Links 14/05/2024: SoftBank and ARM Chasing Hype, "Why Are You Working?"
Contents
- Leftovers
- Science
- Education
- Hardware
- Health/Nutrition/Agriculture
- Proprietary/Artificial Intelligence (AI)
- Security
- Defence/Aggression
- Transparency/Investigative Reporting
- Environment
- Finance
- AstroTurf/Lobbying/Politics
- Censorship/Free Speech
- Freedom of Information / Freedom of the Press
- Civil Rights/Policing
- Internet Policy/Net Neutrality
- Digital Restrictions (DRM) Monopolies/Monopsonies
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Leftovers
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Deutsche Welle ☛ 2024-05-04 [Older] Bundeswehr's classified meetings found online
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Thomas Rigby ☛ "You get what you pay for"
It's what marketing has taught us for the longest time.
Cheap things are rubbish and expensive things are good.
But that isn't necessarily the case. Call it enshittification, call it late stage capitalism — whatever you call it, it's clear that price is no longer a guarantee of quality.
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Juha-Matti Santala ☛ Two small hockey web projects
I’ve recently been running two hockey related community projects at the Finnish developer community Koodiklinikka where we have an active sports fan sub community going on. For both of them, I built small web projects to make them a bit more fun to follow.
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Gregory Hammond ☛ Your hero may not have been a good person - Gregory Hammond
They say don’t speak ill of the dead, and don’t meet your heroes. Today I’m going to break one of those, some of the hero’s that people adore, who are now dead, weren’t actually good people.
When you think of a good person, they may be kind, generous with their time or money, you’re able to have a discussion with them and nobody gets angry, or you have a shared hobby. Most people are kind, and if you don’t know someone, you may assume they are kind.
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Johnny Decimal ☛ 22.00.0044 Howcome Johnny is disorganised?
I didn’t really know what I was doing; there was no plan for the business. I just quit one day! So I knocked something together out of necessity, as I went. The system just evolved.
And, to be clear, it’s not a bad system. It works. We’re here, working, and we can find things. I just know that it can be a lot better.
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Science
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The Register UK ☛ Aurora becomes US's second exaFLOPS super behind Frontier
ISC Argonne National Laboratory's Aurora supercomputer has officially breached the exaFLOPS barrier, but, once again, it's fallen short of unseating Oak Ridge's Frontier system for the number one spot on this spring's Top500.
With Lawrence Livermore's (LLNL) El Capitan supercomputer expected to make its debut on the Top500 ranking as early as this fall, it seems the much touted and even longer delayed Aurora system may never claim the title.
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Bridge Michigan ☛ Northern lights put on spellbinding show in Michigan. How to see them again
The majestic lights — or aurora borealis — were visible far farther south than usual. They were best seen in northern states like Michigan and Maine, but were reportedly visible as far south as Florida.
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Education
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Pete Brown ☛ Tech executives don’t care about losing senior employees because they don’t have to.
Employees with a lot of seniority—especially those that are US-based—are generally the most expensive employees. While I may believe that the experience and skills they take with them are exactly the stuff these companies need for long-term competitiveness and sustainability, my strong suspicion is that those factors are less important to these companies than short-term margins and growth.
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Kev Quirk ☛ My Computing History
My computing history is probably quite typical of someone of my vintage (nearly 40), but I'll go through it anyway. Because, you know, nostalgia.
I'll try keep this brief, but there's a lot to get through, so without further ado...
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Hardware
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The Register UK ☛ SoftBank reportedly preparing for Arm to tackle AI chips
The chip designer plans to set up an AI division with prototypes available in spring 2025 and mass production handled by contract manufacturers starting in fall, reports Nikkei.
Arm is said to be taking on the initial development costs with some help from SoftBank. The resulting AI chip business could later be spun off into a SoftBank subsidiary.
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Hackaday ☛ The Computers Of Voyager
There are no microprocessors in the CCS. Rather, the processors are built from discrete 7400-series TTL chips. The machine does not have an operating system but rather runs bare-metal instructions. Both data and instruction words are 18 bits wide, with the instruction words having a 6-bit opcode and a 12-bit address. The 64 instructions contain the usual tools for moving data in and out of registers and doing basic arithmetic, although there are only commands for adding and subtracting, not for multiplication or division. The processors access 4 kilowords of redundant plated-wire memory, which is similar to magnetic core memory in that it records bits as magnetic domains, but with an iron-nickel alloy plated onto the surface of wires rather than ferrite beads.
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Health/Nutrition/Agriculture
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Tracy Durnell ☛ Reply to gRegor: COVID safety at events
👏 I appreciate the work you’ve done on this gRegor! I know I’m unlikely to attend any in-person event soon, in part due to not traveling and in part from worry over event logistics, so I haven’t bothered to get into the details of what would make me feel safe to attend. I worried that I’d feel obligated to attend out of guilt if organizers went to the extra effort to make it meet my needs. But since you’ve been brave enough to share your thoughts, I’ll second them.
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Greg Morris ☛ Why Are You Working?
It was, as Thanos says, inevitable. I am so shockingly boring that I couldn’t stop working even for one day off. There was little point in tidying up after myself and trying to hide the fact that I can’t do other things. So, when all the family returned from their normal day at work and school, of course the question came.
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Vox ☛ Why New York City is lowering its speed limit
New York’s not alone in its efforts to lower speed limits. California lawmakers announced new legislation this year to cut speed limits in school zones to 20 mph or less. The city of Oakland also reduced speed limits in several corridors following a new state law that gave local governments the ability to determine speeds on their roads. Washington, DC, reduced the city’s default speed limit — in other words, the speed limit anywhere where there isn’t a sign posted saying otherwise — to 20 miles per hour in 2020, and slowed traffic on major corridors from 30 mph to 25 mph in 2022. These efforts have become especially important in the last few years, as the number of pedestrian deaths in the US has reached a 40-year high.
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The Scotsman ☛ Internet use linked to higher wellbeing, study suggests
The findings suggest that despite popular concerns to the contrary, the association between [Internet] use and wellbeing is likely to be positive
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Brandon ☛ Accepting My Preferences and Being an Introvert
I'm not a fan of labels. I think the internet has skewed them for me, because everyone ends up listing off what they are and that just seems to divide us more than anything else. I realize the importance of putting a face to a label, but it's just not my preference.
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Deutsche Welle ☛ 2024-05-06 [Older] Why are cancer cases soaring in India?
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Proprietary/Artificial Intelligence (AI)
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The Verge ☛ AI gun detection company Evolv name-dropped Disney in its pitch to NYC
New York City did indeed test out Evolv’s scanners in a Bronx hospital and outside the entrance to City Hall later that year. And though the results of both pilots were disappointing — the machines reported false positives at the Bronx hospital more than 85 percent of the time — Adams announced that the city will test out Evolv’s gun detectors on the subway later this year.
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MacStories Inc ☛ Not an iPad Pro Review: Why iPadOS Still Doesn't Get the Basics Right
Lastly, I wanted to provide readers with the necessary context to understand what I mean when I mention the limitations of iPadOS. My iPad setup and workflow have changed enough times over the years that I think some of you may have lost track of the issues I (and others) have been experiencing. This article is a chance to collect them all in one place.
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[Old] Six Colors ☛ iPad Pro Review: No Country for Old Macs
The iPad Pro is a peculiar product to review. Its size is its most notable feature, built around a 12.9-inch retina display. It’s the biggest iPad yet, but it’s still an iPad. When you judge it, you judge the history of iOS development, how Apple has kept its two major operating systems separate, and even the viability of the tablet market in general. The iPad Pro is a product you can buy in a store and use to get work done, watch movies, or even play games. But its meaning extends far beyond its own glass and aluminum shell.
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Joel Chrono ☛ Transferring PSP PS1 save files to Miyoo Mini Plus
How to turn the PS1 savefiles of games played on PSP, to a regular savefile usable in PS1 emulators and retro emulation devices like the Miyoo Mini Plus
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CoryDoctorow ☛ Pluralistic: AI “art” and uncanniness
When it comes to AI art (or "art"), it's hard to find a nuanced position that respects creative workers' labor rights, free expression, copyright law's vital exceptions and limitations, and aesthetics.
I am, on balance, opposed to AI art, but there are some important caveats to that position. For starters, I think it's unequivocally wrong – as a matter of law – to say that scraping works and training a model with them infringes copyright. This isn't a moral position (I'll get to that in a second), but rather a technical one.
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Chuck Carroll ☛ How to Get the RSS Feed For Any YouTube Channel
The easiest way to get an RSS feed for a YouTube channel is visiting the channel page, for example https://www.youtube.com/@LAWRENCESYSTEMS. Right click on an empty part of the page and select "View Page Source" in the context menu, which will then open the page source in a new tab. Hit CTRL+F to pull up a search and type "channel_id=". This URL is the RSS feed for the YouTube channel. Copy+Paste this link into your RSS reader of choice and rejoice.
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Jamie Zawinski ☛ Blockchain Rasputin over here is mad that moderation exists
It has been obvious to anyone paying attention that the reason Dorsey founded and funded Bluesky was with the end goal of enabling Twitter to go [Spider-Man Pointing dot GIF] any time an actual Nazi showed up, because moderation was not their problem, they just outsourced it to a series of nested shell companies (that they fund) who act as reputation laundries and liability crumple zones.
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David Gerard ☛ Jack Dorsey, Bluesky, decentralised social networks and the very common crowd – Attack of the 50 Foot Blockchain
Dorsey is obsessed with the idea of a social media platform that nobody can be kicked from. When he was CEO of Twitter, he directly intervened to make sure Donald Trump would not be banned for posts that would have led to anyone else being booted. Previously, Dorsey had personally made sure that literal neo-Nazi Richard Spencer would not be banned for egregious sockpuppetry. [WSJ, archive]
Elon Musk took over Twitter in 2022. Musk unbanned all of Twitter’s banned users, started reposting white nationalist conspiracy theories and personally encouraged and worked with far-right extremists on who to ban again. [Intercept, archive]
And so Twitter is shedding users and advertisers at a fantastic rate. Weird racists are not enjoyable company.
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Jeff Geerling ☛ Import unsupported camera RAW files into Apple Photos
Many years ago, I decided to migrate my photo library from Apple's now-defunct Aperture to Photos, so I could take advantage of Apple's iCloud Photo Library (don't worry, I still have three full complete local backups, plus a separate cloud backup besides Apple's iCloud originals).
One pain point is RAW support. As camera manufacturers add new models, their proprietary RAW codecs are updated, and software vendors like Apple, Adobe, and Microsoft have to update photo editing tools to work with the new camera models.
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Security
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Privacy/Surveillance
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Bitdefender ☛ Prison for cybersecurity expert selling private videos from inside 400,000 homes
A Korean cybersecurity expert has been sentenced to prison for illegally accessing and distributing private videos from vulnerable "wallpad" cameras in 400,000 private households.
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New York Times ☛ Secret Hamas Files Show It Spied on Everyday Palestinians
The Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar has for years overseen a secret police force in Gaza that conducted surveillance on everyday Palestinians and built files on young people, journalists and those who questioned the government, according to intelligence officials and a trove of internal documents reviewed by The New York Times.
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The Register UK ☛ Encrypted mail service still okay with giving PII to cops
Proton, which offers several services it touts as being secure and safe, includes an end-to-end encrypted email product. Ostensibly designed for the privacy conscious, Proton claims to be unable to read the content of email and attachments, be free of trackers and ads, and have the "highest standards of privacy."
Be as that may, there is still user info Proton has access to and can be pressured to divulge. In 2021, the Switzerland-based vendor provided Swiss police with the IP address and device details of a netizen the cops were trying to identify. That individual – a French climate activist – was later arrested after Proton shared the same data with French police.
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Defence/Aggression
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New York Times ☛ Biden Bans Chinese Bitcoin Mine Near U.S. Nuclear Missile Base
President Biden on Monday ordered a company with Chinese origins to shut down and sell the Wyoming cryptocurrency mine it built a mile from an Air Force base that controls nuclear-armed intercontinental ballistic missiles.
The cryptomining facility, which operates high-powered computers in a data center near the F.E. Warren base in Cheyenne, “presents a national security risk to the United States,” the president said in an executive order, because its equipment could be used for surveillance and espionage.
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Michael Geist ☛ A Post I Never Thought I Would Need to Write: Jewish Students Have the Right to Feel Safe on Campus
Last week, Jewish students from multiple universities appeared at a national press conference and before the House of Commons Justice committee. They provided deeply troubling accounts of why many Jewish students are no longer safe – or do not feel safe – on campus and in some classrooms. The students spoke of physical violence, threats, and harassment simply for being Jewish. When asked, each said they did not feel safe on campus and warned of “the normalization of antisemitic rhetoric through inaction by university administrators, who fail to use even their own policies and their own code of conduct to act against antisemitism on their own campuses.”
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NL Times ☛ University of Amsterdam says pro-Palestinian protests caused €1.5 million in damage
The University of Amsterdam (UvA) estimated that this week's pro-Palestinian demonstrations caused a cumulative total of 1.5 million euros in damage. Damage caused to municipal property and to neighboring companies and individuals was not included in this estimate, the university said. The UvA will reopen its buildings on Monday, which were closed for four days due to the protests.
The UvA said there was "significant damage" as the result of the protests on the Roeterseiland campus and the other UvA city center campus locations, Oudemanhuispoort and Binnengasthuis. It is not yet clear whether the university wants to try to recover damages from the demonstrators. The university said it is "in consultation with various parties" to determine "whether and how these damages can be recovered." A decision will be announced later.
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LRT ☛ GPS jamming in the Baltics: Is Russia responsible and will NATO respond?
Estonia and Lithuania have accused Russia of interfering with air traffic navigation in the region. Experts see it as part of Moscow’s hybrid war against NATO. Will the security alliance respond?
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Modern Diplomacy ☛ Moscow Crocus City Hall Attack and Immigrant Radicalisation: Four Challenges in Countering the Islamic State Terror Threat
As investigations progress, crucial details concerning the perpetrators’ path to radicalisation and militancy, as well as identities and whereabouts of their handlers remain elusive and contentious. Nevertheless, amid these uncertainties, available reports unveil several discernible challenges. Firstly, instances of political mistrust and conflicts among nations significantly impede capabilities to effectively counter transnational challenges deriving from radicalisation and terrorism. Secondly, IS networks continue to adeptly exploit encrypted messaging platforms, such as Telegram, as a secure virtual bastion to radicalise and recruit vulnerable immigrants, raise funds, form sleeper cells, and plan and organise attacks. Thirdly, the presence and accessibility of illegal arms for terrorists facilitate mass casualty attacks. Lastly, crowded spaces require enhanced security and emergency planning to minimise casualty rates in case of attacks. This analysis will discuss all these challenges in detail.
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VOA News ☛ Former spy alleges global Chinese spy network hunts and abducts dissidents
A former Chinese spy now living in Australia told Australian Broadcasting Corp.’s Four Corners program that a unit of the Chinese secret service had been operational in Sydney as recently as last year.
The spy - named only as "Eric" - has described a shadowy world of deception and abduction. The former Chinese agent told ABC how he’d been ordered by the secret police in Beijing to target dissidents overseas, including in India, Thailand, Canada and Australia.
‘Eric’ said he would gain their confidence and lure them to countries where they could be kidnapped and sent back to China.
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Transparency/Investigative Reporting
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Reason ☛ 'Dozens' of Students Walking Out of Duke's Commencement Is Not a Story
Comedian Jerry Seinfeld on Sunday gave the commencement address at Duke University—a ceremony that was dominated by students walking out in support of Palestine.
Oh, wait. No, it wasn't. But you'd be forgiven for having thought so, as a huge portion of the media coverage bafflingly put that protest front and center, despite that it was a blip on the event's radar.
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Environment
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Raspberry Pi ☛ CoolCoral: Raspberry Pi Pico coral cooling solution | #MagPiMonday
As the climate around the globe changes, nature itself is being affected. Ocean reefs and their coral are just one of the ecosystems under threat, so research into them is very important.
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Connor Tumbleson ☛ The EPA & Earth
A medium block of time ago in the early 1960s people started talking about the damage to our Earth - they were getting upset with beaches damaged by oil spills and rivers that caught on fire laced with chemicals. Additionally, as we visited outer space and learned our planet's resources were limited - public concerns kept rising.
So the 1970s the president at the time was like - "Congress come on - lets start a new agency and combine all the environmental responsibilities under one agency". This led to the creation of the Environment Protection Agency (EPA) which roughly had the following goal in 1970.
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VOA News ☛ Chinese companies win bids to explore Iraq for oil, gas
China’s National Offshore Oil Corp. (CNOOC) -Iraq won a bid to develop Iraq's Block 7 for oil exploration that extends across the country's central and southern provinces of Diwaniya, Babil, Najaf, Wasit and Muthanna, said oil minister Hayan Abdul Ghani.
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Energy/Transportation
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Johnny Decimal ☛ 22.00.0045 I cycled to the airport
A strange dream, you might think. It’s just a small thing, but I love the idea of being able to do something so big — fly to Melbourne — without having to get in the car.
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Omicron Limited ☛ Physicists create five-lane superhighway for electrons
The material behind this work, known as rhombohedral pentalayer graphene, was discovered two years ago by physicists led by Ju. "We found a goldmine, and every scoop is revealing something new," says Ju, who is also affiliated with MIT's Materials Research Laboratory.
In a Nature Nanotechnology paper last October Ju and colleagues reported the discovery of three important properties arising from rhombohedral graphene. For example, they showed that it could be topological, or allow the unimpeded movement of electrons around the edge of the material but not through the middle. That resulted in a superhighway, but required the application of a large magnetic field some tens of thousands times stronger than the Earth's magnetic field.
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VOA News ☛ Spain's train service disrupted by theft of copper cables near Barcelona
Spain’s state-owned railway authority ADIF said that the theft of electrical cabling from a station just north of Barcelona in the town of Montcada caused “several fires in the cables of the signaling system.”
It said that the incident around 4 a.m. local time (0200 GMT) caused a “serious” impact to the local train service and affected all the rail lines.
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Finance
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Deutsche Welle ☛ 2024-05-06 [Older] Xi in France pressed on China's 'market distortion'
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Vox ☛ How Reddit and WallStreetBets blew up GameStop’s stock
There has been a lot of hand-wringing about the day-trading trend and this new crop of investors playing the markets, many of whom are treating stocks more like a spin at the roulette wheel than a long-term strategy to build wealth. It’s not clear how many of them are looking at the underlying fundamentals of companies, or whether they’re just “YOLO-ing” themselves across the market.
On GameStop, the answer is probably a mix. There’s a reasonable business case to make for (some of) the game retailer’s valuation; there’s also a case that this whole thing has just been quite fun for everyone — the possible trolls of Reddit, market watchers, commentators, and certainly GameStop — except for the short sellers, who have been in for a pretty miserable ride.
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AstroTurf/Lobbying/Politics
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The Verge ☛ Melinda French Gates to leave the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
French Gates, who will officially leave on June 7th, will continue her philanthropy elsewhere, to the tune of $12.5 billion. The money stems from an agreement with her ex-husband, Bill Gates, and does not come from the foundation’s endowment. In her X post, she says she will focus on programs “on behalf of women and families.”
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Omicron Limited ☛ Psychological research offers strategies for healthy political discussions among people with opposing views
"It's easy for us to think about members of both parties as being completely biased in favor of their side. But what happens so much of the time is that people talk past each other or show more interest in pointing out the ridiculous things the other side is doing rather than actually finding solutions," said co-author Curtis Puryear, Ph.D., a post-doctoral researcher in the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University.
"Our findings suggest that if you show you care about understanding the other side's concerns, it goes a long way towards fostering respect."
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US News And World Report ☛ Eurovision Banned the EU Flag From the Song Contest. the EU Is Demanding to Know Why
In a contest already full of controversy, the European Commission said it plans “a very lively discussion” with the organizers over the ban. Even though the 27-nation EU did not compete as such, many of its member states did, and the star-spangled blue flag is often seen as a unifier for all involved.
EU Commission spokesperson Eric Mamer said it had “no information from the organizers at this point in time about the motivation for refusing the European flag during the event,” but the ban clearly angered EU Vice President Margaritis Schinas enough to hold talks with the Swiss-based European Broadcast Union, which organizes the contest.
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Deutsche Welle ☛ 2024-05-05 [Older] Germany: Thousands protest after attack on EU lawmaker
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Misinformation/Disinformation/Propaganda
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The Verge ☛ TikTok is testing AI-generated search results
There’s also a similar feature called “search highlights” that are not labeled as AI-generated. Those, too, show up at the top of search results, but it’s not clear where that information is coming from, like whether it’s summarizing videos or taken from someplace else. TikTok didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment about the features.
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Sightline Media Group ☛ Disinformation creates ‘precarious year for democracy,’ experts warn
The situation exemplifies two challenges that some experts are warning about ahead of the presidential election in November: The use of generative AI to create fake images and videos, and the emergence of China as an adversary that stands ready and willing to target the United States with disinformation. Academics are also voicing concerns about a proliferation of alternative news platforms, government inaction on the spread of disinformation, worsening social media moderation and increased instances of public figures inciting violence.
An environment rife for disinformation is coinciding with a year during which more than 50 countries are holding high-stakes elections. Simply put, it’s a “very precarious year for democracy,” warned Mollie Saltskog, a research fellow at The Soufan Center, a nonprofit that analyses global security challenges. Some of the messaging meant to sow division is reaching veterans by preying on their sense of duty to the U.S., some experts warned.
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Censorship/Free Speech
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The Hill ☛ Online liability protections have outlived usefulness, top lawmakers say
Section 230 has been under scrutiny from lawmakers on both sides of the aisle. Sens. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) and Dick Durbin (D-Ill.) introduced legislation last year that would limit tech companies’ legal immunity under Section 230. However, that legislation has yet to advance after Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) blocked it earlier this year.
Rodgers and Pallone argued that rolling back the protections on Big Tech companies would hold them accountable for the material posted on their platforms.
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Freedom of Information / Freedom of the Press
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Daniel Lemire ☛ Forwarding references in C++
In C++, there are different ways to pass a value to a function. Typically, at any given time, an object in C++ ‘belongs’ to a single function. The various ways to call a function differ in who owns the object, the caller or the callee (the function being called).
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New York Times ☛ Chinese Woman Jailed for Reporting on Covid Set to be Freed
For months, she filmed amateur, often shaky videos that contradicted the government’s narrative of a smooth, triumphant response to the crisis. She visited a crematory and a crowded hospital, where rolling beds lined the hallway. She recorded the city’s empty train station and tried to interview residents about the lockdown, though many brushed her off or requested anonymity, seemingly out of fear of reprisals.
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Civil Rights/Policing
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Democracy for the Arab World Now ☛ Saudi Arabia Must Lift Travel Ban on Women’s Rights Activist Loujain Al-Hathloul
Al-Hathloul, one of Saudi Arabia's most celebrated advocates for women's rights, was arrested, tortured, and imprisoned for over 1,000 days for her human rights activism before being conditionally released from prison on 10 February 2021. Her sentence imposed heavy restrictions following her release, including a period of probation and a travel ban lasting two years and ten months, ending on 13 November 2023. However, when she attempted to travel abroad in February 2024, al-Hathloul was told at the border that she remained under a permanent travel ban.
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Internet Policy/Net Neutrality
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Tech Central (South Africa) ☛ Subsea cable cuts hit Africa again, causing major disruption
The immediate cause of the faults, which are reportedly affecting the Eassy and Seacom cable systems that run along Africa’s east coast, could not be established. However, according to Wiocc, an investor in the Eassy cable system, Eassy has experienced a cut between South African and Mozambique.
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European Commission ☛ Light deployment regime for small cells – amendment
Commission Implementing Regulation 2020/1070 specifies the physical and technical characteristics of small cells (small-area wireless access points) that are exempted from any individual town planning permit or other individual prior permits.
This initiative will amend the Regulation to facilitate the deployment of small cells with state-of-the-art technology and extend the reporting period for Member States to 2 years.
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Digital Restrictions (DRM)
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The Register UK ☛ You OK, Apple? Seriously, your silicon lineup is a mess
With the launch of M4 this week, we're left wondering whether an M3 Ultra will ever materialize, or if Cook and Co will jump straight to the M4. There's some precedent to suggest this could happen: the iMac never received an M2 refresh, jumping straight from the M1 to M3.
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Patents
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JUVE ☛ Mathys & Squire boosts Munich office with IT partner [Ed: Spam disguised as news. Man changes job, then the site that promoted an illegal fake 'court' does some SPAM for him and the firm.]
Matthias Brittinger (49) brings 20 years of experience in the IP field to Mathys & Squire. In April, he joined from German IP firm Müller Hoffmann & Partner where he had worked since 2013, most recently as a partner.
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Trademarks
Monopolies/Monopsonies
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