Is that American hand writing? It reminds me so much of James Hetfield’s, and basically no one writes like that in my country.
Is that American hand writing? It reminds me so much of James Hetfield’s, and basically no one writes like that in my country.
AI doesn’t do feelings
How can I have a serious conversation with these annoying answers? Come on, you know what I am talking about. Even an AI chatbot would know what I mean.
Any AI chatbot, even “general purpose” ones will read your code and will return a description of what it does if you ask it.
And particularly AI would be great at catching “useless”, “weird” or unexplainable code in a repository. Maybe not with the current levels of context. But that’s what I want to know, if these tools (or anything similar) exist yet.
Thank you.
Of course, 100% reliability is impossible even with human reviewers. I just want a tool that gives me at least something, cause I don’t have the time or knowledge to review a full repo before executing it on my machine.
I just want a report that says “we detected in line 27 or file X, a particular behavior that feels weird as it tries to upload your environment variables into some unexpected URL”.
I’m afraid to tell you that your e-book deDRMing is very much considered piracy. 😅
Piracy is easier than ever IMO. 20 years ago it was messy, and full of viruses and fake content. Nowadays there’s plug&play pirate services with refined content.
There’s so much people in the world today convinced that their subscriptions are worth it that I think they’ll let pirates coexist in peace, because they know pirates wouldn’t pay for it anyways.
I don’t care if the solution is AI based or not, indeed.
I guess I thought it like that because AI is quite fit for the task of understanding what might be the purpose of code in a few seconds/minutes without you having to review it. I don’t know how some non-AI tool could be better for such task.
Edit: so many people against the idea. Have you guys used GitHub Copilot? It understands the context of your repo to help you write the next thing… Right? Well, what if you apply the same idea to simply review for malicious/unexpected behaviour on third party repos? Doesn’t seem too weird for me.
Yes, couldn’t be easier.
We are talking about one single notification per year that serves as a notification for the hundreds of KDE programs that you normally install on a Plasma desktop.
So, yeah, it’s pretty fair. And it’s free software, so you can fork it and delete those lines of code anyway. It’s KDE so they’ll probably even let you disable it at some point in the settings.
Damn why no one told me about this??
Not really, most of the AUR points to the official source. And in this particular case, the actual Proton team was actually managing the AUR package.
Aint the official one
Will check that out
Doesn’t exist anymore in the AUR
It doesn’t even exist anymore, you are probably using something old.
It’s a shame that Proton VPN has no official flatpak. The Arch Linux AUR package’s been broken for a long while now.
Link us to one of these examples, it doesn’t seem that hard to get
Oh I am very sorry, I think I did not express myself properly. I wasn’t particularly referring to you, but rather the typical user who will answer to the “Musk is one of the richest” with the “company value” thing.
I do think tho that whatever your opinion on Musk’s companies is, the market clearly thinks otherwise, which banks are part of it.
Also, I strongly dislike Musk. But it’s very clear to me that he has enough power to do whatever he wants like wasting lots of money trying new things until something sticks.
He might not be now, but like a year ago he was the richest human ever. I don’t think he’s fallen from the top 20. And that is just the official numbers. Imagine what might be hidden.
And don’t come to me with the “but shares are not money”. Shares are basically money, and you can even use them to convince banks to give you more.
They won’t. They’ll just substitute them. The idea is trying to force every company do the same thing, as making people work locally makes them more dependent on their local company and less likely to jump to a better job.
Then you can lower salaries (not rise them) and destroy benefits. Also you can enforce dress codes to make it look like a dictatorship country like North Korea.