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Once, Twice, Three Times an Indictee

Legal Commodore Jack Smith thinks convicting Trump will be easy like Sunday morning, but the Donald’s document snatch is more Guy Richie than Lionel Richie.

by Maureen Dowd

Microsoft just released a demo of BigGPT-Large, which they define as "a domain-specific generative model pre-trained on large-scale biomedical literature, has achieved human parity, outperformed other general and scientific LLMs, and could empower biologists in various scenarios of scientific discovery."

Here's the response to the first question that I asked: @ct_bergstrom @emilymbender

The Right to Lie: Google's "Web Environment Integrity" Proposal is a Geyser of Badness Threatening to Swamp the Open Web. 

If your computer can’t lie to other computers, then it’s not yours.

This is a fundamental principle of free and open source software. The World Wide Web abides by this principle, although we don’t often think of it that way. The Web is just an agreed-on set of programmatic interfaces: if you send me this, I’ll send you that. Your computer can construct the “this” by whatever means it wants; it’s none of the other side’s business, because your computer is not their computer.

Google’s so-called “Web Environment Integrity” plan would destroy this independence. “Integrity” is exactly the wrong word for it — a better name would be the “Browser Environment Control” plan.

In the normal world, you show up at the store with a five dollar bill, pick up a newspaper, and the store sells you the newspaper (and maybe some change) in exchange for the bill. In Google’s proposed world, five dollar bills aren’t fungible anymore: the store can ask you about the provenance of that bill, and if they don’t like the answer, they don’t sell you the newspaper. No, they’re not worried about the bill being fake or counterfeit or anything like that. It’s a real five dollar bill, they agree, but you can’t prove that you got it from the right bank. Please feel free to come back with the right sort of five dollar bill.

This is not the Open Web that made what’s best about the Internet accessible to the whole world. On that Web, if you send a valid request with the right data, you get a valid response. How you produced the request is your business and your business alone. That’s what software freedom is all about: you decide how your machinery works, just as other people decide how their machinery works. If your machine and their machine want to talk to each other, they just need an agreed-on language (in the case of the Web, that’s HTTP) in which to do so.

Google’s plan, though, steps behind this standard language to demand something no free and open source software can ever deliver: a magical guarantee that the user has not privately configured their own computer in any way that Google disapproves of.

The effrontery is shocking, to those with enough technical background to understand what is being proposed. It’s as though Google were demanding that when you’re talking to them you must somehow guarantee, in a provable way, that you’re not also thinking impure thoughts.

How could anyone ever agree to this nonsense? Must all our computers become North Korea?

The details of your own system’s configuration are irrelevant to — and unnecessary to accurately represent in — your communications with a server, just as your private thoughts are not required to be included, in some side-band channel, along with everything you say in regular language.

If a web site wants to require that you have a username and password, that’s fine. Those are just a standard part of the HTTP request your browser sends. But if a web site wants your browser to promise that it stores that username and password locally in a file named “google-seekritz.txt”, that’s not only weird and creepy, it’s also something that a free software (as in libre) browser can never reliably attest to. Any browser maintenance team worth its salt will just ship the browser with a default configuration in which the software reports that to Google when asked while, behind the scenes, storing usernames and passwords however it damn well pleases.

Indeed, the fundamental issue here is the freedom to have a “behind the scenes” at all. Environments in which people aren’t allowed to have a “behind the scenes” are totalitarian environments. That’s not an exaggeration; it’s simply the definition of the term. Whatever bad connotations the concept of totalitarianism may have for you, they come not from the fancy-sounding multi-syllabic word but from the actual, human-level badness of the scenario itself. That scenario is what Google is asking for.

My web browser (currently Mozilla Firefox running on Debian GNU/Linux, thank you very much) will never cooperate with this bizarre and misguided proposal. And along with the rest of the free software community, I will continue working to ensure we all live in a world where your web browser doesn’t have to either.

(Cross-posted at https://rants.org/2023/07/the-right-to-lie-and-google-wei/ .)

Read in context, Xitter says that it's mission is to provide a platform for hate speech, a topic of paramount importance, unfettered by observations that it is hate speech.

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A game of Go on a hyperbolic manifold, played in the HyperRogue discord server, ended like this.
#noneuclidean #noneuclideangeometry #rogueviz #bringsurface #baduk

I really love Pee-Wee Herman. As a kid I watched the show, ate the cereal, wore the watch, colored and baked the Shrinky Dinks, and even tried to wear out the VHS copy of The Pee-Wee Herman Show at my video store. He was such a magnificent weirdo. I still have my action figures somewhere. I am so happy we got Paul Reubens, and I am heartbroken he is gone. variety.com/2023/film/news/pau
#RIPPaulReubens #RIPPeeWee

The BBC's experiment with Mastodon is pathbreaking in English-language news -- a major organization setting up its own instance. They've really thought this through. Key language:

"We're using social.bbc as the domain, so you can be sure these accounts are genuinely from the BBC. And by linking to and from the BBC’s website, we have verified our identity on Mastodon."

bbc.co.uk/rd/blog/2023-07-mast

Welcome to:
@BBCRD
@BBC5Live @BBCRadio4
@BBCTaster
@Connected_Studio
@BBC_News_Labs

Or should I have gone with the Jurassic Park “See, nobody cares” image?

Either way, the New York Times’s obsession with Hunter Biden is pathetic.

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STOP TRYING TO MAKE “BIDEN FAMILY DRAMA” HAPPEN

IT’S NOT GOING TO HAPPEN

The inevitable, dangerous X factor. 1/...🧵in part, via David Frum:

NYT reports that Elon #Musk personally thwarted a #Ukraine military operation he disapproved of.

At this point, Musk's interference to thwart Ukraine battle plans is not any kind of economic action. It is an assertion of a personal foreign policy, in defiance of the United States, whose citizenship he sought and to which he swore loyalty in 2002.

t.co/7hWGMBKo5j

The Florida Democratic Party's Take Back America tour begins in Volusia County at 9:30 a.m., Wed., Aug. 2. Sign up at mobilize.us/floridadems/event/ receive the exact address.

Throughout the month of August, Chair Nikki Fried and our Executive Director Phillip Jerez will be traveling the state firing Democrats up and getting them organized to register people to vote, re-enroll folks in vote-by-mail, and more.

#TakeBackFlorida #TakeBackFL #FloridaDems #VoteBlue #GOTV

Biden doesn't get enough credit for being brave enough to begin America's too long delayed transition off of fossil fuels.

If we want #ClimateAction than we've got to try to change that before the next elections so that more Americans go to the polls to help get the GOP out of power.

I'm providing free access to this article on how the Inflation Reduction Act is helping to shift the U.S. towards becoming a cleaner energy economy. #ClimateProgress wapo.st/3q8OcS2

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The basic facts, as currently being reported, about the Nazi imagery in #DeSantis ad. Just disgusting. rawstory.com/ron-desantis-dele

nytimes.com/2023/07/23/us/poli

This bizarre article is about how much $ Jack Smith’s investigations of Agolf Twitler are costing. It’s paywalled, but not terribly interesting anyway. It contains this howler:

“A more apt comparison is to the nearly two-year investigation by the special counsel Robert S. Mueller into the 2016 Trump campaign’s connections to Russia, which resulted in a decision not to indict Mr. Trump.”

Mueller’s didnt indict t**** because of a Nixon-era OLC memo that forbade that🤦‍♂️

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