Category «Knowledge Management»

Text is king read on, queen

Experimental History – “The hot new theory online is that reading is kaput, and therefore civilization is too. The rise of hyper-addictive digital technologies has shattered our attention spans and extinguished our taste for text. Books are disappearing from our culture, and so are our capacities for complex and rational thought. We are careening toward …

Subjects: Education, Knowledge Management

A community organizer’s guide to Signal group chats

The Verge – Key privacy settings and best practices. “With ICE and CBP roaming the streets, united community action is more important than ever right now — from local mutual aid groups to school safety patrols. Known for its privacy features and end-to-end encryption, the Signal messaging app has become a popular platform for organizing …

Subjects: Censorship, Civil Liberties, E-Records, Internet, Knowledge Management, Legal Research

Nearly Half of Americans in 2025 Believed False Claims Across Seven Months of Surveys

NewsGuard: “Belief in False Claims Averaged 46 Percent in 2025. Over the first seven months of Reality Gap Index reports — from June to December 2025 — NewsGuard found that an average of nearly half of Americans believed at least one false claim about major claims spreading in the news. For the first six months …

Subjects: AI, Internet, Knowledge Management, Legal Research, Search Engines, Social Media

Accountability for ICE and CBP

Follow up to CBP Murdered Alex Jeffrey Pretti in Minneapolis MN on January 24, 2026 [Note – Two CBP Agents Identified in Alex Pretti Shooting. The two federal immigration agents who fired on Minneapolis protester Alex Pretti are identified in government records as Border Patrol agent Jesus Ochoa and Customs and Border Protection officer Raymundo …

Subjects: Censorship, Civil Liberties, Congress, Government Documents, Knowledge Management, Legal Research, Legislation

How Data Brokers Can Fuel Violence Against Public Servants

Wired [no paywall]: “A new report from the Public Service Alliance finds state privacy laws offer public servants few ways to protect their private data, even as threats against them are on the rise…A new report published Tuesday finds that while violent threats to public servants across the US have been increasing, “comprehensive” state-level consumer …

Subjects: Censorship, Civil Liberties, E-Records, Internet, Knowledge Management, Legal Research, Privacy

How “95%” escaped into the world and why so many believed it

Exponential View: “One number still keeps turning up in speeches, board meetings, my conversations and inbox: “95 percent.” Do I need to say more than that? OK, here’s another clue: this number traveled on borrowed authority in 2025, rarely with a footnote and it started to shape decisions. The claim is this: “95 percent” of …

Subjects: AI, Economy, Education, Internet, Knowledge Management, Legal Research

ChatGPT isn’t the only chatbot pulling answers from Elon Musk’s Grokipedia

The Verge: “Google’s Gemini, AI Mode, and AI Overviews, Perplexity, and Microsoft are starting to cite Musk’s Wikipedia knockoff…ChatGPT is using Grokipedia as a source, and it’s not the only AI tool to do so. Citations to Elon Musk’s AI-generated encyclopedia are starting to appear in answers from Google’s AI Overviews, AI Mode, and Gemini, …

Subjects: Education, Internet, Knowledge Management, Legal Research, Search Engines, Social Media

The Library of Congress at a Crossroads: Executive Overreach and the Future of Public Knowledge

Street, Leslie and Runyon, Amanda, The Library of Congress at a Crossroads: Executive Overreach and the Future of Public Knowledge (January 25, 2026). U of Penn Law School, Public Law Research Paper No. 26-07, Seattle University Law Review Online & Seattle Journal of Technology, Environment, & Innovation Law, forthcoming, 2026, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=6155010 or …

Subjects: Congress, Copyright, Courts, Education, Freedom of Information, Government Documents, Internet, Knowledge Management, Legal Research, Legislation, Libraries

How often do AI chatbots lead users down a harmful path?

Ars Technica: “At this point, we’ve all heard plenty of stories about AI chatbots leading users to harmful actions, harmful beliefs, or simply incorrect information. Despite the prevalence of these stories, though, it’s hard to know just how often users are being manipulated. Are these tales of AI harms anecdotal outliers or signs of a …

Subjects: AI, Internet, Knowledge Management, Legal Research, Search Engines

Archivist Browser

“Archivist Browser. Your Portal to Digital History. The Internet Archive is one of the most important cultural libraries in human history. I built Archivist Browser to give this vast collection the native, modern, and beautiful mobile interface it deserves.” ‪MD/. @monodivision.bsky.social. I just launched Archivist Browser: A dedicated mobile browser for Archive.org. Ad free, no …

Subjects: Internet, Knowledge Management, Search Engines

All In: Embedding AI in the Law School Classroom

Via LLRX – All In: Embedding AI in the Law School Classroom – What is the irreducibly human element in legal education when AI can pass the bar exam, generate effective lectures, and provide personalized learning and academic support? This article by law professor Gregory M. Duhl confronts that question head-on by documenting the planning and design …

Subjects: AI, Education, Internet, Knowledge Management, Legal Research

RageCheck – A tool for understanding manipulative framing in media.

RageCheck is a free tool that analyzes online content for linguistic patterns commonly associated with manipulative framing—the kind of language designed to provoke emotional reactions rather than inform. Modern social platforms reward engagement, and outrage generates more engagement than nuance. This creates incentives for content creators to frame information in emotionally provocative ways, regardless of …

Subjects: Education, Internet, Knowledge Management, Legal Research, Social Media