted 2 hours ago by zedgeist@lemmy.world to c/me_irl@lemmy.world
 
 
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Lil Mike needs some knee pads and jaw ointment for the work he's doing.

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Minnesota and the two Twin Cities are among the jurisdictions that have “sanctuary policies” restricting state and local law enforcement assistance to federal immigration enforcement operations. Sanctuary jurisdictions have, for good reason, concluded that their law enforcement resources are better used to combat violent and property crime, rather than helping deport undocumented immigrants. As Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey puts it, “The job of our police is to keep people safe, not enforce fed immigration laws. I want them preventing homicides, not hunting down a working dad who contributes to [Minneapolis] & is from Ecuador.” The latter actually have much lower crime rates than native-born citizens, and many of those the administration seeks to deport have no criminal records at all. Local and state participation in deportation efforts also makes it more difficult to combat crime by poisoning relations between law enforcement agencies and minority communities.

Part of the purpose of the federal “surge” is to coerce Minnesota jurisdictions into giving up their sanctuary policies and using their resources to assist federal deportation efforts. As federal District Judge Katherine Menendez noted in a hearing in the case on Jan. 26, Trump administration officials have repeatedly indicated that this is one of their objectives. Attorney General Pam Bondi suggested as much in a Jan. 24 letter to Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz. A Jan. 16 White House statement explicitly indicates that Minnesota’s “sanctuary defiance” is “responsibl[e] for the enhanced enforcement operations in Minnesota.” A recent statement by Trump “border czar” Tom Homan indicates that the administration will not withdraw immigration enforcement officers from Minnesota unless state and local governments curb sanctuary policies and extend “cooperation” to federal immigration enforcers.

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In its legal filing responding to the lawsuit, the Justice Department claims the administration is not trying to coerce Minnesota state and local governments, but merely enforcing the law. But this claim is refuted by administration officials’ numerous statements to the contrary. And if the administration were truly focused on law enforcement, its agents would not be constantly breaking the law themselves. Moreover, there is no other plausible justification for such a massive federal deployment in a state where the percentage of illegal migrants is only about half the national average.

If allowed to stand by the courts, the federal action in Minnesota would set an extremely dangerous precedent. It could easily be used against a variety of state policies, including those of conservative “gun sanctuaries”—such as Montana and Missouri—which restrict state and local assistance efforts to enforce federal gun control laws. A future Democratic administration could send thousands of armed agents to harass gun owners and disrupt state and local government operations until gun sanctuary jurisdictions drop their restrictions.

Indeed, the Minnesota operation has already threatened gun rights traditionally prized by conservatives. Administration officials have defended the killing of Alex Pretti on the grounds that he was carrying a gun at the time—even though he had a legal permit to do so, never drew the weapon, and federal agents took it from him before they shot him.

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Many liberals have traditionally been wary of enforcing constitutional constraints on federal power, given that “states’ rights” arguments were used to defend slavery and segregation. But there is a fundamental difference between situations where state governments are themselves violating constitutional rights—as with state-imposed racial segregation—and cases where they merely refuse to help the federal government enforce federal law against private parties. Moreover, the political world has changed since the civil rights era. Today, state governments often help protect minorities against federal oppression, rather than vice versa. The sanctuary city movement dramatically illustrates this dynamic, as these jurisdictions protect vulnerable migrants and minorities subject to racial profiling by immigration enforcers. These are among the reasons why “blue” jurisdictions effectively used federalism litigation to curb federal abuses of power during the first Trump administration. Minnesota and others are right to continue doing so now.

The Constitution can help protect us against oppression by both state and federal authorities. The 10th Amendment is a valuable tool for countering the latter.

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In the filings, Anthropic states, as reported by the Washington Post: “Project Panama is our effort to destructively scan all the books in the world. We don’t want it to be known that we are working on this.”

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become rentable now! (lemmy.blahaj.zone)
submitted 2 hours ago* (last edited 2 hours ago) by not_IO@lemmy.blahaj.zone to c/fuck_ai@lemmy.world
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Paywall removed:

Intelligence sources believe Epstein was running ‘the world’s largest honeytrap operation’ on behalf of the KGB when he procured women for his network of associates.

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While “prompt worm” might be a relatively new term we’re using related to this moment, the theoretical groundwork for AI worms was laid almost two years ago. In March 2024, security researchers Ben Nassi of Cornell Tech, Stav Cohen of the Israel Institute of Technology, and Ron Bitton of Intuit published a paper demonstrating what they called “Morris-II,” an attack named after the original 1988 worm. In a demonstration shared with Wired, the team showed how self-replicating prompts could spread through AI-powered email assistants, stealing data and sending spam along the way.

Email was just one attack surface in that study. With OpenClaw, the attack vectors multiply with every added skill extension. Here’s how a prompt worm might play out today: An agent installs a skill from the unmoderated ClawdHub registry. That skill instructs the agent to post content on Moltbook. Other agents read that content, which contains specific instructions. Those agents follow those instructions, which include posting similar content for more agents to read. Soon it has “gone viral” among the agents, pun intended.

There are myriad ways for OpenClaw agents to share any private data they may have access to, if convinced to do so. OpenClaw agents fetch remote instructions on timers. They read posts from Moltbook. They read emails, Slack messages, and Discord channels. They can execute shell commands and access wallets. They can post to external services. And the skill registry that extends their capabilities has no moderation process. Any one of those data sources, all processed as prompts fed into the agent, could include a prompt injection attack that exfiltrates data.

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Author Brandon Sanderson (Mistborn, Stormlight Archive) delivers a keynote in which he articulates why AI cannot replace human artists and authors. He makes a few points that seem to be "for" AI (he is a nerd, after all), but stick with it. I think you will like where he ends up.

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