FreshRSS

Normální zobrazení

Jsou dostupné nové články, klikněte pro obnovení stránky.
PředevčíremHlavní kanál
  • ✇XDA
  • Slack is the latest app to come to Windows on Arm so you can get work done fasterSimon Batt
    Finally, after all of these years, people are taking Windows on Arm seriously. It's been a long time coming, but more and more companies are releasing apps that utilize an Arm infrastructure. We saw Chrome finally get good on an Arm machine, and Adobe ensuring its apps work on the hardware. Now, Slack has joined the party with an Arm-compatible version of its client, and you can give it a spin right now.
     

Slack is the latest app to come to Windows on Arm so you can get work done faster

11. Červen 2024 v 02:44

Finally, after all of these years, people are taking Windows on Arm seriously. It's been a long time coming, but more and more companies are releasing apps that utilize an Arm infrastructure. We saw Chrome finally get good on an Arm machine, and Adobe ensuring its apps work on the hardware. Now, Slack has joined the party with an Arm-compatible version of its client, and you can give it a spin right now.

  • ✇Ars Technica - All content
  • Slack users horrified to discover messages used for AI trainingAshley Belanger
    Enlarge (credit: Tim Robberts | DigitalVision) After launching Slack AI in February, Slack appears to be digging its heels in, defending its vague policy that by default sucks up customers' data—including messages, content, and files—to train Slack's global AI models. According to Slack engineer Aaron Maurer, Slack has explained in a blog that the Salesforce-owned chat service does not train its large language models (LLMs) on customer data. But Slack's policy may need updati
     

Slack users horrified to discover messages used for AI training

17. Květen 2024 v 20:10
Slack users horrified to discover messages used for AI training

Enlarge (credit: Tim Robberts | DigitalVision)

After launching Slack AI in February, Slack appears to be digging its heels in, defending its vague policy that by default sucks up customers' data—including messages, content, and files—to train Slack's global AI models.

According to Slack engineer Aaron Maurer, Slack has explained in a blog that the Salesforce-owned chat service does not train its large language models (LLMs) on customer data. But Slack's policy may need updating "to explain more carefully how these privacy principles play with Slack AI," Maurer wrote on Threads, partly because the policy "was originally written about the search/recommendation work we've been doing for years prior to Slack AI."

Maurer was responding to a Threads post from engineer and writer Gergely Orosz, who called for companies to opt out of data sharing until the policy is clarified, not by a blog, but in the actual policy language.

Read 34 remaining paragraphs | Comments

❌
❌