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Joined 9 months ago
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Cake day: October 19th, 2023

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  • I can only speak to what’s expected in the US.

    For personal info you should include your full legal name, a contact phone number, email, and possibly a link to a portfolio of some kind if that’s expected in your industry (arts, software, design, etc.). No need to put a birth date or any more personal info. If you’re applying to work in another country, I would indicate your nationality and what visas you might have or need to be sponsored for.

    For education, just put the institution, degree, field of study, location, and dates. You can include degree honors there if you have any. Once you have an undergrad degree of some kind, you can remove your high school unless its particularly prestigious.

    After that it should primarily be a list of any work experience, notable projects, skills, and honors/awards.





  • As I understand it, NAT is a firewall with only a very basic configuration: allow all outbound and accept only established inbound. If you don’t expect to have any incoming connections and completely trust all your internal devices then its good enough.

    However, if you start wanting to port forward for servers (SSH, FTP, video games) you need to poke holes in the NAT firewall and it has no additional configuration options to help you. The same goes for if you have internal (ex. IoT) devices that you don’t necessarily trust, there are no rules to block outbound traffic.



  • I don’t see it as hypocritical at all. Public comments are, for me at least, put out for the public good. The same reason someone might license open source code with the MIT license. My issue with Reddit is that they restricted who can obtain the data and then privately sold them to only the highest bidder. They should be freely available to all who want to view them without restrictions on money or power.


  • I wonder what the risks are to including deleted and pre-edited content in training data. Most of the edits are going to be typos and formatting, do you want 2-3 copies of the same message with typos in them for training data? Similarly, deleted comments are mostly nonsense, unhelpful, duplicate, or highly controversial things.

    If someone wants to dig through and find individual users to restore that’s one thing, but I don’t think I’d immediately choose to train off of that other data unless I had to.