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Comment Re:the Battle of the Titans (Score 1) 61

>> What if the white hat AI introduces the vulnerabilities?

Always possible of course but I find that the LLM's are better at writing robust code than most humans. Yesterday I was working to make a basic login page for a web app. After I got it working I asked the AI how I could make it more resistant against hacking and it came up with a long list of improvements. Brute force protection, cookie security, session binding, idle timeout, concurrent session limits, login anomaly detection, etc., etc. Very helpful.

Comment Re:Claude rules (Score 1) 47

It's a hassle to pick and choose from the various models I agree. I'm using the Windsurf IDE and recently they came up with an "adaptive" model picker that supposedly sends your prompt to the best model for the task. I was using it yesterday and got good results, no telling which model or mix of them were doing the work.

Comment the Battle of the Titans (Score 1) 61

"In the last few weeks, Mythos Preview has identified thousands of zero-day vulnerabilities with many classified as critical."

We are moving into a scenario where there's a race for extremely capable white hat AI to identify the existing vulnerabilities and try to plug them, and black hat to find and exploit them. I think this is a good move to try and get the white team ahead of the game. There's a possible apocalypse here.

Comment Claude rules (Score 2) 47

The Claude models are the best by far for coding assistance in my experience. Apparently a lot of other people think so too because Anthropic is getting swamped. They are having to ration out their compute resources and in some cases have raised their fees to 2-3 times more than the lesser competition charges. I'm finding that in order to keep costs down I'm having to use 2nd-tier models for simpler work and revert to Claude for the heavy lifting. A hassle.

Clearly the demand is there. At this point I expect Anthropic is revenue-limited by their infrastructure availability so it makes sense that they recruit the big players to help beef it up.

Submission + - AI can clone open-source software in minutes (techspot.com)

ZipNada writes: Two software researchers recently demonstrated how modern AI tools can reproduce entire open-source projects, creating proprietary versions that appear both functional and legally distinct. The partly-satirical demonstration shows how quickly artificial intelligence can blur long-standing boundaries between coding innovation, copyright law, and the open-source principles that underpin much of the modern internet.

In their presentation, Dylan Ayrey, founder of Truffle Security, and Mike Nolan, a software architect with the UN Development Programme, introduced a tool they call malus.sh. For a small fee, the service can "recreate any open-source project," generating what its website describes as "legally distinct code with corporate-friendly licensing. No attribution. No copyleft. No problems."

Submission + - AMD says it will buy Intel (techspot.com)

ZipNada writes: In a move that feels less like a corporate transaction and more like the final punchline to a 40-year industry rivalry, AMD announced Wednesday that it has agreed to acquire Intel, the company it has spent decades chasing, imitating, undercutting, suing, licensing from, and lately outperforming.

The all-stock transaction, which AMD described as a "once-in-a-generation opportunity to unify x86 innovation," would combine the two companies under a single umbrella just a few years after such an outcome would have sounded ridiculous.

For most of modern computing history, Intel was the empire and AMD the scrappy survivor, the perpetual second source that somehow kept finding ways to stay alive. Now, after a bruising run of manufacturing delays, product stumbles, strategic resets, and a historic reversal in investor confidence, Intel is poised to be absorbed by the smaller company it long treated as a footnote.

Comment Re:TypeScript? (Score 1) 65

There are some significant advantages over Python. JavaScript on Node.js (or Bun in this case) is inherently event-driven. TypeScript gives strong typing on top of that. And apparently Bun can package up an app into a standalone executable, also unlike Python. I'm going to have a look at Bun, seems powerful.

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