Does the Wiz article read like AI for anyone else? The headings, paragraph structure, and sentence structure feel very similar to what I've seen LLMs produce. It also seems to heavily use em dashes (except the em dashes were replaced with minus signs).
Feels kinda funny reading an LLM generated article criticizing the security of an LLM generated platform. I mean I'm sure the security vulnerabilities were real, but I really would've like it if a human wrote the article; probably would've cut down on the fluff/noise.
I've been working in the produce department at a grocery store for a few years, and the rule we're told is to remove items a day before their best-before date (or if it looks expired or unsellable), which then get packed and sent to the food bank (even though IMO 80-90% of it is kinda inedible).
Other stores (even from the same company as mine) might instead have a compost heap and throw all old produce there and/or give a discount to those items.
Best-before dates are crucial for us since we need them to figure out how long a product has been sitting on the shelf (especially the items that can sit on the shelf for months) and especially for keeping the warehouse organized as we can days of orders stockpiled with 3+ different best-before dates, and it's important to always put out the oldest product otherwise the whole box can go bad.
Also, as a fun fact, since there are thousands of items, old bad produce can be often be missed. One time I found some prunes that had been past their best-before date for nearly a year.
Also, I've regularly witnessed items that go bad basically right as we get them (maybe 5 or so days before their best-before date) while other items can last a week or two after their best-before date just fine.
So yeah, for regular people, best-before dates are more like a suggestion that roughly tells you how old the item is and maybe the mean average time the item goes bad (depending on how it's regulated). If it's near the item is roughly near its best before, maybe just give it a close look and a sniff. If it looks and smells fine, it's probably fine.
> Also, as a fun fact, since there are thousands of items, old bad produce can be often be missed. One time I found some prunes that had been past their best-before date for nearly a year.
I once bought a glass of jam in a store that was already past its best-before date. It was still perfectly good, especially for baking. If I had seen that before leaving the store, I might have tried to haggle down the price :)
Feels kinda funny reading an LLM generated article criticizing the security of an LLM generated platform. I mean I'm sure the security vulnerabilities were real, but I really would've like it if a human wrote the article; probably would've cut down on the fluff/noise.