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"Heat Initiative" is a "non-profit" "on paper".

From the discourse though, it seems it is run by one guy who works for someone who sells scanning software (and has stocks in "AI").

We've hardly spoken about this org for the good part of three years, and I don't understand why someone dug "them" back up.

Some articles are better, but there are enough of them which are just bad.

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New challenge for The Guardian. Don't inadvertently apologize for fascists.

I'd be wary of ascribing fault to individuals as someone should be able to come clean about their mistakes without facing possible sanctions.

There are companies which you wouldn't expect which have made fairly bad mistakes.

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While there are a few people blaming the company, one company having issues (CrowdStrike) shouldn't lead to so many having problems.

The problem is with so many companies (and others) relying on one particular service.

Olives boosted

Protect your rights to read, share, and discuss law. Pressure your representatives to vote against H.R. 1631 (the Pro Codes Act) before it's too late: act.eff.org/action/tell-congre

you.38degrees.org.uk/petitions
"The Metropolitan Police has started using live facial recognition cameras across London. This surveillance technology turns us into walking ID cards and treats members of the public like suspects in a high-tech police line up. These cameras are a threat to our privacy and freedoms – and they need to be stopped.

The Met’s own stats show live facial recognition to be over 80% inaccurate and more likely to misidentify innocent people of colour as potential suspects. A court even found that police had been using this technology unlawfully."

There are upsides to this particular government, of course, but to put their worst decisions on a pedestal is really to betray one's own ignorance.

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theguardian.com/commentisfree/ From what I've heard, the "crackdown" on "deepfakes" has been an absolute disaster, with over-broad language posing a serious threat to freedom of expression, for instance, in "saving" imaginary people (). And this makes sense, as an average joe on the street is probably not that versed in policy.

It is so, so frustrating when someone from the U.K. voices stupid, stupid takes like this in complete ignorance of what is actually going on in the other side of world ().

"When she left government, the administration’s approval ratings had reached highs of more than 70%."
Singapore has a ruling party with something like 90% of seats, and they execute people for drug trafficking. They are also against homosexuality.

Olives boosted

It's reported by Politics UK on Twitter that the British Army account has been suspended for failing to provide proof of age. As Government seeks to age-gate more of the Internet, suspect more censorship by platforms! x.com/PolitlcsUK/status/181541

If Facebook and Google are coming up with smart glasses, do you think the "glasshole" insult will return?

While I could see the other party also having this problem, one of the problems with Kamala is her historic stance against prostitution.

Even with something like privacy in interacting with the machine (or better yet, running it completely locally), that would be something to cover in a direct manner, not a doomsday manner.

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If someone had written a concern that an algorithm might be used for disinformation, then well, that might be relevant (although, it is hard to say what can really be done about that). When someone talks like this, using this grandiose and dramatic language, and supposed future threats, it enters the realm of sensationalism.
QT: qoto.org/@olives/1128298958417

Olives  
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/article/2024/jul/22/artificial-intelligence-panic-time-change Notice the elements here. A sensationalisti...

theguardian.com/commentisfree/
Notice the elements here. A sensationalistic headline. You should be afraid. Also, leaning heavily on tick tock tick tock, time is running out!, even though there is no sign as to why this week should be any different from any other week. People have made such claims over the past seven years (or even the past couple).

For good measure, they toss in a wad of *things you cannot possibly comprehend*, as if we are dealing with some kind of Lovecraftian horror veering over the horizon. This is a good example of "AI" sensationalism.

"If development continues at this speed"
This is not how "development" works. "development" is not made up of XP bars which you continuously fill up to unlock the "next level" of development.

reason.com/2024/07/19/the-doob
"Sen. Gary Peters (D–Mich.) last week introduced a bill to prohibit the federal government from deeming an individual ineligible for employment or for a security clearance based solely on past marijuana use. The legislation is named the Dismantling Outdated Obstacles and Barriers to Individual Employment Act of 2024, otherwise known as the DOOBIE Act. Heh."

LLMs probably function better as a roleplay machine than as an assistant which is expected to be accurate.

Parts of the Australian Government questioning whether the PM's idea to ban minors from social media is a good idea.

It's interesting to see a take which says only 25 - 40% of data sources which could be tapped remain, and talking as if it is a disaster for "AI"*. I wonder if sucking up so much data was ever really sustainable though.

* I call it "AI" but I really mean artificial "intelligence". Writing the whole phrase out every time is tiresome, so I simplify it with a couple of quotes.

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