[-] [email protected] 12 points 3 hours ago

And western intelligence

[-] [email protected] 25 points 1 day ago

Local orgs are saying much the same thing, framing this as ICE being forced to retreat because of the rapid community response.

Everyone and anyone, be ready to film these encounters if you see them and post them somewhere. This shit spreads like wildfire in local communities, people will show up. And it also raises awareness. This is a very popular pizza place that chuds also enjoy

[-] [email protected] 22 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

My favorite pizza place got raided by ICE/HSI. A crowd of community members formed, blocking the street. The local PD arrived and apparently dispersed the crowd with teargas and flashbangs. Not sure the number of detainees

Crazy that this is happening. Not sure what I should or can do...fuck them for detaining random people for no apparent reason, just because those higher up want to up the numbers

[-] [email protected] 41 points 2 days ago

You can say "fuck america" and they would still let you in, but "fuck Israel"? Straight to jail

[-] [email protected] 2 points 3 days ago

Good work comrade. I'm glad to know there are people with good values working at these sort of campaigns. As frustrated as I am with my own cities paltry efforts at combatting this issue this gives me hope that some boots on the ground and people in the organizations have their head on straight

[-] [email protected] 2 points 3 days ago

I'm never allowing my loved ones in these nursing homes. I recently had to see loved ones going through an elderly family member with dementia and it is a special hell, but damn if I'll let these nursing homes "put them down easy"

[-] [email protected] 25 points 4 days ago

I had mutuals saying they deserved it for not following the cops orders

[-] [email protected] 11 points 4 days ago

Balls are made of plant Peas are literal tiny green plant balls Potato scooped in a ball shape

Congrats on eating balls OP

[-] [email protected] 4 points 4 days ago

My parents have had the same cuisinart for 20+ years and they use the hell out of it

[-] [email protected] 21 points 4 days ago

No international students and vastly decreased research grant funding sure doesn't look good for academia

[-] [email protected] 6 points 4 days ago

Social security and medicare are pulled from employment the same way. A major reason these funds are underfunded is because of the cap on it - salaries above $170k don't pay any more.

I agree it isn't the best but its better than employers funding individual's health insurance policies like in the USA for people under 65

[-] [email protected] 32 points 4 days ago

Employers above a certain size should fund the public healthcare instead. Better healthcare for everyone, basically why medicare is still relatively decent in the USA

33
submitted 5 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

The other night, I was walking past this intersection to pick up food, on the other side. Unfortunately, I saw an older woman (60s) eat complete shit when crossing here. I paused for a second, but she was able to get up and her friend was helping her, so I don't think she was seriously hurt.

I picked up my food and came over to this side, and critically examined how this intersection was built. This sort of incident is something I have heard many boomers use to rail against how unsafe modern pedestrian and bike infrastructure is. That being said, this intersection is built all wrong, from the point of pedestrians using this crossing.

The floating curb extension is necessary, because between where the picture is taken and the island is a bike lane. The root issue is the placement of the beg button, which is not in-line with the zebra crossing. As you can see, if you push the button and walk straight forward, you will walk over the floating curb extension.

The floating curb extension is painted yellow on one side - the one most visible to oncoming traffic. It is not painted yellow on the side that the woman was crossing from, so after pushing the button, and walking forward, it is very reasonable that she would trip over this and eat shit.

Solutions are:

  1. The root problem is the placement of the beg button, which should be aligned with the crossing. This is probably not changeable at this particular intersection, but should be taken into consideration for future planning.
  2. The floating curb extension needs better visibility - at the very least it needs yellow paint on all sides. Better yet, they could have bollards, but that would probably trigger the car brains a little bit to much

So, what do I do? I want to send my concerns about this to the city as a concerned citizen. Hopefully they would do something, at least some paint. If they won't do anything, I might have to just do some guerilla fixes.

The reason this really irks me is that, although I support bike lanes and curb extensions in general, these poor designs are not actually the best at being pedestrian centered and will only make people dislike these features due to a bad experience like the one I witnessed. And of course, she walked it off and was OK but eventually someone is going to break a bone, get a concussion, or who knows what.

42
submitted 6 months ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

AI, as it currently exists, is terrible, devoid of much real value or use, and probably overall degrading our society (and definitely our climate). This is unlikely to change as the technology requires massive amounts of capital to train and run the models. Massive data centers that are an endless pit of energy, ghouls that want to use the technology for nefarious purposes such as extracting more wealth from you and I, to the extreme of facial recognition of "terrorist" suspects for drone strikes.

There is massive amounts of capital in this area, and other than the energy and equipment for running the models, another big cost for firms that develop LLMs is the need for training data that requires hundreds to thousands of people to generate manually. This is where you can potentially earn some decent remote money. There are caveats, and I by no means recommend this to anyone as a sole source of income. Work availability fluctuates week by week, the biggest company in this space is very evil, and you might end up spending a lot of time for very little benefit.

Your actual ability to earn depends mostly on your country of residence your level of education. In the USA, with a M.S. in Chemistry (they have never confirmed any of my education btw), I have been able to earn at most $60/hr, but more often $25-35/hr. The pay changes constantly because every project pays differently, and you will change projects very often, usually every week or two. I have also gone through a 2 month dry spell of having no/little work to do, which is why this is not something I would ever recommend as a source of income you rely on.

What is AI training and why should I care?

Specifically, AI training encompasses any work that involves creation or annotation of data that is fed back into an LLM model to improve it's capabilities. The data can be images, audio, video, and most commonly text. The specific task at hand can vary widely, but the most common involves rating various dimensions of the LLM's response and then improving the response.

How exactly is this used by a company? As a simple example, imagine that you are creating a service that uses an LLM to create recipes from a list of ingredients. First, you might download every cookbook and recipe that you can find by crawling the web, and feed that into the model. Unfortunately, the quality of the recipes might not be very well standardized, some transcription errors may have occurred, or you might have other specifications that you would like your model to follow. So you send those recipes, one-by-one, to thousands of people who will fix any errors, add additional context, and make sure that the recipes fit the specifications. Now this data set can be used to fine-tune the model and hopefully improve it by some measure.

Companies I have worked for

Scale Labs (Remotasks, Outlier)

Scale Labs is by far the largest company in this space, and is, at least up until recently, the de facto monopoly. It was founded by Alexandr Wang in 2016, after he dropped out from MIT at the age of 19. The company grew by setting up large centers (aka digital sweatshops) in Sub-Saharan Africa and Southeast Asia, paying the lowest possible wage for workers to annotate images from autonomous vehicles. Imagine sitting in a sweltering computer center, getting paid well below $1 an hour, to circle cones, pedestrians, vehicles, bikes, over and over again, with no job security - that is how this little psychotic dipshit become a billionaire at the age of 24. There are numerous articles out there about how bad this company is, and of course they are also the official AI partner of the DoD.

Scale runs two tasking platforms - Remotasks, and Outlier, the latter of which myself and @corgiwithalaptop have used. They seem focused on recruiting people with specific expertise, for a list of all fields you can look at their site (outlier.ai). Although I was hired as a "Chemistry Expert", most of my projects haven't involved Chemistry at all.

There are some major problems with this platform:

  • You will have no tasks (empty queue, or EQ) for extended periods of time (sometimes weeks to months)
  • "Training" is usually unpaid and extreme bullshit
    • You need to do new training for each new project. The training documents are often vague or contradictory. You have to do graded quizzes and graded assessment tasks that you will fail, and never get feedback on why you failed. This is a very common experience, I once had a single week where I failed 4 assessments in a row, meaning I did 4 unpaid trainings for no reward.
  • The platform itself is full of bugs and technical issues
    • Once I was assigned to a project, but a bug prevented tasks from actually being allocated to me. The project's managers (queue managers, or QMs) told me that it is a bug that I would have to ask support about. By the time support got back to me over a week later, the project had wrapped up. I got assigned to a new project, and faced the exact same bug, which took another week to get fixed. This entire time, I am unable to do any work on the platform or make any money.
    • If there is a technical issue that prevents you from completing a task, you will not get paid at all for the time you had already invested in the task.
  • Every task gets reviewed and you are given a rating out of 5. Reviewers are just normal taskers that get promoted to reviewer willy-nilly (I have been a reviewer on many projects), and some reviewers are just god awful. They will straight up not understand your prompt, or not be familiar with some concept in the task, and give you a 1/5 for no reason. I have even been on projects where people were using an LLM to automatically complete the reviews, giving erroneous bad scores. If you get enough low scores, you can be removed from the project.
  • Support is non-existent and useless. It takes days to weeks to get any response, and sometimes the response is just a canned response where you can tell they didn't actually read your ticket.
  • They can remove you from the platform at any time for any reason, and anecdotally I have heard about this happening to people who did nothing wrong. There is no recourse if this happens to you, you can reach out to support but like I said, this is useless

Despite these problems, I am currently making money on the platform and will continue to do so as long as I can. For all of these reasons, I can not recommend outlier unless you have infinite spare time and really want a remote way to make money. If you have an expertise, especially coding/math, I think you might have a better chance of getting in and making good money. Recently, they have been promising to make changes to address these issues, but scale labs is ultimately an authoritarian employer that has no incentive to make their workers lives better, and only has incentive to increase the efficiency of labor extraction, so take that with a grain of salt. If you need income, I would not recommend wasting to much time on it or expecting anything out of it, but it might be worth a try.

Stellar AI

I have only been on this platform for about a week, and am only on one project so far, so I don't have much to say other then the following ways it is better than Scale's platforms:

  • Training was much better. Instead of just reading a google doc, they walk you through exactly how to do a task within the tasking interface. It was also paid
  • If there is a technical issue that prevents you from completing a task, they will still pay you for your time My current project involves guiding the AI through navigating websites to get information to answer a prompt, for example, "what is the cheapest airline to fly to Hawaii," it is not all that difficult and the pay is $25/hr.

Conclusions

If you are good at writing-based work, and want remote ways to make money, and have plenty of spare time, it might be worth trying out these platforms. The worst case scenario is that you spend some time on it and ultimately reap no benefit, but there is a chance you get in and can successfully make decent money doing work that really isn't that difficult. The majority of the stress I have had is due to the Outlier platform itself.

If you have special expertise (any advanced degree, multiple languages, especially if you have coding experience) you might have better chances. Pay rates vary by country, so if you aren't based in the USA I am not sure what the earnings potential is.

@corgiwithalaptop also works for Outlier and they might be able to offer a different perspective. If you do decide you want to apply for Outlier, reach out to me or them and we can give a referral code - if you use my code and get the job and complete 10 hrs of work I would get $200, which I pledge to give $100 through the mutual aid comm here and the other $100 to my local mutual aid.

120
submitted 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

CNBC

CNN

(CNN) Hamas’ choice of a hardline political leader did little to comfort Gazans displaced, hungry, and seeking a way out of their misery after nearly 10 months of war on Wednesday.

The Palestinian militant group appointed Yahya Sinwar to lead its political bureau on Tuesday, replacing Ismail Haniyeh, who was killed in Tehran in an attack Iran blamed on Israel. Israel has neither confirmed nor denied responsibility.

The move consolidates power within the organization under Sinwar, who until this week was the head of Hamas in Gaza. Sinwar, a hardened militant with many years spent in an Israeli prison, is viewed as less compromising in dealings with Israel and closer to Iran than his predecessor. He is accused by Israel of being the mastermind of the October 7 attack and believed to be hiding in a tunnel in Gaza.

Those poor Gazan people! This very bad man (and dare I say his regime?) is consolidating power. I wonder why?

It can't have anything to do with that attack that Israel denied (but their officials posted pictures of Haniyeh with "target eliminated")

I guess Palestinians just can't be reasoned with.

End sarcasm

I hope these authors, editors, and anyone defending the Zionist entity at this point gets their time in a harsh cold prison.

view more: next ›

sewer_rat_420

0 post score
0 comment score
joined 11 months ago