RGB

joined 2 years ago
[–] RGB@group.lt 2 points 3 days ago

I mostly hate when fat large torrents disappear, I use private trackers, but it is not for everyone, and sometimes they are slow to respond. But movie is not my speciality its music. Love it more ;0]

[–] RGB@group.lt 1 points 5 days ago (1 children)
[–] RGB@group.lt 1 points 5 days ago (2 children)

you mean the name of FB head?

 

But removing Denuvo DRM after 12 weeks ‘causes zero mean total revenue loss.’

[–] RGB@group.lt 7 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) (1 children)

appendix

Had had a couple of bone brakes, but it felt like nothing compared to that pain, it also got away, was saved by a blood testing and going straight to operation table, after the pain ceased.

[–] RGB@group.lt 10 points 5 months ago

I mostly pirate for others to leech. Always my slsk is getting upwards of 40 users and 30MB/s upload. It is harder and harder to get packs, or music in general from private and not trackers. Redacted does not have everything, I love the idea of big repository of music and share upwards of 50TB on slsk. Lots of Dj's, new producers and podcast use this stuff :) I pay for youtube premium, but never rip it, I almost always buy music I like trough Bandcamp if it is available.

 

Google rolled out AI overviews across the United States this month, exposing its flagship product to the hallucinations of large language models.

[–] RGB@group.lt 4 points 8 months ago

Bandcamp now is most user friendly, but even the creators cheat by deleting their 1$ offerings, and Yes I hate bundles of 600 albums for a price of 1$

[–] RGB@group.lt 3 points 9 months ago
[–] RGB@group.lt 7 points 9 months ago

It is a very difficult topic - I use slsk private trackers and now try to revive airdc++ my data set is around 60TB - it is pain in ass to manage -HDD's fail, you need to salvage the data, also buy a new bigger ones, ssd's also fail. Internet connection is limited, and the MASSIVE amount of data being produced these dayz... I also run I2P and IPFS nodes, TOR snowflake. And it is massive pain that alphatracker is down... also the rarbg loss. Please keep calm, everything will be fine, I have to mention that I live in a grey country - no need for vpn - that really helps.

[–] RGB@group.lt 8 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

I seed as much as I can, never set any targets for seeding. Torrents die our dayz, so no target should be a priority. Unless it is movies 🎥 - that shit takes tons of data.

18
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by RGB@group.lt to c/music@beehaw.org
 

We live in an era of absurd musical abundance. Streaming services put the (in)complete history of recorded music at our fingertips, with sophisticated recommendation algorithms that promise to tailor us the perfect playlist. More than 100,000 new tracks are uploaded every day to platforms like Spotify, Apple Music or SoundCloud. As the hip-hop innovator Kool Keith put it in a 2020 interview: ‘There’s so much new music out there that it’s just too much for the average antique person.’ It can be too much for any person, antique or otherwise. We’re saturated, inundated with the stuff. But the problem isn’t just abundance: it’s what we do with the musical riches at our fingertips.

 

Do you believe in ghosts?

 

The EU is currently updating eIDAS (electronic IDentification, Authentication and trust Services), an EU regulation on electronic identification and trust services for electronic transactions in the European Single Market. That’s clearly a crucial piece of legislation in the digital age, and updating it is sensible given the fast pace of development in the sector. But it seems that something bad has happened in the process. Back in March 2022, a group of experts sent an open letter to MEPs [pdf] with the dramatic title “Global website security ecosystem at risk from EU Digital Identity framework’s new website authentication provisions”. It warned:

[–] RGB@group.lt 4 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

you download an original image and then: https://github.com/massgravel/Microsoft-Activation-Scripts oh I misread the question, even pirate bay has software, use trackers, try to get to closed ones.

 

It also has inbuild radio, a very nice program but the learning curve is a bit steep.

 

Its not your ex ;)

[–] RGB@group.lt 9 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Running I2P on my pc just in case :)

[–] RGB@group.lt 2 points 1 year ago

there is an group on FB [https://www.facebook.com/groups/cursedaiwtf] that is full of some fucked up things, sorry for FB, but don't know any place weirder now.

 

Shit in -> shit out 📤

 

A few months ago, Ian Hogarth wrote the Financial Times Op-Ed headlined “We must slow down the race to God-like AI.”

A few weeks ago, he was appointed head of the UK Foundation Model Taskforce, and given 100 million pounds to dedicate to AI safety, to universal acclaim. Soon there will also be a UK Global AI Summit.

 

The EU is ready to agree that immediate open access to papers reporting publicly funded research should become the norm, without authors having to pay fees, and that the bloc should support non-profit scholarly publishing models.

In a move that could send shockwaves through commercial scholarly publishing, the positions are due to be adopted by the Council of the EU member state governments later this month.

Various draft positions on scholarly publishing have been published by the January-June Swedish presidency of the Council in recent months, but with few clues as to how the potentially industry-shaking proposals were being received by fellow member state governments.

Now, however, the latest version published on May 4, which retains the most radical aspects of the earlier drafts, has been agreed “at technical level”, ready for research ministers to give it their assent at a meeting on 23 May.

view more: next ›