Saturday, April 15
Artificial Intelligence
Sam Altman of OpenAI |
Many experts in A.I. and computer science say the technology is likely a watershed moment for human society. But 36% don’t mean that as a positive, warning that decisions made by A.I. could lead to “nuclear-level catastrophe,” according to researchers surveyed in an annual report on the technology by Stanford University’s Institute for Human-Centered A.I., published earlier this month.
Almost three quarters of researchers in natural language processing—the branch of computer science concerned with developing A.I.—say the technology might soon spark “revolutionary societal change,” according to the report.
“As the technical barrier to entry for creating and deploying generative A.I. systems has lowered dramatically, the ethical issues around A.I. have become more apparent to the general public. Startups and large companies find themselves in a race to deploy and release generative models, and the technology is no longer controlled by a small group of actors,” the report said. READ MORE...
Friday, April 14
Who Really Cares About Any Of It?
- One for the Haves and one for the Have Nots
...and...
- One for the Liberals and one for the Conservatives
Americans Want What They Want When They Want It
BILL OF RIGHTSAmendment 1 Freedoms, Petitions, Assembly
Amendment 2 Right to bear arms
Amendment 3 Quartering of soldiers
Amendment 4 Search and arrest
Amendment 5 Rights in criminal cases
Amendment 6 Right to a fair trial
Amendment 7 Rights in civil cases
Amendment 8 Bail, fines, punishment
Amendment 9 Rights retained by the People
Amendment 10 States' rights
Later Amendments
Amendment 12 Presidential elections
Amendment 13 Abolition of slavery
Amendment 14 Civil rights
Amendment 15 Black suffrage
Amendment 16 Income taxes
Amendment 17 Senatorial elections
Amendment 18 Prohibition of liquor
Amendment 19 Women's suffrage
Amendment 20 Terms of office
Amendment 21 Repeal of Prohibition
Amendment 22 Term Limits for the Presidency
Amendment 23 Washington, D.C., suffrage
Amendment 24 Abolition of poll taxes
Amendment 25 Presidential succession
Amendment 26 18-year-old suffrage
Amendment 27 Congressional pay raises
Gas or Electric?
FILE - A Tesla electric vehicle, left, sits in a charging station at a dealership, Thursday, Feb. 18, 2021, in Dedham, Mass. Shares of Tesla and Twitter have tumbled this week as investors deal with the fallout and potential legal issues surrounding Tesla CEO Elon Musk and his $44 billion bid to buy the social media platform. Of the two, Musk's electric vehicle company has fared worse, with its stock down almost 16% so far this week to $728. (AP Photo/Steven Senne, File)
Hooray for electric vehicles. Someday, they’re going to help slash carbon emissions and get global warming under control.
The Biden administration plans to tighten car-pollution standards in a way that's meant to dramatically speed the adoption of electric vehicles, or EVs. On April 12, the Environmental Protection Agency proposed new rules that would cut the allowable pollution from cars by more than half by 2032.
The goal is laudable. The implementation, however, could be a multi-car pileup. The Biden administration is basically proposing the forced adoption of new technology on a scale unprecedented in the auto industry. The government has been tightening fuel-economy standards since the 1970s, but that has largely been a gradual process. Even then, unintended consequences have caused unforeseen problems. READ MORE...
College Is Not Always The Answer
During my 45 year career, no employer ever looked at my grades or my GPA...
My entire continued employment was predicated upon me ACHIEVING RESULTS...
TODAY... many people graduate from college with a student loan debt of between $50,000 to $200,000... it could be higher or it could be lower... but regardless it is a huge amount of debt with which to begin a career. The higher paying jobs are always UP NORTH... seldom in the south, unless you have over 10 years of critical experience to the company considering hiring you.
IS COLLEGE WORTH IT?
Yes, if you want to be a lawyer, CPA, physician, dentist, or quack... but, just to get a college degree for the sake of earning more money because you have one... NO!!!
You could work building homes for 10 years, get your contractor's license, hire your own crew to supervise and make hundreds of thousands of dollars for the rest of your life without college.
Managing a restaurant is less stressful than being in middle management at a Fortune 500 company because of how management is being measured. Increase sales by 20%, decrease costs by 20%, increase markets by 20% and increase share price by 20%.
PLUS... there is pressure being placed on professors to lower their standards so that everyone passes their class and the college/university loses no revenue. Now there is a movement underway not to give any grades at all... just pass/fail.
I have talked to numerous college graduates who said that they hardley used any of their college education in their careers... maybe 20%, if that.
My first job after graduating with a BA degree in English was as DIRECTOR OF PRODUCT EFFICIACY for a microbiological media manufacturer... WTF did I know about microbiology of efficacy?
My parents pushed me into college because they wanted me to have a WHITE COLLAR job not a BLUE COLLAR job. Right now, blue collar jobs make more money annually than white collar jobs... if all you care about is the money.
COLLEGE IS NOT WORTH THE INVESTMENT but you have to make that decision on your own.7
Manipulating Quantum Light
Albert Einstein's stimulated emission theory has been validated by large amounts of light, but never before by individual photons.
New research offers the ability to manipulate and identify single photons, allowing for the manipulation of quantum light.
Continued development of this technology has the potential to lead to huge advancements in quantum computing.
Stimulated light emission—a theory first proposed by Einstein in 1916 that helps explain how photons can trigger atoms to emit other photons—laid the basis for the invention of the laser (Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation).
Thursday, April 13
Accused of Sexual Harassment
Constitutional law attorney Jonathan Turley on Fox News. (Fox News)
Turley, a Fox News contributor, has been outspoken about the pitfalls of artificial intelligence and has publicly expressed concerns with the disinformation dangers of the ChatGPT bot, the latest iteration of the AI chatbot. Last week, a UCLA professor and friend of Turley's notified him that his name appeared in a search while he was conducting research on ChatGPT.
"Five professors came up, three of those stories were clearly false, including my own," Turley told "The Story" on Fox News Monday. "What was really menacing about this incident is that the AI system made up a Washington Post story and then made up a quote from that story and said that there was this allegation of harassment on a trip with students to Alaska.