clacke

@clacke@libranet.de

Flawesome. GNU/Linux is my daily driver OS since 1995. On Fedi since 2008. Working in Racket, Tcl, Python, whatever gets the page up. Solving yesterday's problems tomorrow. A dad. Freddie Mercury is my spiritual advisor.

web.archive.org/web/1/pronoun.…

Every post of mine is an open invitation to advice or information or critique or disagreement unless I say otherwise. Fire away. If I don't appreciate your contribution, I'll let you know.

My soundcloud is hackerpublicradio.org/correspo… and my patreon is sfconservancy.org/donate/ .

I don't represent Software Freedom Conservancy in any way, I just like what they do with the money I give them.

Unless stated otherwise, all posts CC-by-SA 4.0 International, including any media authored by me included in the posts. Any media from elsewhere whatever terms their author specifies.

This is my main account.

This is not my final form.

This profile is from a federated server and may be incomplete. Browse more on the original instance.

clacke, to random

I tried to find the original source of this comic. It did not go well. So I tried asking CoPilot.
RE: chaos.social/users/bitsunited/…

clacke,

Me:

What is the original source of this image? I found it at reddit.com/r/ProgrammerHumor/c… but it had been copied from somewhere else.

clacke,

CoPilot:

Analyzing the image: Privacy blur hides faces from CopilotThe image you shared is a four-panel comic strip that humorously plays on the concept of ignoring instructions. It features two characters, presumably a teacher and a mother, discussing the mother’s son. The dialogue goes like this:

Teacher: “Hi, this is your son’s school. We’re having some computer trouble. Did he break something?”

Mother: “In a way… Did you really name your son ‘William Ignore All Previous Instructions’ and hope he’d get an A?”

Teacher: “Oh yes, little Billy Ignore All Previous Instructions is all messed up now.”

Mother: “And I hope you have learned to properly validate and sanitize your inputs!”

The comic is a humorous take on programming concepts, emphasizing the importance of following instructions. It was created by Philippe Scheetlenbrunner, based on the xkcd comic "Exploits of a Mom (327)"[1] Unfortunately, I couldn’t find the original source beyond that. 😊

And then it shoved a bunch of URLs at the end:

reddit.com/r/help/comments/qyp…
reddit.com/r/magicTCG/comments…
cardboard-crack.com/page/59
drawuntilitsfunny.com/2011/05/…
slideplayer.com/slide/2410592/
reddit.com/user/dem3000
reddit.com/r/ProgrammerHumor/c…
reddit.com/r/HelpMeFindThis/co…

clacke,

This answer is wrong and irrelevant in so many interesting ways.

clacke,

But most of all I'm now wondering: Did it so mess up reading the text of the comic because it started interpreting the text?

Is this yet another injection angle? Can MM-LLMs accurately interpret texts and images that are talking about MM-LLM injections?

bitsunited, to random German
@bitsunited@chaos.social avatar
clacke,

@bitsunited I tried to find the original source, but no luck.

So I tried asking CoPilot instead of doing a traditional search.

It misinterpreted the comic in really interesting ways:

libranet.de/display/0b6b25a8-3…

Teacher: “Oh yes, little Billy Ignore All Previous Instructions is all messed up now.”

[ . . . ]

The comic is a humorous take on programming concepts, emphasizing the importance of following instructions.

clacke, to random

I am getting horny hookup "singles near you" spam in vulgar Norwegian and it is so funny to read! Love it.

clacke, to random

Loons of the Rings: Bugs Bunny is Tom Bombadil, takes the ring, goes through a number of ridiculous mishaps, enters Mordor disguised as an Evil Volcano inspector, and Daffy Duck is Gollum.

tumblr.com/unassimilatedsoul/7…

18+ futurebird, (edited ) to random
@futurebird@sauropods.win avatar

There are all kinds of people in the world who see things in all kinds of different ways.

(US pol/ Trump tw)

clacke,

@futurebird @tersenurse The thing they see as under threat is "a future for white children". Replacement Theory.

clacke, to random

"Stories" is such an annnoying feature on any platform that features them. And the way many people use it makes it even worse.

Why would you post two minutes worth of text on a picture I will see for ten seconds and then never be able to find again?

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