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I see a "I work at Facebook. Please pass a very specific regulation which we can more readily comply with, but which would regulate my smaller competitors to death." take.

Olives boosted

When someone complains about porn one minute, complains about end-to-end encryption the next, and advocates censorship the next, that doesn't breed confidence in me that their argument that human rights concerns with undermining end-to-end encryption could be fixed with the so-called mythical government which never over-steps it's boundaries has much merit.

Olives boosted

theverge.com/2024/2/22/2408013 Avast fined for selling customer info without their consent and lying about it.

sahanjournal.com/business-work Amazon coffee machine under fire for secretly taking pictures of employees in breakroom.

reclaimthenet.org/eu-group-loo E.U. working group apparently looking for ways around ECHR ruling prohibiting undermining end-to-end encryption.

edri.org/our-work/press-releas EDRi pushes for ban on spyware after politicians were attacked by phone hacking malware.

reason.com/2024/02/22/proposit San Francisco police to be able to operate any method of surveillance for a year before review. San Franciscans have a chance to vote against it.

reclaimthenet.org/biometric-en Major League Baseball is scanning your face.

reclaimthenet.org/maine-school School drops plans to fingerprint students.

reason.com/2024/02/20/nyc-chil Child Protective Agency coercing parents into allowing them to search their homes without a warrant.

reclaimthenet.org/facial-recog New Zealand's Privacy Commissioner helps grocery store to invade citizens privacy with new face recognition program.

Olives boosted

I take solace in the continued evidence that generative #AI models invariably produce obvious artifacts in their output. I think that may be just the nature of neural networks; they're probabilistic, and the chance that their output doesn't include something weird is very small.

Just take a look at every #sora video the AI-bros are freaking out about today, and you'll see each one has at least one obvious tell, if not multiple.

Olives boosted

Slapping the #AI label on generative models is a move designed to make them seem mysterious and powerful, and thus attract media hype and venture capital. We can see this an intentional weaponization of that Arthur C Clarke quote about advanced technology being indistinguishable from magic.

Evil vending machine scandal making the rounds, lol. It is troublesome though that it has a camera hidden inside it, and that it's recording people.

theguardian.com/world/2024/feb

"A malfunctioning vending machine at a Canadian university has inadvertently revealed that a number of them have been using facial recognition technology in secret.

Earlier this month, a snack dispenser at the University of Waterloo showed an error message – Invenda.Vending.FacialRecognition.App.exe – on the screen.

There was no prior indication that the machine was using the technology, nor that a camera was monitoring student movement and purchases. Users were not asked for permission for their faces to be scanned or analysed."

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KISS_pri Seeing someone coming up with grandiose (and probably harmful) fedi bureaucracies in their imagination reminds me a lot of this.

The anti end-to-end encryption suit which tries to lean on "deceptive practices" just shows that the government will try to lean, hard, on any tool they get, which is just another sign of why KOSA wouldn't be good.

Instead of making people prove whether they're human, maybe we should make them prove they are machines, lol.

theverge.com/2024/2/22/2408013 Avast fined for selling customer info without their consent and lying about it.

sahanjournal.com/business-work Amazon coffee machine under fire for secretly taking pictures of employees in breakroom.

reclaimthenet.org/eu-group-loo E.U. working group apparently looking for ways around ECHR ruling prohibiting undermining end-to-end encryption.

edri.org/our-work/press-releas EDRi pushes for ban on spyware after politicians were attacked by phone hacking malware.

reason.com/2024/02/22/proposit San Francisco police to be able to operate any method of surveillance for a year before review. San Franciscans have a chance to vote against it.

reclaimthenet.org/biometric-en Major League Baseball is scanning your face.

reclaimthenet.org/maine-school School drops plans to fingerprint students.

reason.com/2024/02/20/nyc-chil Child Protective Agency coercing parents into allowing them to search their homes without a warrant.

reclaimthenet.org/facial-recog New Zealand's Privacy Commissioner helps grocery store to invade citizens privacy with new face recognition program.

Olives boosted

reason.com/2024/02/20/the-bide

"WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has been imprisoned in London for nearly five years, pending extradition to the United States so he can be prosecuted for violating the Espionage Act by publishing classified information. Since that amount of time behind bars is about the same as the four-to-six-year prison term that Justice Department lawyers have said Assange would be likely to serve if convicted, you might think the Biden administration would be ready to reconsider this case, especially since it poses an alarming threat to freedom of the press. Instead, the U.S. government's lawyers are back in London for yet another hearing, which Assange's attorneys describe as a last-ditch attempt to block his extradition."

Olives boosted
Olives boosted

If you're not aware, this instance went down for maintenance for a while, so if it seemed quiet, that is why.

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