Arthur Besse
cultural reviewer and dabbler in stylistic premonitions
- 987 Posts
- 1.34K Comments
Arthur Besse@lemmy.mlto
Technology@beehaw.org•Engineer proves that Kohler’s smart toilet cameras aren’t very privateEnglish
6·3 hours ago
Arthur Besse@lemmy.mlOPto
Technology@lemmy.ml•EU's Top Court Just Made It Impossible to Run a User-Generated Platform LegallyEnglish
31·18 hours agoNot really. The decision only states that a service that allows to publish advertisements with personal information must review these
Did you post this after reading only the beginning of the article? Because, around the middle of it, the author foresees and responds to your comment:
Some people have said that this ruling isn’t so bad, because the ruling is about advertisements and because it’s talking about “sensitive personal data.” But it’s difficult to see how either of those things limit this ruling at all.
There’s nothing inherently in the law or the ruling that limits its conclusions to “advertisements.” The same underlying factors would apply to any third party content on any website that is subject to the GDPR.
As for the “sensitive personal data” part, that makes little difference because sites will have to scan all content before anything is posted to guarantee no “sensitive personal data” is included and then accurately determine what a court might later deem to be such sensitive personal data. That means it’s highly likely that any website that tries to comply under this ruling will block a ton of content on the off chance that maybe that content will be deemed sensitive.
Here are some relevant parts of what the court actually wrote:
67 In the present case, it is apparent from the order for reference that Russmedia publishes advertisements on its online marketplace for its own commercial purposes. In that regard, the general terms and conditions of use of that marketplace give Russmedia considerable freedom to exploit the information published on that marketplace. In particular, according to the information provided by the referring court, Russmedia reserves the right to use published content, distribute it, transmit it, reproduce it, modify it, translate it, transfer it to partners and remove it at any time, without the need for any ‘valid’ reason for so doing. Russmedia therefore publishes the personal data contained in the advertisements not on behalf of the user advertisers, or not solely on their behalf, but processes and can exploit those data for its own advertising and commercial purposes.
68 Consequently, it must be held that Russmedia exerted influence, for its own purposes, over the publication on the internet of the personal data of the applicant in the main proceedings and therefore participated in the determination of the purposes of that publication and thus of the processing at issue.
It seems to me that the fact that the nature of the content was itself advertising is not the relevant thing here, but rather the fact that the website had a commercial purpose is. So, maybe this will only apply to websites operated for commercial purposes? 🤔
(I am not a lawyer…)
A company that publishes ads for sexual services without getting confirmation of consent is a risk for the society and this business model should not be allowed.
Is there something I missed which indicates that the sexual nature of the advertisement was a factor in the court’s decision?
Arthur Besse@lemmy.mlto
Showerthoughts@lemmy.world•I hate how inescapable politics are on Lemmy, but at least nobody's constantly asking how blind people wipe their butt or pick up their dog's poop then completely ignoring me when I try to answer.English
21·20 hours agoDid you miss that OP mentioned they’re blind?
Here is that image you posted, but with manually-written alt text added.
(I don’t usually do this when adding alt tags but in this case I also added the same text as a title/tooltip to make it also easy to read for users without a screen reader. Apologies to screen reader users that this probably causes you to hear the description twice.)

Arthur Besse@lemmy.mlto
You Should Know@lemmy.world•YSK about Project 100,000, when the US conscripted people with mental disabilities to be used as cannon fodder in Vietnam, suffering triple the casualties of other soldiersEnglish
718·23 hours agosee also: Conscription of people with disabilities. It’s ongoing in present-day Ukraine.
Arthur Besse@lemmy.mlto
Mildly Infuriating@lemmy.world•Samsung smart fridges have started displaying adsEnglish
31·23 hours ago
Arthur Besse@lemmy.mlto
Not The Onion@lemmy.world•Hillary Clinton Says Young Americans Are Pro-Palestine Because They Watch ‘Totally Made Up’ Videos of Gaza HorrorsEnglish
291·1 day agoPhew! I am extremely relieved to find out those videos are fake.
It’s pretty fucked up of TikTok to have tricked us like that, but I’m sure under Larry Ellison’s new leadership they’ll sort things out.
Arthur Besse@lemmy.mlto
Linux Mint@lemmy.ml•[SOLVED] How can i make the terminal continually print its output to a file?English
111·3 days agoprogramname >>my_output.txt 2>>my_errors.txtThis will run
programname(replace that with name of the program you actually want to run) and append its standard output and standard error to the filesmy_output.txtandmy_errors.txt(those filenames are arbitrary, you can call them whatever you want).If you use
instead of>it will overwrite the specified files each time you run it again, instead of appending to them if they already exist as>does. In either case the files will be created if they do not exist.You can read more about redirecting I/O in UNIX shells here.
Arthur Besse@lemmy.mlto
Showerthoughts@lemmy.world•Do people know what the Streisand effect was about?English
101·3 days agoit was about this photograph

Of course I went to the wikipedia article to get a link the actual image to post here, but, to answer your question: yes I did in fact remember what the photo looks like without looking it up.
I’d forgotten that the term was coined by Mike Masnick, though.
your commitment to the bit is truly laudable 🤣
how about we just try it first
😭
I looked it up before posting to make sure it wasn’t AI.
Thank you for making an effort to avoid posting slop :)
But why not include a link to the source?
It’s one of a series of art installations by an artist in Bucharest.
“The seemingly whimsical project has a darker meaning”
It’s actually in Milan, but in reference to people living in the sewers of Bucharest.
when this is over […] we can finally go back

isn’t your post title also?
Yeah true, but I’m really proud of the work my team does and very invested in it, so will always come to it’s defence when people say AI in general is bad, even if they probably mean genAI
It’s not just companies pushing “AI” hype that are dishonest, the term itself is: artificial neural networks today simply do not meet reasonable definitions of intelligent and they won’t anytime soon.
Cheers to you for doing useful work, but why not call it something more accurate like computer vision or medical image computing?
spoiler
i guess maybe because calling things “AI” gets them funded? 😭
not the first time OP is raising questions like this 🤔
Arthur Besse@lemmy.mlto
Technology@lemmy.world•Israel’s IDF Bans Android Phones—iPhones Now ‘Mandatory’English
3·4 days agoI think you misunderstood me
Go ahead and post the same link for Google job listings. I’ll wait.
My comment was in response to your comments (bolded below) in this thread:
I was already thinking of getting a Linux phone next, this is helping to seal the deal. Fuck Apple the genocide enablers.
please do explain how Apple is doing anything here. If Israel wants to provide their military with iPhones they’re going to no matter what Apple does.
They don’t have to do business with/in Israel.
That still will not stop a nation state (especially Israel) from getting their hands on Apple devices.
My point was not to say that Google is better than Apple here - in fact, unlike Apple (as far as I know), Google has actually built AI tools specifically tailored for Israel’s genocidal business requirements.
My point is that if Apple wanted to boycott a country (which in the case of Israel they obviously don’t, which job listings at their R&D centers are just one of many points of evidence of) it would actually make it difficult-to-impossible for any substantial part of the boycotted country’s government to rely on using iPhones.
(Unlike Android derivatives which can easily be used without direct reliance on Google’s services…)
As an aside, while I would not use iOS (due to it being proprietary), it is hard to dispute that (for most adversaries, at least) compromising it is generally much more expensive/difficult/unlikely than Android. So, given that Apple is very friendly to them, the IDF’s policy decision to use iPhones makes sense.
Arthur Besse@lemmy.mlto
Technology@lemmy.world•Israel’s IDF Bans Android Phones—iPhones Now ‘Mandatory’English
71·4 days agoPhysically obtaining the devices is insufficient; they need ongoing software updates and other network services too.
The IDF could/would absolutely not be doing this if they did not trust that Apple is a very committed partner.
You can also observe from Apple’s job listings that they are.































