Election Meddling, Censorship, and More Bad News in 2024 Freedom on the Net Report

“Freedom House released its annual Freedom on the Net report. It marks the 14th consecutive year of declines in internet freedom around the world, and chronicles concerning government interventions in elections.” Around the world, voters have been forced to make major decisions about their future while navigating a censored, distorted, and unreliable information space.

Subjects: Censorship, Civil Liberties, Internet, Legal Research, Privacy

DittText

What is Diff Text? A simple diff checker tool to quickly find the difference between two blocks of text. What can it be used for? It can be used to compare changes with plain text, code, json, yaml, html, css, markdown, and more. What do the colors mean? Green means the text was added, red …

Subjects: Internet, Knowledge Management, Legal Research

AI Detectors Falsely Accuse Students of Cheating With Big Consequences

Bloomberg: “About two-thirds of teachers report regularly using tools for detecting AI-generated content. At that scale, even tiny error rates can add up quickly…Since OpenAI’s ChatGPT brought generative AI to the mainstream almost two years ago, schools have raced to adapt to a changed landscape. Educators now rely on a growing crop of detection tools …

Subjects: AI, Education, Internet, Knowledge Management

Inside Redbox’s insane bankruptcy unwinding

Sherwood: “Ever wanted to own 46 copies of Orlando Bloom’s latest movie? What about a dozen empty Redbox DVD cases? Or maybe an entire Redbox kiosk, free with local pickup? It’s all up for grabs, thanks to Redbox’s recent demise. The chain of DVD-rental kiosks filed for bankruptcy in June after racking up close to …

Subjects: Courts, Cybercrime, Cybersecurity, Economy, Financial System, ID Theft, Intellectual Property, Legal Research

Student was punished for using AI then his parents sued teacher, administrators

Ars Technica: “A school district in Massachusetts was sued by a student’s parents after the boy was punished for using an artificial intelligence chatbot to complete an assignment. The lawsuit says the Hingham High School student handbook did not include a restriction on the use of AI. “They told us our son cheated on a …

Subjects: AI, Education, Knowledge Management, Legal Research

How the Malleus maleficarum fueled the witch trial craze

Ars Technica: “Between 1400 and 1775, a significant upsurge of witch trials swept across early-modern Europe, resulting in the execution of an estimated 40,000–60,000 accused witches. Historians and social scientists have long studied this period in hopes of learning more about how large-scale social changes occur. Some have pointed to the invention of the printing …

Subjects: Civil Liberties, Education, Knowledge Management, Social Media

Startup Can Identify Deepfake Video In Real Time

Wired: “Real-time video deepfakes are a growing threat for governments, businesses, and individuals. Recently, the chairman of the US Senate Committee on Foreign Relations mistakenly took a video call with someone pretending to be a Ukrainian official. An international engineering company lost millions of dollars earlier in 2024 when one employee was tricked by a …

Subjects: AI, Cybercrime, Cybersecurity, Internet

Global water crisis leaves half of world food production at risk in next 25 years

The Guardian: More than half the world’s food production will be at risk of failure within the next 25 years as a rapidly accelerating water crisis grips the planet, unless urgent action is taken to conserve water resources and end the destruction of the ecosystems on which our fresh water depends, experts have warned in …

Subjects: Climate Change, Energy, Environmental Law, Poverty

How rational inference about authority debunking can curtail, sustain, or spread belief polarization

Setayesh Radkani, Marika Landau-Wells, Rebecca Saxe. How rational inference about authority debunking can curtail, sustain, or spread belief polarization. PNAS Nexus, 2024; 3 (10) DOI: 10.1093/pnasnexus/pgae393 In polarized societies, divided subgroups of people have different perspectives on a range of topics. Aiming to reduce polarization, authorities may use debunking to lend support to one perspective …

Subjects: Education, Internet, Knowledge Management, Social Media

Why Microsoft Excel won’t die

The Economist: Excel has featured in plenty of workplace blunders — though its defenders will be quick to blame human error. The financial world is littered with tales of costly spreadsheet errors. Excel has also been blamed for botching gene names in over a third of genomics papers (because it labelled them as dates); underreporting …

Subjects: Knowledge Management, Microsoft

The Individualization of Responsibility – Masterclass in Deception

The Climate Historian: “…In the mid-20th century, as evidence mounted linking smoking to lung cancer, the tobacco industry didn’t just fight back—they mastered the art of deflection. Instead of outright denying the dangers, they funded research to stir doubt, muddying the scientific waters.In the 1950s, the Tobacco Institute launched its “health reassurance” campaigns. These campaigns …

Subjects: Climate Change, Congress, Economy, Energy, Environmental Law, Financial System, Internet, Legal Research