Jan. 26, 2024, 12:09 p.m. | Bruce Schneier

Schneier on Security www.schneier.com

For most of history, communicating with a computer has not been like communicating with a person. In their earliest years, computers required carefully constructed instructions, delivered through punch cards; then came a command-line interface, followed by menus and options and text boxes. If you wanted results, you needed to learn the computer’s language.


This is beginning to change. Large language models—the technology undergirding modern chatbots—allow users to interact with computers through natural conversation, an innovation that introduces some baggage from …

chatbots command computer computers conversation history human interface internet and society language learn llm options results text trust

Information Security Engineers

@ D. E. Shaw Research | New York City

Technology Security Analyst

@ Halton Region | Oakville, Ontario, Canada

Senior Cyber Security Analyst

@ Valley Water | San Jose, CA

Computer and Forensics Investigator

@ ManTech | 221BQ - Cstmr Site,Springfield,VA

Senior Security Analyst

@ Oracle | United States

Associate Vulnerability Management Specialist

@ Diebold Nixdorf | Hyderabad, Telangana, India