steph

joined 1 year ago
[–] steph@lemmy.clueware.org 2 points 1 year ago

A process owned by any user will be able to exploit a userspace vulnerability, whatever this user is. Selinux, chroot, cgroups/containerization add a layer of protection to this, but any vulnerability that bypass these will be as exploitable from nobody as from any other local user. It will protect a user files from some access attempts but will fail to prevent any serious attack. And as usual when it comes to security, a false sense of security is worse than no security at all.

Remember that some exploits exist that can climb outside of a full-blown virtual machine to the virtualisation host, finding a user escalation vulnerability is even more likely.

The only real protection is an up-to-date system, sane user behavior and maybe a little bit of paranoia.

[–] steph@lemmy.clueware.org 1 points 1 year ago

Given this trend, GPT 5 or 6 will be trained on a majority of content from its previous versions, modeling them instead of the expect full range of language. Researchers have already tested the outcome of a model-in-loop with pictures, it was not pretty.

[–] steph@lemmy.clueware.org 1 points 1 year ago (3 children)

Each and every line of code you write is a liability. Even more so when you wrote it for someone else. You must always be able to rebuild it from source, at least as long as your client expect the software to work. If you feel it's not worth it, you probably low-balled the contract. If you don't want to maintain code, have the client pay a yearly maintenance fee, give the code and the responsibility to maintain it to your client at the end of development, or add a time limit to it's support.

There's no "maintenance mode" software: either it's in use and must be kept updated with regard to it's execution environment, or it's not used anymore and can be erased and forgotten. Doing differently opens too much security issues, which shouldn't be acceptable for us all as a trade.

[–] steph@lemmy.clueware.org 4 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Forewarning : ops here, I'm one of the few the bosses come to when the "quick code" in production goes sideways and the associated service goes down.

soapbox mode on

Pardon my french but that's a connerie.

Poorly written code, however fast it has been delivered, will translate ultimately into a range of problems going from customer insatisfaction to complete service outage, a spectrum of issues far more damageable than a late arrival on the market. I'd add that "quick and dirty code" is never "quick and dirty code with relevant, automated, test coverage", increasing the likelihood off aforementioned failures, the breadth of their impact and the difficulty to fix them.

Coincidentally , any news about yet another code-pissing LLM bothers me a tad, given that code-monkeys using such atrocities wouldn't know poorly written code from a shopping list to begin with, thus will never be able to maintain the produced gibberish.

 

Just stumbled upon a midsize japanese trails comparison, and the Versys was distinctly absent. A V-Strom, Tenere and Transalp, all different and with their strengths, be it off or on road, and yet no mention of my very subjectively beloved Versys.

So may I ask this venerable assembly it's opinion on the subject? How come the Versys seems to fly under the radar, what is it lacking to be noticable - or more egoistically, what fun am I missing with mine?