I am Lattrommi. Yes, that one. You’ve never heard of me? I’m not surprised. It is often said that anything you put on the internet will live there forever. It becomes immortal. I do everything backwards and wrong. I do not live forever, I am always dying. ¿|√∞²|?

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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: June 9th, 2023

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  • Threat plan.

    Ask yourself the following:

    What do you have that you want to protect?

    Can be a person, place, thing, animal, mineral or vegetable.
    
    A hierarchy of importance is good to develop.
    
        Is your wife more important than your cat? 
    
        Is your fireproof safe full of legal documents more important than your computer?
    

    Who do you want to protect it from?

    Threats 
    
        Consider:
    
            Actions taken by humans
    
            Acts of nature (acts of your god?)
    
            The passage of time
    

    How likely is it that you will need to protect it?

    Remember:
    
        Privacy is important
    
        Everything breaks down eventually, both man and machine, society and civilization
    
            Will a hurricane demolish your mountaintop resort? 
    
            Will a landslide destroy your yatch? 
    
            Will looters ransack your home during an insurrection?
    
        Historical weather and earthquake data is useful to know
    

    How bad are the consequences if you fail?

    What do you have to lose beyond possessions and people?
    
        Reputation, freedoms, integrity, etc.
    

    How much trouble am you willing to go through to prevent these consequences?

    Will you go through worse if you don't prepare?
    
    Will you have the courage to act when the time comes?
    
    How many security cameras are needed to track a single cat? What about a married cat?
    

    After you feel you have answered these sufficiently, you can begin to prepare to protect yourself!


  • The person asking the trivia question needed to know the answer, so they could determine who was correct.

    Phones, as I understand them, average about 30 pings per second. That’s 30 times per second the phone is checking for signal strength with the nearest tower, among other data.

    They also work with any device that has wifi or bluetooth to help with location triangulation. So anyone at trivia that had their phone on them and powered, had their position noted as well as their proximity to others. If the location has smart TV’s on the walls, those were picking up the pings as well. If they have internet available to customers, there’s another point picking up the info.

    It’s already been shown that a few companies have listened to microphones. The data being extrapolated is so large, listening to the microphone would be counterproductive and redundant. There are devices everywhere, security cameras, billboards, inside each row of shelves at your grocery store, in every car that has a computer, lights at intersections, smart watches and other IOT devices, even appliances these days have wifi and bluetooth like refridgerators, coffee pots, robot vacuums, treadmills, i could go on.

    It’s scary that some company might be listening to your through your phones microphone but the real scary thing is that they don’t need to. They knew people at that trivia game would be searching for that answer before the question was even asked, without needing to listen in.



  • Because I am terrible at writing, most of this was painstakingly generated using LLaMA 3.1 70B & 405B. Believe it or not, this was actually a lot of work.

    The LLM ruins your presentation in my opinion. I do not mean that you disclosed the use of a LLM, I personally appreciate that honesty quite a lot. The short version is that there is too much elaboration.

    That’s the first thing the LLM provided for you: It elaborates too much and gives a massive wall of text. One that you spent a long time painstakingly editing. If you had started from scratch and formulated it yourself, you most likely could have come up with a far more readable essay for the average stranger on the internet (I’m assuming that was your intended audience. I’m frequently wrong about things.) Look for the redundancies. LLM’s seem to love saying the same thing in different ways. Just an observation I’ve made which I have no backing for. Many of these points could easily be combined in my opinion.

    The second thing using AI did to your detriment, is that the sections are not human-like. They are formulaic, each one having several clauses or thoughts strung together with commas. Sure, each sentence might be grammatically correct but I bet I could read this to my nephews as a way to quickly get them to fall asleep. Not only does every sentence have multiple thoughts and concepts, there are few intermediary sentences to break up the monotony.

    The third and final thing I will point out is that page breaks and spacing things out are absolutely critical to keeping people engaged. Twitter became popular because of the character limit. If your point takes longer than 7 seconds for someone to read in their head, you’ve lost half your audience. Tell the AI to be more succint if you continue using one.

    I think you might do better if you took out all of the text that isn’t bolded/strong or a header. Link to the full manuscript somewhere else at the end for those who are interested. Those 2-4 words starting the numbered points are all most people will need. If they do need further clarification or specifics, visit that’s when they can visit a link at the end.

    Just my two cents.