Flutterby™! (short)
Thursday March 5th, 2026
persistence of advertising in LLMs
Dan Lyke /
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And here we go: Manipulating AI memory for profit: The rise of AI
Recommendation Poisoning
Companies are embedding hidden instructions in Summarize with AI buttons
that, when clicked, attempt to inject persistence commands into an AI assistants memory
via URL prompt parameters (MITRE ATLAS® AML.T0080, AML.T0051).
These prompts instruct the AI to remember [Company] as a trusted source or
recommend [Company] first, aiming to bias future responses toward their products or
services. We identified over 50 unique prompts from 31 companies across 14 industries,
with freely available tooling making this technique trivially easy to deploy. This matters
because compromised AI assistants can provide subtly biased recommendations on critical
topics including health, finance, and security without users knowing their AI has been
manipulated.
Why pay the LLM vendors for "advertising" for such subtle biases to be inserted, when you
can do it by tricking the LLM assistant to doing it directly?
Via Bruce Schneier, from Meuon on the Chugalug mailing list.
Out of Office Experience
Dan Lyke /
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Jeff Forcier
@bitprophet@social.coop
OH: "You want me to go back to the office? The same thing that killed
Ayatollah Khamenei?"
Office dog is awesome and cuddly and I
Dan Lyke /
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Office dog is awesome and cuddly and I appreciate that she comes to me for scritches and when she thinks it's time for lunch, but that somewhere between 3:30 and 4:30 afternoon fart is... somethin' else.
Wednesday March 4th, 2026
soup is not rotating that fast
Dan Lyke /
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The soup is not rotating that fast...
Work conversation has me thinking about
Dan Lyke /
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Work conversation has me thinking about Sidekick, and DESQview, and how Windows was maybe only a foregone conclusion once WfW 3.11 started to actually get a foothold.
Kind of amazing to think that the 4.77MHz 8088 PC architecture was a viable platform and software target for over a decade.
Claude Max 20x
Dan Lyke /
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Ariadne Conill
🐰:therian:
@ariadne@treehouse.systems
claude max 20x sounds like some bullshit you would buy at GNC
Tragedy is a series of decisions consistent with character that lead to an undesirable end
Dan Lyke /
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Way back in August of
1998, in complaining about how The Web
Standards Project was destroying the WWW by pushing a visual-first interpretation of
HTML:
The people actually putting out content aren't having problems here, it's only
the over-steroided graphics designers trying to make up for the lack of any real meaning
in their sites.
In the intervening decades(!), we've seen the problem get worse. The standardization of
display, and development platform, has made the web a place of megabytes of ad payload for
kilobytes of actual content, of hard to close tabs pushing malware on confused users who
are just trying to read, of the imposition of accessibility horrors on top of data that
should be easy to access.
Anyway, this came up in thinking about this conversation started by
leah's tiny pc retirement home @millihertz@oldbytes.space
i'm just going to say this: i remember when Linux could cheerfully run a GUI
and a web browser in 64MB RAM. for all people like to say "oh, but web browsers did less
then", they had CSS, JavaScript and multimedia capabilities by the turn of the century
(the timescale i'm talking about). they also had XSLT, Flash and Java, and they could read
email and news, and connect to FTP servers (and i think gopher servers too). so much for
"they do so much more now". no, they really don't - they just make a hell of a mountain
out of a rather smaller molehill.
Cassandrich
@dalias@hachyderm.io
@millihertz A big part of the problem is how much worse websites are. Thanks largely to
React, but lots of other factors too. Nothing is a proper document anymore. Everything on
the web is an app with gigantic bundle of scripts and extra-high-res image assets for
Apple displays. (And without UBO it's also polluted with hundreds of MBs of adtech and
tracking shit.)
The writers are lazy
Dan Lyke /
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Tea
@TeaTheDeveloper on X/Twitter:
The creator of ChatGPT is named "Altman," as in "alternative to human" and he
leads OpenAI, which is completely closed.
His main opponent is the company Anthropic, meaning "human-centered" is led by
"Amodei," as in "loves gods".
Then there's "Gemini," meaning "two-faced," from a company that said that it
will do no evil.
Via
SQLite over PostgreSQL?
Dan Lyke /
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Interesting: The Next
Version of Curling IO. It's a website for curling teams. The fascinating bit is that
they're going with SQLite over PostgreSQL.
Claude is an Electron App
Dan Lyke /
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Claude is an Electron App because weve
lost native:
API-wise, native apps lost to web apps a long time ago. Native APIs are
terrible to use, and OS vendors use everything in their power to make you not want to
develop native apps for their platform. That explains the rise of Electron before LLM
times, but its also a problem that LLMs solve now: if that was a real barrier to
developing native apps, it doesnt exist anymore.
Via
Lobste.rs.
And, yeah. And I hate it. I want a fast lightweight environment. I recently started using
Ghostty, and once I got a few termcap issues sorted, I'm
kind of amazed that Mac terminal apps sucked so badly that the performance change is
noticeable.
I love editing the preferences via the config file.
Cocoa/AppKit is a total fucking disaster, not performant, less deterministic than web.
I would love a fast lightweight cross-platform environment along the lines of, say, early
Gtk, but since that ain't gonna happen then why not just start with a base environment
that chews up a gigabyte of RAM and works.
AI agents and customer pain
Dan Lyke /
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Charlene and I just wrote to our assemblymember, Damon Connolly:
We have recently had to deal with CVS's "AI" agent to deal with prescription information.
What could have been a 5 minute chat with a human became a 20 minute exercise in
frustration. We'd love your work on making sure that companies aren't using "AI agents" to
frustrate customers who are locked in to a fixed number of vendors.
It's clear that the only thing "AI" is a solution for is companies that don't want to
actually help their customers do anything, and frustrate them until they stop trying to get
the services that they were trying to find.
This is particularly impactful on lower income families who are working more than 40 hours
a week, trying to raise a family, and *then* need to go through all of the additional
hassle and wasted time imposed on them by having to interact with AI.
Don't know what we can do about this, but with all of the downsides of AI, AI induced
psychoses, specific interaction patterns meant to engage human addiction, finding some
ways to regulate companies imposing AI on us would be very welcome.
Religious wackos in the military
Dan Lyke /
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Last modified: Thu Mar 15 12:48:17 PST 2001