LonelyNematocyst

joined 2 years ago
[–] LonelyNematocyst 14 points 2 weeks ago (10 children)

That's just equivalent to UBI, isn't it? If you pay out UBI and get the money for it from taxes, then there's an income level below which people net gain money and above which people net lose money.

[–] LonelyNematocyst 6 points 2 weeks ago

I stared on this blurry screen for way too long trying to read the repo name, before realizing this is, in fact, Matrix documentation.

[–] LonelyNematocyst 37 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

Source. I found it in about 2 minutes. I would say "OP should have done the same instead of reposting this" but actually I can't find this image anywhere and it may be an original screenshot.

Anyway, here's the letter:

[–] LonelyNematocyst 1 points 2 weeks ago

If you offer someone an algorithm that is impossible to break in a trillion, trillion years, and another algorithm that is in principle impossible to break, but the former algorithm is twice as efficient, then every company on the entirety of planet earth will choose the former. Some companies who pay a lot of money for bandwidth, maybe. "Any company"? Not a chance. Internet is cheap and companies routinely waste money in much more frivolous ways. And for stuff which sells on its security, e.g. messengers like Signal, the advertising value of "our encryption is mathematically unbreakable" would be well worth it. And plenty of individual nerds would opt into it just out of principle, being fully willing to cut their bandwidth in half for fuzzy feelings. Not even to mention military applications. You don't see such things in reality, because this is, unless I misunderstand something truly massive, impossible. You can't do unbreakable encryption over the network because you can't securely share the pad key. Yet, even in this time before people knew DHKE could be potentially broken by quantum computers, nobody used DHKE to exchange keys for one-time pads. Well yes, because that'd be incorrect - by sharing one-time-pad keys with DHKE you're reducing the security to that of DHKE, so you might as well drop the one-time-pad part and use an ordinary encryption algorithm instead.

[–] LonelyNematocyst 1 points 2 weeks ago

I saw several variations on this exact meme over the last days, and it is so insanely idiotic I'm halfway to thinking it's some sort of psy-op. Personally, I like shitting on conservatives as much as the other guy, and... do I really need to explain that one can't simultaneously talk about Haha How Dumb Those Guys and also call yourself open-minded? The moment you do the former you have given up on the latter.

[–] LonelyNematocyst 1 points 3 weeks ago (2 children)

This is a rather reductive view of quantum cryptography. The two most common applications of it I hear about is the development of encryption algorithms resistant to being broken on quantum computers (the way, say, Shur's algorithm is known to break RSA) and techniques like quantum key distribution. Both of these are real problems that don't become meaningless just because one-time pads exist - you need to somehow securely distribute the keys for one-time-pad encryption. That's why one-time pads aren't used everywhere ("it would cut the whole internet bandwidth in half overnight" would not have been a sufficient reason - that'd be a tiny price to pay for unbreakable encryption, if it actually worked).

[–] LonelyNematocyst 2 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

Consider also getting Simple Tab Groups. You can basically instantly send a bunch of tabs to a "group", which is like bookmarks except they can also be opened/closed all at once in a new window. Very handy, you can open 50 tabs researching something, close them all, then instantly reopen them when coming back to the research.

[–] LonelyNematocyst 2 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Does it have to be Chrome, or just e.g. Chromium is fine?

[–] LonelyNematocyst 1 points 2 months ago

There's stuff like Searxng or whoogle, but these aren't "real" search engines, merely "search aggregators" - they relay requests to a bunch of actual search engines, like bing or google, and aggregate the results. That's why they don't require tons of compute and scraping, and also why they often fail to work (since the search engines in question don't like or allow this). I believe it's not feasible to run a "real" search engine alone or even as a small group of people - according to this comment you need a powerful server with terabytes* of drive, hundreds of gigabytes of RAM and a lot of compute - and all of this will just let you crawl some top domains, nowhere near a good chunk of the internet.

*which sounds low actually, I would have expected more for this

[–] LonelyNematocyst 4 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago) (1 children)

On reddit fitgirls site is never mentioned in full for good reason.

That's just false. There's a direct link in the r/piracy megathread.

[–] LonelyNematocyst 1 points 8 months ago

That's a problem solved by libreddit/redlib.

[–] LonelyNematocyst 2 points 8 months ago

Agrarian Skies 1 is a very good pack to this day, and has a lot of Forestry in the mid-endgame.

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