Epstein on Tape: What the 2,000 videos tell us
Follow up to Epstein Child Sex Trafficking At Least 1,114 Victims Only 138 Victim Interviews Release – See also – CNN Report – video: “Roughly 2,000 videos [redacted] were included among the millions of documents in the Epstein files released by the Department of Justice earlier this year. CNN reviewed these videos to better understand what they reveal about Jeffrey Epstein and how he was able to carry out his crimes.”Card Catalog: 5 more collections that put their archives online for everyone From 2,000 years of medical illustration to vintage software preserved in a browser, these five free digital archives cover an enormous range of human record-keeping.
- Wellcome Collection(wellcomecollection.org) Over 100,000 images spanning 2,000 years of medical history, all free to download under Creative Commons licensing. The earliest item is an Egyptian prescription on papyrus. The collection includes medieval illuminated manuscripts, 16th-century anatomical drawings with hinged paper flaps that reveal the organs underneath, and etchings by Francisco Goya and Vincent van Gogh.
- National Palace Museum, Taiwan(digitalarchive.npm.gov.…) One of the world’s largest collections of Chinese art and artifacts, spanning 8,000 years from the Neolithic period to the modern era. The museum has digitized 70,000 high-resolution images from its holdings of nearly 700,000 pieces, many of which were evacuated from Beijing’s Forbidden City during China’s civil war in 1948 and never returned.
- Internet Archive MS-DOS Game Library (<a “https://archive.org/details/softwarelibrary_msdos_games”>archive.org/details/sof…) Over 6,000 vintage games from the 1980s and 1990s, playable directly in the browser through an in-browser emulator called EM-DOSBOX. The collection exists because of eXoDOS, a long-running fan preservation project that tracked down software written for hardware configurations that no longer exist.
- Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum (collection.cooperhewitt…) More than 215,000 design objects spanning 30 centuries, from ancient Roman marble to Pre-Columbian textiles to contemporary 3D-printed furniture. The museum holds the largest collection of wallcoverings in North America, and the entire catalog is searchable online with an open API and downloadable datasets.
- Endangered Archives Programme(eap.bl.uk) Over 16 million digitized images and 35,000 sound recordings from more than 500 projects across 90+ countries, in over 100 languages and scripts. The program funds digitization of archives at risk of destruction or decay, from Timbuktu manuscripts threatened by conflict to palm-leaf texts in Southeast Asia. Originals stay in their countries of origin, with digital copies made freely available online.
Social media is populist and polarising; AI may be the opposite
Financial Times, John Burn-Murdoch [no paywall]: “Last year I used detailed data on the ideological positions of people who post on social media to show that they over-represent the radical right and left, confirming the polarisation hypothesis.
Over the past week I have used the same dataset of tens of thousands of responses to questions on policy preferences and sociopolitical beliefs to test whether and how the most widely used AI chatbots shape conversations about politics and society.
The results strongly support the theory of AI chatbots as depolarising and technocratising. I found that while different AI platforms behave in subtly different ways, all of them nudge people away from the most extreme positions and towards more moderate and expert-aligned stances.
On average, Grok guides conversations about policy and society towards the centre-right — a rightward push for most people but a moderating nudge towards the centre for those who start out as conservative hardliners. OpenAI’s GPT, Google’s Gemini and the Chinese model DeepSeek all exert similarly sized nudges towards a centre-left worldview — a slight leftward nudge for most people but a moderating push away from fringe leftwing positions.
Importantly, this remains true after accounting for partisan differences in AI platform usage and chatbots’ sycophantic tendencies. Even when the AI bots know a user’s political leanings, conversations with LLMs still direct hardline partisans on both flanks away from extreme beliefs on average…”
Claude Mythos Is Everyone’s Problem
The Atlantic Gift Article: What happens when AI can hack everything? – “For the past several weeks, Anthropic says it secretly possessed a tool potentially capable of commandeering most computer servers in the world.
This is a bot that, if unleashed, might be able to hack into banks, exfiltrate state secrets, and fry crucial infrastructure. Already, according to the company, this AI model has identified thousands of major cybersecurity vulnerabilities—including exploits in every single major operating system and browser. This level of cyberattack is typically available only to elite, state-sponsored hacking cells in a very small number of countries including China, Russia, and the United States. Now it’s in the hands of a private company.
On Tuesday, the company officially announced the existence of the model, known as Claude Mythos Preview. For now, the bot will be available only to a consortium of many of the world’s biggest tech companies—including Apple, Microsoft, Google, and Nvidia. These partners can use Mythos Preview to scan and secure bugs and exploits in their software. Other than that, Anthropic will not immediately release Mythos Preview to the public, having determined that doing so without more robust safeguards would be too dangerous. For years, cybersecurity experts have been warning about the chaos that highly capable hacking bots could usher in.
As a result of how capable AI models have become at coding, they have also become extremely good at finding vulnerabilities in all manner of software. Even before Mythos Preview, AI companies such as Anthropic, OpenAI, and Google all reported instances of their AI models being used in sophisticated cyberattacks by both criminal and state-backed groups.
As Giovanni Vigna, who directs a federal research institute dedicated to AI-orchestrated cyberthreats, told me last fall: You can have a million hackers at your fingertips “with the push of a button It’s not just tech journalists that are worried about the Mythos threat. “Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell summoned bank CEOs to an urgent meeting this week to warn about the cybersecurity risks associated with Anthropic’s powerful Mythos AI model.”

