

Given that nobody is able to guarantee that code used for training was used according to it’s license, this means no hallucinated code in Linux. Nice.
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Given that nobody is able to guarantee that code used for training was used according to it’s license, this means no hallucinated code in Linux. Nice.


For a FOSS enthusiast, this is a total non-starter. We don’t migrate to Linux just to swap one proprietary black box for another. If I cannot audit the code that sits between my binaries and the internet, I am not interested.
That’s hardcore. Are there any network cards with fully open firmware? How does one learn to audit code for how many layers there are to this? Does this person has time for anything other than auditing code? Or is this and other claims a satire?
I’ll be upgrading soon since my home server is still at 22.04 and I need new ZFS to expand my drive array which was made possible not too long ago. This thing has been running the same Ubuntu install for 7 or 8 years now. It’s been so long that I thought I was hacked by Iranians when I noticed OpenClaw folder in ~/config/. Turns out it was unofficial Captain Claw port that I played ages ago when this thing was still a desktop. I highly recommend this OpenClaw
That was random but I thought someone might find it funny. I’m a bit high. Sorry.