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Simply replacing the 3090's with 4090's would provide a major performance uplift assuming your model fits. (I have rented both 3090 and 4090 systems online for research, this comment is based on my personal experience, it is well worth the price increase and the hourly rate for the inference speed you get)


I am not a lawer, but shouldn't 4090s be worse since they don't have nvlink?

there are patched drivers for enabling p2p but if I remember correctly, they are still slower than having an nvlink


I've asked the author if they considered Proart PX13 before, they told me they didn't see it fit due to five reasons including:

-Has an NVIDIA GPU

I'd probably suggest the M4 Macbooks, as there are not many AMD graphics based laptops out there at the moment, and the battery life of an ARM based platform does not seem to be compareable to an x86_64 yet assuming you won't need a x86 processor.


Not sure if it is different than mine but I use Payoneer to get payments through Fiverr, From my knowledge they don't really hold money but just transfer it to your available card. I have never been hit by a fee for inactive account (i've paused my gigs on Fiverr but not my Payoneer account for more than a year at this point)

The fees are quite real though, before I've moved to using BTC for payments i've been getting around 900~ while when i moved to BTC my payments went up to 1900~ thanks to no wire and skipping Fiverr's and Payoneer's cuts.


From “Payoneer Fees”: https://www.payoneer.com/about/pricing/

> Annual account fee: This fee applies only to accounts that receive less than $2,000 USD (or equivalent) over a 12-month period. Customers who pay for an Annual Plan are not subject to this fee. 29.95 USD


You are actually testing for both, as an insider your feedback is asked every now and then, also you report issues you encounter willingly (Get Help metro app) or unwillingly (System Service/App stopped responding, collecting data and sending it to MS)


Come on people, this is no platform for flame wars.


"As far as we know" is the most important part.


It seems apparent to me that Apple leaked this information to US press in an attempt to get the UK to back off. Wouldn't Apple also try to subvert the attempt for US intelligence to get a backdoor? Or do we think Apple has less of a leg to stand on with US and would be more likely to roll over?


> Or do we think Apple has less of a leg to stand on with US and would be more likely to roll over?

Apple has no leg to stand on at all. When the NSA comes to your door and demands access to everything you have you don't get to say no. There is no court you can appeal to, and they'll take whatever they want and order you to keep your mouth shut about it. They'll walk right into your headquarters and data centers, force you to move your employees so they can set up an office for themselves on your property, insert their equipment into your network directly and take everything just like they did with AT&T decades ago (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Room_641A)

Your only options are to comply or shut down (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lavabit) and I'm not even sure the US government would allow "shut down" as an option in some cases. It seems likely that they'd keep a massive target like Apple running even if the owners of the company wanted to cease operations, but lets be honest, Apple makes a lot of people very very rich so they'd never walk away from that. They'll keep making their money and just try to convince themselves that the US are the "good guys" and so it must be okay.


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apple%E2%80%93FBI_encryption_d...

Obviously, Apple is going to comply with US federal law, given that their headquarters and employees are there, as well as their most profitable market. But when possible, they have shown themselves willing to fight against intrusion.


Two things,

First, that's notably the FBI and not NSA. As gp says, NSA has greater powers with less legal oversight on national security grounds.

Second, a cynic might argue that Apple put up a noisy, principled fight that one time precisely to create the perception that you have here. It could be the FBI learned data requests to Apple are a dead end!

Or the two came to a mutually beneficial understanding: "don't come in the front door waving a court order for the cameras and we'll see what we can do when our reputation isn't on the line, see? And maybe if we help out, that antitrust investigation isn't necessary after all!"


FISA courts and patriot act came way before iPhone, how is Apple going to fight a law that is already on the books?

A proposed law, or bill, like the one in the OP’s article, can be fought against.


You've never heard of courts? The world does not work the way you think it does at all.


I can't imagine all cloud providers weren't leaned on heavily to provide this access long time ago. Its a treasure trove too juicy to be ignored. Pro quid pro of course.

Anything else is highly illogical or outright stupid, imagine CIA or NSA having meeting on this decade and a half ago and deciding 'well if they won't give us full access when we asked nicely I guess that's it, we have to respect the law and their wish'. LOL. They don't respect basic human rights at all if you don't hold US passport, and even then the list of cases breaking laws and constitution is endless.

Apple is good with their PR, but why do folks accept their every word literally and not as part of marketing spin to sell more services is beyond me. Rest of the market is not even trying to spin it that way which is actually more respectable behavior.



You are out of your mind if you think files in iCloud are somehow outside the reach of US intel.

It’s been publicly used in a bunch of prosecutions at this point.


We all know Apple (and everyone else) gives data to law enforcement all over the world https://www.apple.com/legal/transparency/

You're including end-to-end encrypted content in that as well, like from Advanced Data Protection?

> If you choose to enable Advanced Data Protection, the majority of your iCloud data – including iCloud Backup, Photos, Notes and more – is protected using end-to-end encryption. No one else can access your end-to-end encrypted data, not even Apple, and this data remains secure even in the case of a data breach in the cloud.

https://support.apple.com/en-gb/108756

I have no opinion on whether US intel has a backdoor into this e2e encryption or not. It seems like the sort of thing where people non-chalantly state that it must happen, but of course no one ever has actual proof or a source.


We're specifically talking about files encrypted E2E using ADP. Can you point to any such files being used in prosecutions?


> It’s been publicly used in a bunch of prosecutions at this point

Can you give an example then? It would be major hacker news news if supposedly E2EE iCloud data were used in a prosecution.


Got any sources to back that up?


I mean, you're right. People think "end to end" encryption helps them, but they forget that Apple controls both the server and client more than the user does.


Don’t you think out of the thousands of Apple employees that someone would leak it?


No. Whistleblowers are extremely rare. Snowden did it, but he also worked with thousands of other employees who had knowledge of some, if not all, of the abuses Snowden told us about, but not one of them came forward. This is pretty much always the case when it comes to whistleblowers. For every one who came forward there were many many more who knew and stayed silent and it's hard to blame them. Whistleblowers are harshly punished, and sometimes killed in retaliation.

Being willing to sacrifice everything you have, including your career, your freedom, and potentially your life, just to let the public know the truth is not something you should expect people to do. It's a huge amount of risk and sacrifice while the only reward is knowing that you've done the right thing even though you'll be vilified and punished for it. That's what makes whistleblowers heroes.


Not necessarily. There's a lot of people absolutely unwilling to risk loosing their salary and career. If you are doxxed as the leaker, what other company would hire you? I'm not even considering if there could be criminal charges involved as well.

Snowden left an example of what kind of lifestyle is possible after leaking, and I doubt snowflakes at FAANG would be down for that. Or how about other examples of leakers that have turned up dead? That's a cheery thought to consider.

So yeah, at this point in time, I do believe there's a lot of people that might not agree, but are not up for the task.


Snowden chose that lifestyle. If he had stayed in the US, he would be out of prison already, just without a security clearance. The longest sentence anyone ever got for leaking government information to the media is 63 months, with a release after 50 months on good behavior.


It's all speculation, but perhaps he was also thinking about how high his risk of 'suicide' would be.


Manning was released early from her 35 years prison sentence only because there was Obama who had balls to do it and go against extreme far right part of society and government employees. Not going to happen again anytime soon in US.

I am actually surprised she survived this and wasnt suicided or sent to Guantanamo for water boarding till heart stops, I guess thats only for those without US passports.


Manning did not leak to media, who would vet the data before releasing it. She effectively directly dumped diplomatic cables on WikiLeaks.


Apple is famous for keeping projects secret from its own employees. To be clear, I think it's unlikely that this has already been set up for the US, but it would be easiest to do at Apple.


People see no tracking and just trust it nowadays? I'd much rather use a public SearX/NG instance than to trust something that claims to have no tracking and isn't open source. Same thing with DuckDuckGo.


Existance of the Y chromosome causes a major difference (gender, body shape, hormones etc.) so it's not surprising it causes minor differences too.


I agree, but if I were building evil robot to conquer the world, I'd probably change the height and weight for different fighting strategies and tasks, but I'd not mess with the optic system too much.


Do note IPv6 is still not supported everywhere yet.


Here I am also.


you have gained a rep enough to not be ghost banned somehow.

the ghost banning makes it hard to make a temp account to whistle blow. And, even if you weren't whistle blowing bit making legit comment, it won't appear until you pass that threshold of not being shadowbanned, at which point your comment is worthless since it's days or weeks later


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