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Apparently, there was a bit of a ruckus about spam.

Maybe, if a new account posts the same thing five times, then maybe, it could be prevented from continuing to do so for a few hours.

That said, "anti-bot" measures can often be more effective at preventing actual humans from using a site.

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

youtube.com/watch?v=1efOs0BsE0 I suppose that means this video talking about them just tossing him to the sharks is a bit less accurate now then. It's still a good one.

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Olives boosted

I don't think there is any defending what Russia does.

Olives boosted

reclaimthenet.org/biometric-en

"The Major League Baseball (MLB) biometric system known as Go-Ahead Entry will this season be used at stadiums, including by “early adopter” Minute Maid Park in Houston, Texas.

The use of biometric facial recognition surveillance tools at sporting venues around the world started some years ago, and got sped up – or exacerbated, as opponents of the trend might say, with the pandemic.

Incidentally, a key reason organizations like MLB and other leagues give for using such systems is to “speed up entry into stadiums.” This means that instead of a ticket, fans will be showing their faces to the cameras and feeding their biometric data into the system."

Olives boosted

reclaimthenet.org/maine-school

"Following our recent reporting, and in the face of mounting criticism from parents and the American Civil Liberties Union of Maine, a plan to utilize biometric technology for student attendance tracking by Caribou High School has now been dropped.

The shelved project involved the deployment of identiMetrics, a fingerprint detection software produced by a Pennsylvania-based company. The software was aimed at bolstering student record accuracy and circumventing issues tied to missing student ID cards."

reason.com/2024/02/20/nyc-chil

"Every year, thousands of New York City families are subjected to invasive home searches as part of child abuse and neglect investigations. While less than 7 percent of these investigations lead the agency to file claims of abuse or neglect, a new lawsuit alleges that the city's Administration for Children's Services (ACS) workers often make misleading—or outright false—threats to coerce parents to allow ACS to conduct warrantless searches of their homes."

""Even assuming ACS completed only one home search during each investigation (it typically conducts several), ACS sought court orders for just 0.4% of home entries," the suit states. "This means over 99.5% of home searches that ACS conducts are 'presumptively unreasonable' under the .""

"Once inside a family's home, the suit claims that ACS workers engage in incredibly invasive tactics, looking "inside medicine cabinets, under beds, in closets and dresser drawers, in the refrigerator, and in cupboards." Even more troubling, strip searches of children are common, with workers demanding that children lift up their shirts or pull down their pants."

By the way, I've read elsewhere that "negligence" tends to be more a matter of poverty a lot of the time.

reclaimthenet.org/facial-recog

"He revealed his role in supervising a novel facial recognition trial, piloted by the grocery cooperative Foodstuffs North Island. Under the guise of reducing crime, the firm aims to incorporate facial recognition technology in 25 branches of New World and Pak’nSave over the next six months.

Casual shoppers will find themselves under surveillance. This was driven home when the popular chain, Woolworths, included obscure clauses in its policy for its newly introduced loyalty card, Everyday Rewards.

The clauses permit the supermarket giant to procure video and audio material to identify customers, in addition to license plate capture."

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."

"AI" anime art can't really compare that made by humans (well, I suppose there is a possibility the artists are something more... supernatural), lol.

reclaimthenet.org/maine-school

"Following our recent reporting, and in the face of mounting criticism from parents and the American Civil Liberties Union of Maine, a plan to utilize biometric technology for student attendance tracking by Caribou High School has now been dropped.

The shelved project involved the deployment of identiMetrics, a fingerprint detection software produced by a Pennsylvania-based company. The software was aimed at bolstering student record accuracy and circumventing issues tied to missing student ID cards."

reclaimthenet.org/biometric-en

"The Major League Baseball (MLB) biometric system known as Go-Ahead Entry will this season be used at stadiums, including by “early adopter” Minute Maid Park in Houston, Texas.

The use of biometric facial recognition surveillance tools at sporting venues around the world started some years ago, and got sped up – or exacerbated, as opponents of the trend might say, with the pandemic.

Incidentally, a key reason organizations like MLB and other leagues give for using such systems is to “speed up entry into stadiums.” This means that instead of a ticket, fans will be showing their faces to the cameras and feeding their biometric data into the system."

Olives boosted
Olives boosted

You know, this stuff still applies.

Olives  
Ugh... There's more puritanical nonsense, so it looks like I have to debunk that again... First off, even if online porn "might" be "problematic" t...
Olives boosted

axios.com/2024/02/09/meta-poli From the looks of it, you can still opt into political recommendations, it's just not the default.

They're probably trying to avoid people getting mad at them.

I don't think there is any defending what Russia does.

Olives boosted

"“New bill text, same problems,” Adam Kovacevich, the head of tech trade group Chamber of Progress, said in a statement. “This bill still gives right-wing AGs extraordinary power to police online speech. And the bill still forces platforms to over-moderate and censor marginalized communities by creating sweeping liability. As federal courts have repeatedly held, the features of a platform are inextricably linked with its speech, and KOSA’s censorship of that speech runs headlong into the constitution.”"

Already seeing criticism of the "new" KOSA draft.

Olives boosted

fightforthefuture.org/news/202

"However, by not clarifying that the Duty of Care only applies in a content neutral manner, as we have asked, it still invites the harms that we’ve warned about.

As we have said for months, the fundamental problem with KOSA is that its duty of care covers content specific aspects of content recommendation systems, and the new changes fail to address that. In fact, personalized recommendation systems are explicitly listed under the definition of a design feature covered by the duty of care. This means that a future Federal Trade Commission (FTC) could still use KOSA to pressure platforms into automated filtering of important but controversial topics like LGBTQ issues and abortion, by claiming that algorithmically recommending that content “causes” mental health outcomes that are covered by the duty of care like anxiety and depression."

"It’s important to remember that algorithmic recommendation includes, for example, showing a user a post from a friend that they follow, since most platforms do not show all users all posts, but curate them in some way."

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