Tuesday, September 10, 2024

Why Many Parents and Teens Think It’s Harder Being a Teen Today

 One must live as if it would be forever, and as if one might die each moment. Always both at once.

— Mary Renault, born in 1995


A copy of the letter written and signed by Albert Einstein in 1939 warning President Franklin Roosevelt of the possibility of Nazi Germany building nuclear weapons is up for auction next week at Christie’s. The estimate is $4-6 million.


Is There Any Such Thing As An Objectively Beautiful Building?

The current state of our knowledge on aesthetics, and specifically what we consider beautiful, is a mosaic of empirical discoveries. For over 150 years, psychologists have run carefully controlled experiments to determine whether an attribute, such as a particular colour, shape or melody is beautiful. - The Conversation

Billionaire James Packer reveals he's on Ozempic but still gaining weight due to a secret addiction - and opens up on the real reasons for his string of failed relationships


Why Many Parents and Teens Think It’s Harder Being a Teen Today

Pew Research – “Why parents say it’s harder being a teen today. There are big debates about how teenagers are faring these days. And technology’s impact is often at the center of these conversations. Prominent figures, including the U.S. Surgeon General, have been vocal about the harmful effectstechnology may be having on young people. These concerns ring true for the parents in our survey. A majority blame technology – and especially social media – for making teen life more difficult. 

Among parents who say it’s harder being a teen today, about two-thirds cite technology in some way. This includes 41% who specifically name social media. While some mention social media in broad terms, others bring up specific experiences that teens may have on these platforms, such as feeling pressure to act or look a certain way or having negative interactions there. Parents also call out the downsides of being constantly connected through social media…”


Everyone In Restaurant Jealous Of Toddler Who Gets To Wear Pajamas And Watch iPad The Onion


How Dating Apps Contribute to the Demographic Crisis Kyla Scanlon, Kyla’s Newsletter

Watch: Flamethrower robot dog spits fire at YouTuber after ‘bark’ command fail Interesting Engineering. Micael T: “Both horrifying and hilarious. Why do we need these robots but also a new type of Darwin Award Sports, preferrably for spoiled rich kids that can afford this 100K robots. The action at 7:19”


 Florida woman’s Apple Watch traces lost luggage to airport worker’s home


Artificial Intelligence and the Law – David Colarusso

  • AI in Finance and Banking, August 30, 2024 – This semi-monthly column by Sabrina I. Pacifici highlights news, government reports, NGO/IGO papers, industry white papers, academic papers and speeches on the subject of AI’s fast paced impact on the banking and finance sectors. Six highlights from this post: Blockchain for Ethical and Transparent Generative AI Utilization by Banking and Finance Lawyers; Government as Venture Capitalists in AI; How will Generative AI impact Communication?; Artificial Intelligence the Key to Greater Financial Inclusion; The Transformative Impact of AI in Finance and Banking; From Man vs. Machine to Man + Machine: The art and AI of stock analyses.
  • How Can Law Professors Effectively Teach AI Literacy to Law Students? Legal AI Studio – This spring the Michigan State University College of Law and the MSU Center for Law, Technology & Innovation introduced the “LegalRnD AI Studio,” a groundbreaking mini-course series designed to elevate law students’ AI literacy, focusing on practical skills in generative AI. Dennis Kennedy shares how you can replicate this successful model and provide your students with the essential AI literacy they need at your school.
  • The Best of America – Captured in Print for the First Time – Oregon Loves New York: A Story of American Unity After 9/11 – Sally Ruth Bourrie
  • Chat GPT is bullshit – Dr. Michael Townsen HicksDr. James Humphries and Dr. Joe Slater
  • Is Your Firm Disclosing the Risks Associated to Using AI? – Patrick McKenna calls out the importance to the legal community of a new public database, the AI Risk Repository, that lists ALL the ways AI could go wrong. Its creators hope their work could lead to further research to determine which risks to take more seriously. Its creators hope their work could lead to further research to determine which risks to take more seriously.
  • Rejecting Dogmas Around AI, User Privacy, and Tech Policy – The Markup’s Ross Teixeira had a virtual discussion with Jonathan Frankle, Chief Scientist at DataBricks, about the the ethics of companies using customer data to train models, the growing trend of integrating AI models into our personal devices and lives, and how people can get involved in policy conversations from national to local level.
  • Complicated app settings are a threat to user privacy – Default privacy settings in popular mobile apps seem like a convenience, allowing you to use a single setting to control the level of privacy – who can see which actions you take – across all of the app’s functions. Prof. Joseph K. Nwankpa specifies how default privacy settings are also a potential risk to your privacy.
  • AI in Banking and Finance, August 15, 2024 – Sabrina I. Pacifici. Six highlights from this post: How Conversational and Generative AI is shaking up the banking industry; IMF AI Preparedness Index; Deep Learning for Economists; Crisis Amplifier? How to Prevent AI from Worsening the Next Economic Downturn; Generative artificial intelligence and cyber security in central banking; and Financial agencies’ AI tests could get reprieve from enforcement.
  • Pete Recommends – Weekly highlights on cyber security issues, August 31, 2024 – Six highlights from this week: Remote Work: A Ticking Time Bomb Waiting to be Exploited; Microsoft to overhaul Windows security after outage hits hospitals; How safe is Telegram?; Wyze’s new AI feature lets users search security cam footage; Safeguarding Subsea Cables Protecting Cyber Infrastructure amid Great Power Competition; and When A.I.’s Output Is a Threat to A.I. Itself.
  • Pete Recommends – Weekly highlights on cyber security issues, August 24, 2024 – Five highlights from this week: Meta’s new crawler could scrape your page, even when you don’t want it to; Don’t trust Google for customer service numbers. It might be a scam; Cox Communications Battles Copyright Case That Could Disrupt TV Streaming for Millions; U.S. government urging to update Galaxy phones due to vulnerability; and IRS still faces security challenges in aftermath of taxpayer data leak.
  • Pete Recommends – Weekly highlights on cyber security issues, August 17, 2024 – Six highlights from this week: This is likely the biggest password leak ever: nearly 10 billion credentials exposed; How to Stay Safe From Third-Party Seller Scams; The US Supreme Court Kneecapped US Cyber Strategy; DOJ Leads Efforts Among Federal, International, and Private Sector Partners to Disrupt Covert Russian Government-Operated Social Media Bot Farm.
  • Pete Recommends – Weekly highlights on cyber security issues, August 9, 2024 – Five highlights from this week: Nearly 3 billion people just had their data leaked!!; Text message exploits are scarier than ever, but you can protect yourself with these tips; Government IT systems in the hands of a single vendor puts agencies at risk; Apple says Safari protects your privacy. We fact-checked those claims; and Lawmakers look to clarify electronic medical device use in secure facilities.
  • Pete Recommends – Weekly highlights on cyber security issues, August 2, 2024 – Four highlights from this week: How To Check Whether You’re Chatting With a Real Person or AI; Here is another reason why you should never click on ads to download software; New Federal Ruling Prohibits Warrantless Phone Searches by Border Agents; and About Chrome’s “These extensions may soon no longer be supported” message.