Author archives

Susie Wiles, JD Vance, and the “Junkyard Dogs”: The White House Chief of Staff on Trump’s Second Term

Note – “Chris Whipple, the author of this feature told Anderson Cooper that all of the interviews with Susie Wiles were on the record and tape-recorded. He compared the confluence of factors to a lightning strike. “She knew I was working on a book at the outset,” he said, and “when I told her that …

Subjects: Censorship, Civil Liberties, Congress, Economy, Education, Government Documents, Legal Research

What 1,000 pages of documents tell us about DOGE

The Verge [no paywall]: “As Brendan Carr heads to Capitol Hill, newly released documents still don’t say much about what DOGE did at the FCC. Months after staffers from the Department of Government Efficiency were found in the Federal Communications Commission directory, the FCC is being accused of slow-walking demands for information about what they …

Subjects: Censorship, Congress, Courts, E-Records, Economy, Financial System, Freedom of Information, Government Documents, Legal Research

Report – Creating psychological safety in the AI era

MIT Technology Review: Rolling out enterprise-grade AI means climbing two steep cliffs at once. First, understanding and implementing the tech itself. And second, creating the cultural conditions where employees can maximize its value. While the technical hurdles are significant, the human element can be even more consequential; fear and ambiguity can stall momentum of even …

Subjects: AI, Education, Health Care, Internet, Knowledge Management, Legal Research, Search Engines

Poems Can Trick AI Into Helping You Make a Nuclear Weapon

WIRED: “You can get ChatGPT to help you build a nuclear bomb if you simply design the prompt in the form of a poem, according to a new study from researchers in Europe. The study, “Adversarial Poetry as a Universal Single-Turn Jailbreak in Large Language Models (LLMs),” comes from Icaro Lab, a collaboration of researchers …

Subjects: AI, Education, Energy, Government Documents, Internet, Knowledge Management, Legal Research

Scams, Schemes, Ruthless Cons: The Untold Story of How Jeffrey Epstein Got Rich

The New York Times Magazine [no paywall]: For years, rumors swirled about where his wealth came from. A Times investigation reveals the truth of how a college dropout clawed his way to the pinnacle of American finance and society. “For years, rumors swirled about where his wealth came from. A Times investigation reveals the truth …

Subjects: Economy, Financial System, Knowledge Management, Legal Research

Turning Public Money into Amazon’s Profits

Institute for Local Self Reliance:  The Hidden Cost of Ceding Government Procurement to a Monopoly Gatekeeper – ILSR has conducted a sweeping investigation that reveals Amazon has quietly become a major force in how cities, counties, and school districts purchase basic supplies — and that its tightening grip is driving up costs, eroding competition, and …

Subjects: Economy, Education, Financial System, Government Documents, Legal Research

The new ChatGPT Images is here

OpenAI: “Today, we’re releasing a new version of ChatGPT Images⁠, powered by our new flagship image generation model. Now, whether you’re creating something from scratch or editing a photo, you’ll get the output you’re picturing. It makes precise edits while keeping details intact, and generates images up to 4x faster. Alongside, we’re introducing a new …

Subjects: AI, Internet, Knowledge Management, Legal Research

I freed 50GB on my iCloud without losing important files with these tricks

MakeUseOf: “Apple gives its users just 5GB of free iCloud storage, which is barely enough for one device, let alone several. Between backups, photos, and documents, that space fills up fast, forcing many users to upgrade to a paid plan. Even then, you’ll likely hit your limit again. I recently faced this exact issue and …

Subjects: E-Records, Internet, Knowledge Management

Can Bibliotherapy Heal the Pain of the World?

Literary Hub – “As a librarian, I’ve often felt like a part-time therapist. People confide in librarians the way they do with bartenders; we form bonds with our regular customers, listen to their troubles and serve up more than just books. After I learned the word “bibliotherapist,” during library school 20 years ago, I became …

Subjects: Education, Health Care, Internet, Knowledge Management, Libraries, Medicine