Saturday, September 11
Facebook Apologizes
Facebook users who watched a newspaper video featuring black men were asked if they wanted to "keep seeing videos about primates" by an artificial-intelligence recommendation system.
Facebook told BBC News it "was clearly an unacceptable error", disabled the system and launched an investigation. "We apologise to anyone who may have seen these offensive recommendations." It is the latest in a long-running series of errors that have raised concerns over racial bias in AI.
'Genuinely sorry'
In 2015, Google's Photos app labelled pictures of black people as "gorillas". The company said it was "appalled and genuinely sorry", though its fix, Wired reported in 2018, was simply to censor photo searches and tags for the word "gorilla".
In May, Twitter admitted racial biases in the way its "saliency algorithm" cropped previews of images. Studies have also shown biases in the algorithms powering some facial-recognition systems.
Algorithmic error
In 2020, Facebook announced a new "inclusive product council" - and a new equity team in Instagram - that would examine, among other things, whether its algorithms exhibited racial bias.
The "primates" recommendation "was an algorithmic error on Facebook" and did not reflect the content of the video, a representative told BBC News. READ MORE
Friday, September 10
Remembering
Whenever I hear politicians, Democrats or Republicans, say that 9/11 happened because WE LOVE FREEDOM... I cringe with anger... because that is not true at al...
The United States of America has a big problem trying to FORCE DEMOCRACRY on the rest of the world, especially in the Middle East among the ARABS who are MUSLIM and their faith is mainly ISLAM and they DON'T WANT OUR FREEDOM to be a part of their country and their beliefs...
Swapping Statues
The statue was daubed with paint during protests last year |
A statue of Italian explorer Christopher Columbus, which stood on one of the main avenues of Mexico City, will be replaced by one of an indigenous woman.
Mexico City Mayor Claudia Sheinbaum said the bronze likeness of Columbus would be moved to a park and a statue of an Olmec woman would take its place.
The Columbus statue was removed from its plinth last year ahead of protests. Protesters have toppled Columbus statues in Latin America and the US.
Christopher Columbus, an Italian-born explorer who was financed by the Spanish crown to set sail on voyages of exploration in the late 15th Century, is seen by many as a symbol of oppression and colonialism as his arrival in America opened the door to the Spanish conquest.
Mayor Sheinbaum made the announcement on Sunday at a ceremony marking the international day of the indigenous woman. She said that relocating the statue was not an attempt to "erase history" but to deliver "social justice".
Ms Sheinbaum said that the Columbus statue "would not be hidden away" but that the civilisations which existed in Mexico before the Spanish conquest should receive recognition. READ MORE
Disappearing Flamenco
(Image credit: Hugh Sitton/Getty Images) |
Hard-hit by pandemic closures, Spain's flamenco venues struggle to survive long enough to reignite the art form.
Flamenco's trifecta of guitar music, vocals and dance ranks among Spain's most famous art forms. But in the country of its birth, this centuries-old craft that unites elegant physicality and raw human emotion is in danger of extinction.
Spain's tablaos – traditional flamenco venues named after the wooden platforms upon which performers spin, sing and strum – were particularly hard-hit by pandemic lockdown restrictions. In tablaos, spectators rub shoulders at tightly spaced tables and performers remain close enough to maintain an electric connection to their audience, one that encourages improvisation and turns flamenco into a nearly collaborative act.
The unique environment that fosters flamenco, though, presents serious challenges in the time of Covid-19. Shuttered for extended periods, the majority of Spain's tablaos remain empty.
According to Juan Manuel del Rey, president of the Spanish Tablao Association, tablaos employ 95% of the flamenco dancers in Spain. Before the pandemic, the country's 50,000 yearly shows accounted for all but 5% of the world's flamenco performances. Without tablaos, flamenco is losing its stage to the world.
Because tablaos don't have a specific license that recognise them as cultural providers, they're unable to receive needed support from the Spanish government, leaving both venues and performers scrambling for survival. A few venues have opened with limited capacity one or two nights a week, but many remain closed or have already closed permanently. READ MORE
Narcissists Climb the Ladder
People with a high degree of narcissism get promoted faster, new research shows. Why?
Much ink has been spilled on the dangers of the narcissistic CEO. They tend to instil an individualistic culture throughout the corporation, which reduces collaboration and integrity.
Despite these serious concerns about narcissistic leadership, surprisingly little is known about the way ways that these self-centred and over-confident people arrive at their positions of power in the first place.
A new paper by Italian researchers attempts to close that gap in our knowledge – and it has some serious implications for the ways that companies select and reward their employees. READ MORE
Thursday, September 9
Populist Press
Officials Demand Election Be Decertified After Massive Fraud Proven…
Romney Admits He Joined Liberals to Target Republicans With Sick Move
Taliban Announce Huge Surprise For 9/11… Seems Like This Was All Planned
China May Take Over US Air Force Base
Biden Administration Prepares To Sue Texas
Biden Shredded And Told To Resign
Kavanaugh Threatened… Horrid Event Planned At His HOME
Nancy Pelosi Is In Hot Water
White House Staffers Panic — Leak What They Do When Biden Speaks
Chuck Schumer Gets Caught On Camera Doing The Unthinkable
Berlanga of Spain
There's some debate over how it happened. It might have been after the screening of The Executioner, which satirised capital punishment in Spain, at the Venice Film Festival in September 1963 – or it might have been after Welcome, Mr Marshall! (1953) lampooned Spanish hopes for a slice of the US money destined to rebuild Europe after World War Two.
This little anecdote delighted no one more than Berlanga himself. For the duration of the dictatorship, the director made films that were out of step with Spain's cultural mores and reverence for family, church and nation. Franco was right: Berlanga wasn't a communist.
Kenya: Ending FGM
John can barely remember a time when having sex with his wife did not end with her in tears. It was just too painful because she had undergone female genital mutilation (FGM). "Anytime I go to Martha, she recoils, curling like a child. She cries, begging me to leave her alone. She doesn't want to have sex any more," the 40-year-old says. John and Martha come from Kenya's Marakwet community in western Kenya.
Although FGM is illegal in Kenya, girls in their community often undergo FGM between the ages of 12 and 17, as a rite of passage in preparation for marriage. Martha was cut when she was 15.
Sex as an endurance test
"It is painful when we have sex. I wish this practice would end," she says, adding that it had also made childbirth very difficult for her. Recounting their first sexual experience, the couple describe it as traumatising. Martha says she felt a lot of pain and it is not how she had imagined sex would be. She had to ask her husband to stop.
"I didn't realise a part of her [vulva] had been stitched, leaving only the urethra and a tiny vaginal opening," John tells the BBC. "I try to be very compassionate with my wife. I don't want her to feel like I don't respect her, yet we are a couple."
They lived in agony with little hope that things would ever change - not just for them, but they feared for their young daughter as well. That was until John heard of an anti-FGM campaign meeting in his village, targeting men. READ MORE
Downside of IVIG Infusions
According to the Clieveland Clinic, prior to infusions of IVIF patients are usually pre-medicated with acetaminophen 650 to 1000 mg, diphenhydramine 50 mg. Acetaminophen is for headaches basically that this drug might cause and diphenhydramine is to prevent an allergic reaction or nausea. However, at UT Medical, I have decadron instead of diphenhydramine which is a steroid and in my body is much more powerful because every once in a while, it prevents me from falling asleep even though I take 2 benadryl at 6:00 pm.
Last night was especially important for sleep as I have back-to-back early days (awake at 5:30) since my second early wake-up call is for my monthly OPDIVO infusion.
Idiot or "no brainer me," has forgotten to swap out these two days or have IVIG on Fridays instead of Wednesdays because of the use of steroids so I will not have any problems falling asleep. Obviously, I have yet to make that swap because here it is 1:30 am and I am wide awake drinking coffee.
Once you start these monthly infusions, it is necessary for optimum affectiveness to have them every 4 weeks... and while that can be played with once or twice (in case of vacations), it is not something that the Oncologist likes to do. However, I have yet to exercise that option and once in a while my body makes me pay the price...