Spyke

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Claude-powered AI coding agent deletes entire company database in 9 seconds — backups zapped, after Cursor tool powered by Anthropic's Claude goes rogue

This isn't an AI story, it's a "completely fucking idiotic sysadmins exist" story.

Treat an AI like the idiot intern without any references you just hired. Gave the idiot intern permission to delete your production database? That's entirely on you, zero sympathy. (Actually, give any developer that power? You get what you deserve.)

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In Asia, the global oil crisis is turning into an everything crisis

If this helps Asia get off its addiction to wrapping absolutely everything in about 5 layers of plastic, there may be an upside here.

(For the uninitiated: if you buy a packet of biscuits in Europe, you'll get a cardboard box, maybe one interior wrap of plastic, and the biscuits. The same packet of biscuits in China will see every two biscuits wrapped in its own sealed plastic bag. Each of those will have a small plastic bag of "oxygen remover" for God knows what reason. The bags will all then be carefully nestled into a thick plastic tray. The whole lot will then get another layer of plastic wrapped around it. Everything is like this there (and most of South East Asia in my experience) - it's genuinely nuts.)

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GrapheneOS refuses to comply with new age verification laws for operating systems — group says it will never require personal information

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Why the ever loving fuck does an init system even need a user database?

Honest to God, if FIFA were giving out a World "Understanding UNIX" Prize, Poettering would be the inaugural, and only, winner. Never in the field of operating systems has one man driven so much enshittification through sheer force of cluelessness coupled with supreme arrogance. And in a world that Steve Ballmer still occupies, that's one hell of an accolade.

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TSA worker says his family is paying the price for him working without pay

The weird thing about this thread is just how many people hate the TSA.

And I'm not suggesting they shouldn't, but - it's weird. I don't hate the guys and girls who work at airport security anywhere else (and I fly a lot, around Europe and Asia.) They're just people doing a job that I regret is necessary, on the whole keeping people safe. Even the ones in China with a battery and cigarette lighter fetish.

What is it about the US that means as soon as someone gets even the remotest sniff of 'power' that they have to turn into a monumental asshole? There has to be something about education, society, organisation structures, whatever that makes the US almost uniquely like the Stanford Prison Experiment on a continental scale.

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In Asia, the global oil crisis is turning into an everything crisis

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They're labelled "oxygen removers", so I rather assume that's what they're for. Dessicant is something else entirely.

I own a property & live part of the year in Thailand, and have worked in China for a decade - I don't need grandma to teach me to suck ants. Amazingly, in all that time I've discovered that a single layer of plastic and a bag clip is, in fact, entirely adequate to keep both humidity and ants out of food.

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Chrome is also turning into an agentic browser with its newest update

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This is a very good point - in books/dramas it helps the exposition to have a character you can relay half the plot details to. Similarly in radio dramas, every conversation between characters starts with saying each others names and a full recap of whatever the subject is... But nobody in the real world does or wants to talk like that.

Real people just say "hey, is that thing fixed yet?", not "hello Chris, you remember yesterday we were discussing the il problem with the Thing, and you proposed Cornfootling it; what happened?"

When I want Alexa to turn on the lights, I want to just say "Alexa, turn on the lights", not have a goddamned debate. And when I want to search for whatever the hell Cornfootling is, I just want to type "Cornfootling" and hit search.

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BYD’s Second-Generation Blade Battery Makes Western EV Tech Look Ancient

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China does not control the vast majority of rare earths because they're only found in China (or even because they're particularly rare, they're not.)

China controls the market because they were the only people who actually bothered to build extraction and refinement capabilities.

If the US invested half the money it puts into "clean coal" or oil and gas extraction into rare earth extraction and processing, it would have its own supplies. But that would be woke, or something.

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Young Russians get to experience Iron Curtain 2.0 under Putin.

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Genuinely, visit Russia. Spend a bit of time in bith the Potemkim cities (Moscow, St Pete) and the 3rd world beyond them (every other Russian city.)

The level of unhinged, blind faith in whatever bullahit is fed to them is off the charts. As far as they are concerned the west has always wanted to destroy Russia and they have always been at war, physically and culturally.

It requires no doublethink or conflicting viewpoint whatsoever to think Russian elections are neither free nor fair, but that the majority of the Russian people are solidly behind what Putin does anyway.

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Joseph Duggar, ex-'19 Kids and Counting' star, accused of molesting a minor

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Honestly, if I thought most homeschooled kids were "learning ... from very knowledgeable people" I might find it less disturbing, but the reality is most of them are learning from religious zealots, conspiracy theorists, or other fruitloops who think going to a proper school will make them catch the gay. It creates a self-perpetuating underclass, and the parents should be locked up for child abuse long before the diddling starts.

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Booking.com under fire as hundreds of complaints lodged with Fair Trading

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You seem to be under the impression that booking.com provides property management services. I'm not aware of them doing any such thing, but if they do them she should absolutely raise a dispute under her contract for those services. A quick scan of their information page for property owners is pretty clear, though, that it's the property owners' responsibility to get insurance if they need it (they even have some partner links for insurance providers.)

Using booking.com to advertise and resell her business does not change the fact that managing that business is entirely on her. If she doesn’t want to put in the minimum effort, or expense (e.g. insurance) required, she should get out of the business of property letting.

You can hate booking.com for many reasons, but "not running my spare property as a hotel for me so I can just sit back and count the cash" isn't really one of them.

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Reddit banned Paul McCartney over phone-free concert photos post in their subreddit

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I got a sitewide warning a couple of months ago for suggesting that Trump's inaugural "board of peace" meeting was the apotheosis of the "you have one bullet..." thought experiment. "After reviewing, we found that you broke Rule 1 because you threatened violence or physical harm." I'll wager Trump's secret service guys were absolutely shitting themselves when they read it, so it's probably for the best they took it down tbf.

On the bright side, it was the kick up the backside that was needed to get me to try Lemmy, and I hardly use Reddit at all now.

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Booking.com under fire as hundreds of complaints lodged with Fair Trading

I hate not to join a pileon, but if the landlady didn't want to deal with the consequences of letting random strangers into her property unsupervised for money, she shouldn't advertise her property for random strangers to occupy for money.

Short term rentals are a business, not a free money machine. Even rent extraction requires slightly more effort than just depositing the cheques - dealing with customers' behaviour is a cost of doing business. If, like most short-term let grifters, she is not capable of handing that responsibly she should get out of it (and good riddance - short term rentals do no good and plenty of harm to society.)

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Pornhub, YouPorn, Redtube, and other content sharing platforms will block new users in the UK starting next week(February 2)

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China's VPN blocking is actually very, very effective, and the vast majority of people don't go around it.

And that's kinda the point - the controls don't have to be 100%, they just have to cover the majority. And for the few that do circumvent - well, that's just one more easy crime for the authorities to charge you with if they ever feel the need.