After retaking part of Kupyansk, Ukrainian forces are successfully continuing their counteroffensive at the junction of the Dnipropetrovsk and Zaporizhzhia regions. At the same time, Russia has launched a new offensive toward Dobropillia.
https://meduza.io/en/feature/2026/03/19/ukraine-s-counteroffensive-brings-gains-in-the-south-but-weakens-other-sectors-of-the-front-meduza-analyzes-the-latest-battlefield-developments
A first in Sweden: Government retracts an official report after made up sources by AI.
www.dn.se/sverige/rege...
Regeringen drar tillbaka rappo...
De är emot abort, motsätter sig ”sexualisering” i skolan, förespråkar den ”naturliga familjen” – och har kopplingar till Bolsonarofamiljen.
Nu ska organisationen få svenska biståndspengar från Sida genom den SD-kopplade biståndsorganisationen Hepatica, kan DN avslöja.
www.dn.se/sverige/sds-...
SD:s bistånd stöttar Bolsonaro...
All 5 DNA, RNA bases found in Ryugu asteroid samples: Japan research team https://mainichi.jp/english/articles/20260318/p2a/00m/0sc/019000c
3/ More from Lederberg, 1996:
"I take the literature very seriously. To me it’s holy writ and I want to be sure that, in whatever format it is distributed, it will be accessible, its veracity can be attested by its being observable by everyone at will, and it should be an achievement that cannot be altered. But it’s also a dynamic place, as it should be, and effectively is an open forum. It could be more open than it is. We don’t have enough dialectic in our current modes of publication after the fact. There has to be almost a federal case before you can have a comment published on a prior article, and the electronic media will help to lower the threshold in that regard. It’s a ‘rumen’, which is a place for fermentation, for digestion, for re-examination of the given truths over a period of time, and it certainly has a dynamic quality taken in its totality, even if every brick of the edifice has been put firmly into place in a severely qualified process."
@petersuber
This is probably the largest error: anyone who's browsed an app store or the YouTube front page for a length of time will get an intuitive understanding of the need for curation because the physical constraints on the reader remain even when the medium is electronic.
Regeringen vet att deras klimatpolitik är dålig. Därför försöker de undvika oberoende granskning. Förra året uteblev Klimatministern från Klimatpolitiska rådets rapportöverlämning. Nu tvingar de rådet att presentera i slutet möte, utan offentlig insyn. SD vill lägga ner rådet helt omni.se/a/k0wzPX
MEPs are going to press ahead with a vote to approve the EU-US trade pact —despite most observers believing that it clear favours the US.
https://euobserver.com/207269/meps-set-to-finally-green-light-eu-us-trade-deal-in-thursday-vote/
American democracy is now declining at a faster rate than in Hungary and Turkey. I spent the past week talking to Staffan Lindberg, the founder of the V-Dem Institute in Gothenburg, about their alarming new annual report on global democratic decline, which was released today.
My latest piece for The Guardian:
"Afghanistan says 400 killed in strike by Pakistan on Kabul hospital [...] treating drug users"
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2026/mar/16/afghanistan-accuses-pakistan-of-kabul-hospital-strike-killed
@cwebber
On the other hand it seems stupid, who ever heard of a water company worth trillions? I doubt what Altman really has in mind is becoming wholly owned by a alliance of municipalities.
I think you are right that they imagine themselves as plantation owners, but then their poor understanding of the real world makes them substitute in something else to be more palatable.
"We see a future where intelligence is a utility, like electricity or water, and people buy it from us on a meter..." -- Sam Altman
https://x.com/TheChiefNerd/status/2032012809433723158
There you go, there it is. Yup.
There are only two strategies which are acceptable: either AI model output is completely illegal because of copyright stuff (this is unlikely to happen because there is now too much money behind it), or AI model output is fully in the public domain, which has its own problems but at least is an even playing field.
There won't be a middle ground that is safe. Because they want something that looks like a "middle ground", but really, all it does is lock in the big players' control over information, forever.
@grimalkina
I can empathize with this declaration, I once heard such a bad take about statistical models on a podcast I follow I had to walk around a lake, twice.
An insolvency judge in England tossed out testimony after discovering a witness was being coached on what to say in real time through a pair of smartglasses. When the voice of the coach started coming through the cellphone after it was disconnected from the glasses, the witness blamed the whole thing on ChatGPT.
Insolvency and Companies Court (ICC) Judge Agnello KC in Britain wrote up the incident after it happened in January and the UK-based legal research blog Legal Futures was first to report it. The case considered the liquidation of a Lithuanian company co-owned by a man named Laimonas Jakštys. Jakštys was in court to get his business off an insolvency list and to put himself back in charge of it. It didn’t go well.
“Right at the start of his cross examination, he seemed to pause quite a bit before replying to the questions being asked,” Judge KC wrote. “These questions were interpreted and then there was a pause before there was a reply. After several questions, [defense lawyer Sarah Walker] then informed me that she could hear an interference coming from around Mr. Jakštys and asked if Mr. Jakštys could take his glasses off for a period as she was aware smart glasses existed.”
There was a Lithuanian interpreter on hand to help Jakštys talk to the court and she, too, said she could hear voices from Jakštys’s glasses. The judge pointed out they were smart glasses and asked him to take them off. “After a few further questions, when the interpreter was in the process of translating a question, Mr Jakštys’ mobile phone started broadcasting out loud with the voice of someone talking,” Judge KC wrote. “There was clearly someone on the mobile phone talking to Mr. Jakštys. He then removed his mobile phone from his inner jacket pocket. At my direction, the smart glasses and his mobile were placed into the hands of his solicitor.”
Jakštys showed up the next day in the glasses again and the judge told him to turn them off. “Jakštys denied that he was using the smart glasses to receive the answers that he was to give in court to the questions being asked,” the judgement said. “He also denied that his smart glasses were linked to his mobile phone at the time that he was giving evidence before me.”
During the court appearance, Jakštys claimed his mobile phone had been stolen but couldn’t provide a police report for the incident. He also repeatedly received calls on his smartglasses-connected phone from a number listed as “abra kadabra.” The call log showed that many of the calls occurred when he was on the witness stand. The judge asked him about the identity of “abra kadabra” and Jakštys said it was a taxi driver.
“When he was pressed as to why all these calls were made…Mr. Jakštys stated that he was not able to remember. This was a reply which he also gave frequently during his evidence,” Judge KC said.
In the end, the Judge tossed out all of Jakštys’ testimony. “He was untruthful in relation to his use about the smart glasses and in being coached through the smart glasses,” the judgement said. “In my judgment, from what occurred in court, it is clear that call was made, connected to his smart glasses and continued during his evidence until his mobile phone was removed from him. When asked about this, his explanation was that he thought it was ChatGPT which caused the voice to be heard from his mobile phone once his smart glasses had been removed. That lacks any credibility.”
This incident in the London court is just another in a long line of bad behavior from people wearing smartglasses. CBP agents have been spotted wearing them during immigration raids and Harvard students have loaded them with facial recognition tech to instantly dox strangers.
The EU insists on a tuition fees cut as the price of a Brexit reset.
Brussels is insisting that British Prime Minister Keir Starmer agree to a cut in tuition fees for EU students as the price of his Brexit reset.
EU officials say they are frustrated that the UK is yet to engage on the topic in talks — which are meant to finish by the summer.
“It needs to be worked out before talks can be concluded,” one EU official told POLITICO.
Antimatter Trucker is finally a job title! But don’t worry, this isn’t going to be “The Wages of Fear, 2026”:
“The device on Cern’s truck will carry about 1,000 antimatter particles, weighing about a billionth of a trillionth of a gram. Should the containment fail, and the antimatter make contact with normal matter, the resulting pulse of energy would be so feeble, the load doesn’t even warrant a radioactive label.”
A Pentagon recruiter openly offers corruption: “unmatched access to top-level government officials and privileged information flow — whatever you need, you can get.”
www.nytimes.com/2026/03/13/u...
Wall Street Bankers Offered Lu...
Not sure what this account will be about, mostly boosting things I find interesting.