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I think that maybe the point isn't that the scams/distrust are "new" with the advent of AI, but "easier" and "more polished" than before.

The language of the reader is no longer a serious barrier/indicator of a scam (A real bank would never talk like that, is now, well, that's something they would say, the way that they would say it)


I'm in two minds on this - the bank does need to know that its communications are being received

But, they have no idea if the paper statements are making it to your desk, or if they are getting swiped from the letterbox (I'm in an apartment in Melbourne, and the snail mail is not reliable at all, mail is sometimes delivered to the wrong building, sometimes the wrong address entirely, it's also swiped by miscreants who have nothing better to do, and, in some cases, the pricks set the letter boxes on fire, taking all the mail with it)


If the bank really needed to know that its communications are being received, they would send them in a way that would reliably return this information (signature-confirmed postal mail). It's very unlikely that the bank actually needs to know this information.

I appreciate that that has a stronger guarantee of delivery, it is also prohibitive from a costs point of view, which I, as the customer, will be paying either through fees or reduced interest for deposits or higher interests for borrowings.

Worst case scenario is the HTTP pixel request tells attackers that there is a verification chat happening.

HTTPS the attackers know a conversation is happening, but no idea what

But, I personally think the threat is being overblown (I am happy to be corrected though)


> It doesn't look like they had 1 AI run for 20 minutes and then 30 humans sift through for weeks.

It does, though, look like they were running their AI over the codebase for an extended period of time (not per run, but multiple runs over the period of a year)

> Does it matter?

Hell yes, false reports are the bane of the bug bounty industry.


They don't appear to go into detail about anything except how great it is that they found the bugs, what those bugs were, and how rare it is for other people to find bugs.

I think that it would be helpful from a research point of view to know what sort of noise their AI tool is generating, but, because they appear to be trying to sell the service, they don't want you to know how many dev months you will lose chasing issues that amount to nothing.


The whole premise of the second amendment is about citizens being armed in order to resist/overthrow a government

Of course, if you're taking up arms to resist/overthrow a government, then you should be entirely anticipating that the government will shoot back. Or shoot first.

If protest is approaching/crossing the line into insurgency, people need to seriously consider that they may be putting their life on the line. It's not a game.


I'm pretty sure that if people are taking up arms to resist their government, things have already gone far enough down that path that they feel their lives are in jeopardy.

Just this week there were [~~Catholic~~] PRIESTS who were advised to draw up their last will and testament if they were going to resist [~~ICE in Minneapolis~~] the government https://www.npr.org/2026/01/18/nx-s1-5678579/ice-clashes-new...

How can you think it's a "game'?

Edit - removed incorrect quantifiers


> Just this week there were Catholic PRIESTS who were advised to draw up their last will and testament if they were going to resist ICE in Minneapolis

Episcopal (the US branch of the Anglican Communion), not Catholic, and it wasn't conditioned on going to Minneapolis, it was a statement about the broad situation of the country and the times we are in and what was necessary for them, with events in Minneapolis as a signifier, but not a geographically isolated, contained condition.


Thanks for the feedback, you're right and I've (tried) to mark the incorrect stuff with what markdown would show as strikethroughs)

> How can you think it's a "game'?

Everything seems fueled by social media radicalisation, and the social media side of things is very much 'gameified', all about scoring likes/upvotes/followers (and earning real revenue) for pushing escalating outrage.


Which is VERY different to the discussion at hand.

Is it?

Good’s wife after yelling DRIVE BABY, DRIVE DRIVE and the fallout screamed at agents “Why are you using real bullets!”

These people seem to have thought it was a game.


She was unarmed when she was killed.

A vehicle can be just as deadly as a firearm. And vehicles had previously been used aggressively by the protestors.

There were claims (no idea if true) that the agent who fired the fatal shots had been dragged down the road and injured in a previous vehicle-based altercation.


If him being previously injured affected his mental state such that he needed to kill someone who was not presenting an immediate threat to life, he should not have been on duty.

>needed to kill

She was intentionally obstructing for four minutes before the video, dancing to her horn while blocking traffic.

She ignored orders to stop and get out of the vehicle.

She pressed the car in drive enough to spin the tires with a federal agent in front of the car.

THEN he drew his gun from the holster and fired.

She hit him with her car.

Good forced him. She made every bad decision and reality came quick.


None of those things are an immediate threat to life.

Spread your hate with someone else.


Hitting someone with your car is an immediate threat to life.

Stomp feet all you like, but she made all the bad decisions she could and seemed to think it was a game.


If anyone is wondering - yes I am stopping interacting with this individual who refuses to reply in good faith.

> Spread your hate with someone else.

> I am stopping interacting with this individual who refuses to reply in good faith.

Wild. I noticed that you didn’t dispute any of the facts about the incident, but will not relent on your incorrect claims of MURDER.


Every police agency and training in the world will clearly explain that a vehicle is absolutely considered a weapon.

A single rental truck in Nice France killed more people than any mass shooting in the USA, ever.


Show me where the car was being used as a dangerous weapon.

Well… she accelerated in drive with a federal agent in front of the vehicle, while ignoring other federal agents to stop and get out of the vehicle, he THEN drew his gun from the holster, she the hit him with that car.

Her mental state was clearly not peaceful or rational - while armed. If she had made better decisions she would be alive.


In which case it's no longer relevant because nobody is going to overthrow a government that has nukes, tanks, drones, and chemical weapons using a hunting rifle or a handgun. The idea was cute enough back when the firepower the government had to use against the people was limited to muskets and cannons, but currently the idea of guns being used to overthrow a government with a military like the US is a complete joke.

Today you'll still find a bunch of 2nd amendment supporters insisting against common sense regulations because they need their guns to stop government oppression and tyranny yet you can open youtube right now and find countless examples of government oppression and tyranny and to no surprise those guys aren't using their guns to do a damn thing about any of it. In fact they're usually the ones making excuses for the government and their abuses.

There are reasonable arguments for supporting 2nd amendment and gun ownership but resisting/overthrowing the government is not one of them. That's nothing more than a comforting power fantasy.


>nobody is going to overthrow a government that has nukes, tanks, drones, and chemical weapons using a hunting rifle or a handgun.

The Chechens in the first Chechen war more or less did so by starting with guns and working up the chain via captured weapons. Eventually gaining complete independence for a number of years, against a nuclear power.


I think that it's fair to say that the military power Russia had in the 90s was very different from what the US has today. Even back then, as you say, the war still wasn't won with rifles and handguns. That isn't to say that what the Chechens accomplished wasn't impressive though.

Which is why Chechnya today is an independ... Oh wait.

Wow, in two comments we moved the goalposts from impossible to independence didn't last as many years as I'd have liked.

The text of the second amendment, as written, would seem to indicate that the premise of the second amendment is to arm "a well-regulated militia" (which was relevant to the government that adopted the second amendment, as it had no standing army).

It was basically crowdsourcing the military. We've been running through all the various problems with that idea ever since, including:

- oops, turns out not enough people volunteer and our whole army got nearly wiped out; maybe we need to pay people to be an army for a living (ca. 1791)

- oops, turns out allowing the public to arm themselves and be their own militia can lead people being their own separate militia factions against the government, I guess we don't want that (e.g. Shay's Rebellion, John Brown and various slave rebellions fighting for freedom)

- oops, turns out part of the army can just decide they're a whole new country's army now, guess we don't want that (the civil war)

- oops, turns out actually everyone having guns means any given individual can just shoot whomever they like (like in hundreds of school shootings and mass shootings)

- oops, turns out we gotta give our police force even bigger guns and tanks and stuff so they won't be scared of random normal people on the street having guns (and look where that's gotten us)

Honestly, the whole thing should've been heavily amended to something more sane back in 1791 when the Legion of the United States (the first standing army) was formed, as they were already punting on the mistaken notion that "a well-regulated militia" was the answer instead of "a professional standing army".


No it isn't -- that's an ignorant myth. Madison was the last person in the world who would have endorsed overthrowing his new government ... the Constitution is quite explicit that that is treason and the penalty is death. The first use of the 2A was Washington putting down the Whiskeytown Rebellion.

[flagged]


Citation please?


Can I get one with a little, uh, less spicy, of an "about us" page?

I'm not asking for a primary source, just something without a political axe to grind.


The source is from one of the preeminent scholars of the indigenous history of North America. Get the book if you don't like the website it was published at.

[citation needed]

It's not exactly an unusual claim, and it was very much the loudly espoused position of the Republican Party until, well, last week.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Second_Amendment_to_the_United...

> In Federalist No. 46, Madison wrote how a federal army could be kept in check by the militia, "a standing army ... would be opposed [by] militia." He argued that State governments "would be able to repel the danger" of a federal army, "It may well be doubted, whether a militia thus circumstanced could ever be conquered by such a proportion of regular troops." He contrasted the federal government of the United States to the European kingdoms, which he described as "afraid to trust the people with arms"...


This was posited as the nice sounding reason for the second amendment, when the more accurate reason was to ensure citizens had guns to drive out the indigenous peoples and steal their lands.

We rather quickly saw the federal government rolling over the people even with weapons in the Whiskey Rebellion.


I don't disagree.

But it's still very funny seeing the Right wrestle with "wait, the other team has guns?!" and "wait, Trump sounds like he wants gun control?!" right now when this claim has been the basis of their argument for decades.


To be fair, the right struggle with the argument every time it's put to the test.

I recall the 2016 shootings of Dallas Police Officers and the right were apoplectic about the individual

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Micah_Xavier_Johnson


Yeah, it is quite funny.

They wrestled with it for about 5 minutes, then got the memo, shrugged and resumed to deep-throat the boot.

Don't forget the very profound usefulness of a "well-armed militia" in putting down slave rebellions and catching escaped slaves.

In 46, Madison was discussing foreign danger in response to Hamilton in 29. but... thx for providing a citation. That's a much better response to downvoting.

That… doesn't seem to be accurate?

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Federalist_No._46

> This essay examines the relative strength of the state and federal governments under the proposed United States Constitution. It is titled "The Influence of the State and Federal Governments Compared"… he describes at length in this paper a series of hypothetical conflicts between state and federal government. Madison does not expect or hope the constitution to lead to the kind of conflict between state and federal authority described here. Rather, he seeks to rebut the arguments that he anticipates from opponents of the constitution by asserting that their "chimerical" predictions of the federal government crushing state governments are unfounded


I had thought (perhaps wrongly) that our brains got a massive "boost" in capacity when our ancestors moved to coastal areas and the diet was dominated by (Omega 3 heavy) shellfish and crustaceans.

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/9505798/


That's a difficult distinction to make - at which point does tool selection differ from modification for use as a tool - any animal that strips the leaves off a twig in order to use it as a tool has manufactured the tool.

I've been critical of people that default to "an em dash being used means the content is generated by an LLM", or, "they've numbered their points, must be an LLM"

I do know that LLMs generate content heavy with those constructs, but they didn't create the ideas out of thin air, it was in the training set, and existed strongly enough that LLMs saw it as common place/best practice.


Wait, everything ELSE was a "performance" but a (claimed) standing ovation was the real deal...?

You can just watch the event.

Edit: https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cm24vjvy3n1o

"I was in the room when President Donald Trump entered and it's fair to say he got a good welcome from the crowd, certainly at the beginning. A standing ovation."


The issue isn't whether or not there was a "standing ovation" - the issue is that you are framing anything you think of as vaguely negative as fake and anything that you think is vaguely positive as genuine.

Because everyone knows how easy it is to play Trump, do a standing ovation and his ego is satisfied so it's easier to deal with him.

Exactly like you'd do with a toddler :)


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