By ResearchBuzz
NEW RESOURCES
Center for Railroad Photography & Art: Center unveils Odyssey, our new digital archive of railroad imagery. “Dynamic and user-friendly, Odyssey will facilitate higher cataloging standards among Center staff and greater public searchability of collection materials. Users can explore all of the Center’s images that are available in its Flickr galleries, but now collected in a single location — as well as new offerings from John Gruber, Stan Kistler, David Mainey, and Jim Shaughnessy, with more to come from Richard Steinheimer and many others.”
TWEAKS AND UPDATES
The Register: FYI: Tor Browser is very much still a thing and getting updates. “The Tor Browser, which strives to provide anonymity online rather than the limited data sharing internet companies call ‘privacy,’ has reached version 12.5, a milestone that brings usability and accessibility improvements alongside attention to legacy issues.”
Engadget: Podcast app Stitcher is shutting down in August. “Stitcher is shutting down. The popular podcasting app and web service, which SiriusXM acquired in 2020 for $325 million, will close on August 29th, according to an FAQ on its website (via Variety). The move appears geared toward drawing its user base into the broader SiriusXM platform.”
AROUND THE INTERNET WORLD
Motherboard: AI-Generated Books of Nonsense Are All Over Amazon’s Bestseller Lists. “Amazon’s Kindle Unlimited young adult romance bestseller list was filled with dozens of AI-generated books of nonsense on Monday and Tuesday. As of Wednesday morning, Amazon appeared to have taken action against the books, but the episode shows that people are spamming AI-generated nonsense to the platform and are finding a way to monetize it.”
The Verge: Reddit is telling protesting mods their communities ‘will not’ stay private. “Reddit is pressuring moderators who have set their subreddits to private to reopen their communities this week, according to messages seen by The Verge. The company has given moderators deadlines to lay out their plans for reopening but said that they can’t stay closed.”
Daily Beast: YouTube’s Comments Are an Internet Treasure We Must Protect. “YouTube’s most sentimental comments sections seem to derive from more serious and earnest music videos, often from anime and games. On the video for ‘Howl’s Moving Castle [OST – Theme Song]’, thousands of people have written diary entries inspired by an original user, Anxley, whose journaling throughout the 2020 lockdowns has seemingly granted him saint-like status.”
SECURITY & LEGAL
Rolling Stone: Genius’s Attempts to Sue Google Over Song Lyrics Are Basically Dead. “THE SUPREME COURT has rejected a bid from Genius to revive the lyrics website’s lawsuit against Google, which had accused the search engine of lifting lyrics transcriptions from Genius for millions of songs.”
CTV News Calgary: 1M child exploitation photos and videos seized, 8 Albertans arrested. “Authorities have arrested eight people, including seven Calgarians, in connection with one of the largest seizures of child pornography in Alberta. The Alberta Law Enforcement Response Team’s Internet Child Exploitation (ICE) team made the arrests over the past three months.”
Route Fifty: Feds want to help prevent cyberattacks on the water sector. “NIST’s National Cybersecurity Center of Excellence is seeking input from technology vendors, water sector members and other key stakeholders on a new practical reference design for mitigating cyber risks in water and wastewater systems.”
RESEARCH & OPINION
PsyPost: Conspiracy theorists less likely to believe in misinformation if they experience rewarding romantic connections. “The researchers found that individuals with a strong inclination towards conspiracy thinking were less likely to fall for COVID-19 misinformation if they were in a fulfilling romantic relationship. Having a positive romantic connection provided these individuals with a sense of safety and security, reducing their need to seek safety through embracing false information about COVID-19.”
VentureBeat: More details emerge about Google DeepMind efforts to surpass ChatGPT. “Back in April, Google Brain and DeepMind joined forces as Google DeepMind, with plans to take on the competitive threat posed by OpenAI and its game-changing ChatGPT. Now, according to Wired, DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis says the company is working on a new system, Gemini — which was teased at Google I/O in May — that will ‘tap techniques that helped AlphaGo defeat a Go champion in 2016.'”
New York Times: A.I. May Someday Work Medical Miracles. For Now, It Helps Do Paperwork.. “The best use for generative A.I. in health care, doctors say, is to ease the heavy burden of documentation that takes them hours a day and contributes to burnout.” Good morning, Internet…
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June 30, 2023 at 05:31PM
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