>Officials plan to obtain residents' consent so that only self-driving vehicles will cruise the city's streets. >The experiment is in line with the government's goal of realizing a "4th industrial revolution" using the power of artificial intelligence and other advanced technologies. huh
Gavin Adams
just have watched "Upgrade", definitely can recommend as /cyb/ movie
Adam Lewis
well that's just like, your opinion man
Jacob Bailey
LIVE!
Luke James
and anime is?
Jacob Scott
I haven't posted any anime, dude. There's no "anim/erp/unk: the spastic manifesto" thread in the catalog either.
>yfw interactive fiction never died >yfw interactive fiction and cyberpunk goes hand in hand youtube.com/watch?v=HgD0JDmr960
Noah Flores
Which one? Sindome or Cybersphere?
Justin Gutierrez
I'm using encfs to encrypt shit on linux and unencrypt when i need it.
when it mounts, does that mean it's being copied to my ssd, and it can be retrieved later? also, how do i add files safely? they have to reside on memory before they can be encrypted, which (does not(?)) remove trace of the files.
The solution to a fertility crisis isn't importing shitskins but making automatons.
Samuel White
Is this reliable?
If you had to protect or hide something important in your computer, you would trust the encryption of Mac's Filevault or you would prefer a Linux operating system with Full Disk Encryption.
Seems it was marketed as a plain revenge movie and that only reviewers and commentators noticed the /cyb/ qualities. Weird. I had not heard of this movie before.
Grayson Ross
If you have a lot of interesting files you could consider uploading them to the FTP site.
Noah Hall
Which ones do you recommend? I was reminiscing on LambdaMOO recently. It was rather deserted.
Logan Kelly
NSFW discussion on banesuit tech from Eudeamon:
Andrew Hernandez
Well, TRON, the OS, was quite successful and had the US deeply concerned.
Jace Wright
Now that was some serious voice acting.
Nicholas Gutierrez
>LIVE! Right on, user. Night is here and we have to hang on and avoid falling off page 10. Slow day today.
Luis Martin
Thread is slow cause op didn't put /sec/ in the op and no one really cares for /cyb/. There's only so much "cyberpunk" stuff we can talk about but sec is much more interesting and keeps threads alive.
Leo Cook
>encryption is considered a munition >to sell encrypted devices in the USA you must inform the government how you are performing said encryption by law
Yeah macs are totes safe, brah
Blake Sanders
youtube.com/watch?v=yS1ibDImAYU >yfw Planetes was right and space junk is a serious hazard If Elon Musk succeeds is going to save space travel from itself.
Well, the movie "Upgrade" was interesting though. And more interesting then the endless battlestation, smartphone and earphone generals that seems to live endlessly.
Isaac Bailey
Damn I cant believe the burgers went full retarded over that, were they really going to stop trade with japan over an os?
Brody Torres
But there's already /nsg/ for sec so it would be redundant
Ryan Robinson
At the time Japan looked invincible and was taking over the number crunching computer market. The US was deeply worried TRON would succeed in taking over a much larger market share covering everything from embedded to home computers, from servers to mainframes.
Not sure but it wold have to be something with very high security. And should run on an unusual architecture.
Cameron Mitchell
=== /sec/ News: Btc mining is becoming quite a hassle, encouraging a lot of malware authors to redouble their efforts: vms.drweb.com/virus/?i=17645163 >A multicomponent malware program capable of infecting Linux devices and intended to be used for Monero (XMR) mining. It is implemented as a shell script containing over 1,000 lines of code.
Eli Miller
sindome.org/ come play Sindome, it has a neat web client and is the height of cyberpunk related computer entertainment
See This is no longer about playing. It is about the world we live in, the result of the boiling frog principle in action.[spoiler][/spoiler]
Jayden Williams
Funny how japan wont budge on shit like muhracism and shitty islands but they bend over backwards over the one thing that could have prevented the lost decade
Cameron Taylor
I wonder where they spent those bitcoins, sure as hell they don't use it in walmart
Ryan Russell
Looks comfy
Jacob Anderson
Well, would that have been sufficient to prevent the lost decade? During this period a lot of economists and politicians were very happy to provide free advice to Japan. Now, that much of the West and in particular EU is plunging into the same stagflation problems, the cheery advices are getting far and few between.
In any case, the Japanese problems started when the real estate market imploded and was further accelerated by byzantine financial reporting rules that incentivized bad practice.
Yeah but you also have a ton of companies that couldn't compete anymore and japan itself kinda got left out of the IT boom, the MSX were barely known outside the country and only popular there, and besides softbank there weren't any tech startups worth talking about. Even the britfags got companies like ARM and PowerVR going.
William Thompson
Me again, forgot to mention that one of the reasons japan got big in the first place was by basically taking over the electronics industry, imagine if they had have that same luck in the IT industry
Josiah Price
Well, there were two reasons for losing competitiveness. The first and most obvious one was that the Japanese export economy was no longer able to take advantage of a cheap Yen as the success had appreciated their currency.
The other reason was relating to the financial reporting I mentioned above. Basically, Japanese companies owned each other based on cross ownership groups. The value of those shares, strangely, was not set to a fraction of the value of the companies but the value of the company at the time of purchasing the shares. This is generally considered a bad idea. So a lot of money was bound into totally non-liquid papers.
Michael Thomas
=== /cyb/ News (or fraud?) >>>sci/10167376 CRISPS supposedly used to make babies with specific genes.
Robert Sanchez
>>>>sci/10167376 Had to find correct link also Holy shit if true this it big, BIG
Joseph Nguyen
Sorry about the typo. And yes, this could be huge. Chinese authorities have openly stated years ago that they intend to improve the Chinese gene pool and eliminating mental illnesses was then placed at the top of the list of priorities.
On a wider scale, if you ensure that all children born are free from the 100s known genetic illnesses and, later, that none have an IQ less than 100 (today's scale) they will win the future. Health care and social expenses are huge posts on all western national budgets. Diabetes and haemophilia are huge national security risks since in a war time blockade perhaps 5 percent of the population will die. That alone can bring down a country.
Tyler Martin
I am still waiting for somatic alternatives, as in, genetic engineering in adults. China making CRISPR babies is kinda expected.
>genetic engineering in adults Is that possble with CRISPR?
James Myers
no CRISPR is generational
Josiah Rogers
what's the sauce of that gif?
Jose Myers
It would be interesting to see CRISPR used in adults
Michael Campbell
whats some hard scifi/cyberpunk where mind uploading is a thing. it doesnt have to be the central theme of the story, just a part of the world that the characters live in.
Isaiah Adams
something near future, not distant future. maybe something between 50-200 years from now.
Check global rule 7. I have not reported you. I leave that to others. Goodbye.
Colton Sullivan
Go to bed babby.
Owen White
Yo /cyb/ anons, I need help finding this website, you could learn so fucking much on cryptography on that site, I lost it from my bookmarks for some weird reason.
Brandon Green
ftp://collectivecomputers.org:21212/Books/Cyberpunk/ you mean?
YAY!!! IT IS BACKKKKKK!
Brayden Watson
Hm, unsure but will bookmark
Jordan Hill
netrunner or kali
Matthew Edwards
I'll take a backup. Please do too, just please remember to use throttling.
=== /sec/ News At a time when a lot of chips are loaded with backdoors, RISC-V is a hope for many: >Linux lobby org joins with RISC-V bods to promote open chip spec theregister.co.uk/2018/11/27/linux_riscv_deal/ >The Linux Foundation, the non-profit funded by for-profit tech firms to promote the open source operating system, has begun working with the RISC-V Foundation, another non-profit backed by well-heeled companies, to encourage adoption of the open source RISC-V instruction set architecture (ISA).
Owen Peterson
How is this even a question?
Chase Reyes
Is one good move from the Linux Foundation in a long long time, I still can't believe they accepted Microsoft in the board.
Aiden Gray
> Roughly 300 miles to the north, in the Hebei city of Nangongshi, Hou Xiameng runs her data factory out of her in-laws’ former cement factory. Her first job out of college was labeling faces for Megvii, the Chinese facial recognition company with a $2 billion valuation that’s most famous for its technology platform called Face++. To this day, some facial recognition systems recognize her before they do her friends because, she says, “my face is in the original database.” > But life in Beijing was too tough and expensive. She and her then-fiancé, Zhao Yacheng, decided to move back to their hometown and start a data factory. Ms. Hou’s parents would pay for computers and desks. They are renovating the warehouse next door to hire 80 more people. > Like Mr. Yi, Ms. Hou doesn’t spend time thinking about the implications of her work. Are they contributing to a surveillance state and a dystopian future that machines will control human? > “Cameras make me feel safe,” she said. “We’re in control of the machines for now.” Cyberpunk is now. nytimes.com/2018/11/25/business/china-artificial-intelligence-labeling.html?pagewanted=all
Gavin Reed
>I still can't believe they accepted Microsoft in the board. Erm, perhaps the Linux Foundation hoped they could do the embrace extend and extinguish on Microsoft??