This. And the wonderful thing about LLMs is that they can be trained to bend responses in specific directions, say toward using Oracle Cloud solutions. There's fertile ground for commercial value extraction that goes far beyond ads. Think of it as product placement on steroid.
This is a great comment. At the same time GDPR and other standards do not address practical issues that (arguably) cause real harm like including features to generate undressed images of women and children.
It's the same dynamic that has warped the California housing market by adding a forest of regulations that make it almost impossible to build new housing. Those regulations for the most part add nothing but cost and time to projects. Meanwhile housing prices go through the roof.
i'd argue that, at least in my european country, there already more severe laws regulating such thing that might earn you jail time, while gdpr wasn't made with that in mind
The problem is enforcing those laws now the Trump administration is using X and other social networks as instruments of national policy and forcing others to use them, to the detriment (potentially considerable) of European societies.
ClickHouse effectively has a number of personas. Time series is one of them, and ClickHouse has steadily absorbed market share from pure play time series databases over the last few years. Other personas include real-time observability backend (the single biggest use case in my experience) as well as real-time data lake engine. Time series support, column storage, and real-time response are key underlying capabilities. It's quite versatile and fun to use.
Disclosure: I run Altinity, a vendor in this space.
> FOSS software that many rely on that has been around for a while were non-VC: VCS, Linux / GNU / BSD, web browsers, various programming languages, various databases...
It's honestly hard to pick a pattern out for older open source project contributions. PostgreSQL started at UC Berkeley but people contributed to it from all over. Key engineers like Tom Lane worked a number of companies in the database field, some dependent on VC funding, some not. He's currently at Snowflake. [0] A lot of recent innovation around PostgreSQL today (Neon, Supabase, etc.) is VC funded.
That pattern changed with projects like Hadoop, which was about the time that VC funds recognized a standard playbook around monetizing open source. [1]
> The appeal to JD Vance is properly craven and validates the view that their business model is effectively a protection racket.
It's not craven, it's a mistake. It needlessly antagonizes the market at large to solve a smaller problem. I don't see how this benefits Cloudflare in the long run unless they've decided to throw in their lot with the current US regime. If so, what happens when that regime changes?
If it's under a few terabytes, copy it to ClickHouse and store it in the native format, make your change, and dump it back out again. ClickHouse reads and writes Parquet very efficiently and supports efficient distribution of work across clusters. It's a rewrite but it's fast.
I can't judge how accurate this account is as a whole, but it raises some intriguing points. For example, this passage ties student indebtedness to the decline in radicalism.
> Noam Chomsky sounded a similar note in 2014 when he described the emergence of a business model ... keeping the student body burdened by debt and, thus, less likely to repeat the student activism of the 1960s.
I also like how the articles tie the general shape of the Information Revolution to the emerging gaps in higher education.
Thomas Goldstein successfully argued the Supreme Court case that allowed Google to claim fair use of Oracle's Java SE APIs. The rest of his life sounds like a sequel to Neal Stephenson's Cryptonomicon.
At the University of Michigan many moons ago CTA stood for Central Tripping Authority, a largely imaginary collective devoted to taking hallucinogens. (Regularly.) There was CTA graffiti all over East Quadrangle dormitory when I lived there. The meaning was well-understood.