

He could threaten them with a friendly visit, like when he visited the Pope or Orban.


He could threaten them with a friendly visit, like when he visited the Pope or Orban.


This basically amounts to a key/interaction logger in the IDE. I’d suspect this would prevent many people contributing to projects using something like that, at least I wouldn’t install such a plug-in.


What exactly would you checksum? All intermediate states that weren’t committed, and all test run parameters and outputs? If so, how would you use that to detect an LLM? The current agentic LLM tools also do several edits and run tests for the thing they’re writing, then edit more until their tests work.
So the presence of test runs and intermediate states isn’t really indicative of a human writing code and I’m skeptical that distinguishing between steps a human would do and steps an LLM would do is any easier or quicker than distinguishing based on the end result.


A lot of Dockerfiles start with installing dependencies via the base image’s package manager, without specifying exact versions (which isn’t always possible, as most distros don’t keep all history of all packages in their repos). So all your dependencies may have different versions, when you build again.


As you mention German police, in Germany you need to always have your current address on the card. When you move, your ID card is updated. They don’t replace it, you get a sticker on it that is stamped. It looks like you can even order it by mail now, in which case it gets a QR code with digital signature instead: https://www.personalausweisportal.de/SharedDocs/bilder/Webs/PA/DE/Allgemein/Schritt_5_Adressaufkleber.jpg?__blob=normal&v=5
Well, having a domain is basically documenting your IP publicly. It’s not that risky.
Well at least it’s not a regular keyboard key in the top right of the Numpad like on my work Dell, I already shut down my computer twice by accident:
It has a Copilot key of course, but I’m mostly using it docked with an external keyboard by now