It’s confusing because unlike most security features, it’s meant to protect the users from themselves. The risk comes from a combination of users being allowed to visit malevolent sites and browsers letting all websites do a lot of random stuff, including making 3rd party requests with cookies and private stuff
This is false. It is meant to protect users from a confused-deputy attack made by malicious websites, where that website makes a request to a "serious" API but the user has never asked for, or approved, that request.
Blaming the user for everything that happens serves nobody.
A CORS header in the response tells your browser to relax CORS restrictions.
I personally never specifically consent to anything, yet get a ton of marketing emails. To most companies that send me those emails 1.8m would be a slap on the wrist.
er. okay. The good thing about this test is that I am the only person in the world with my full name, and I know all the people with my last name (about 30-ish people). None of us are ambassadors, none of us are related to Congo in any way.
1. Like everything, apts degrade over time, maintenance usually happens in spikes, so the state of the place goes down until someone pays for the new paint job
2. It depends on the market, in highly attractive places, owners don't care about keeping tenants, so they'll let the place fall apart, until they can't get anyone anymore. Then they'll put in the price to put the place back in order and start again.
As long as these models require a lot of computing power, the best models open source or not will be served by corporations who can afford the infra.
Also, I don’t about others, but I personally strongly dislike OpenAI’s leadership’s hypocrisy. I find them losing the race highly satisfying.
COVID, Trump's second election, Musk turning into the Bond villain he was cut out to be, Altman's good guy mask melting down slowly, the AI bubble sucking up all the money and making developers anxious about their future.
One shouldn't wonder why the mood is gloomier.
At least we have Mark Rober still out there working for the greater good, but I think it starts to transpire that things are starting to weigh on him too.