Anonymous ID: f99b3d Dec. 9, 2022, 5:18 a.m. No.17912155   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2163 >>2254 >>2429 >>2525

https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2019/03/greek-myths-have-some-scary-ideas-about-robots-and-a-i

 

This is what the ancient Greeks had to say about robotics and AI

 

'Not one of those myths has a good ending once the artificial beings are sent to Earth.'

 

Image: REUTERS/Goran Tomasevic

 

Historians usually trace the idea of automata to the Middle Ages, when humans first invented self-moving devices, but the concept of artificial, lifelike creatures dates to the myths and legends from at least about 2,700 years ago, says Adrienne Mayor, a research scholar in the classics department in the School of Humanities and Sciences at Stanford University. These ancient myths are the subject of Mayor’s latest book, Gods and Robots: Myths, Machines, and Ancient Dreams of Technology (Princeton University Press, 2018).

 

“Our ability to imagine artificial intelligence goes back to the ancient times…”

 

“Our ability to imagine artificial intelligence goes back to the ancient times,” says Mayor, who is also a fellow at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences. “Long before technological advances made self-moving devices possible, ideas about creating artificial life and robots were explored in ancient myths.”

 

Mayor, a historian of science, says that the earliest themes of artificial intelligence, robots, and self-moving objects appear in the work of ancient Greek poets Hesiod and Homer, who were alive sometime between 750 and 650 BCE.

 

The story of Talos, which Hesiod first mentioned around 700 BCE, offers one of the earliest conceptions of a robot, Mayor says.

 

The myth describes Talos as a giant bronze man that Hephaestus, the Greek god of invention and blacksmithing, built. Zeus, the king of Greek gods, commissioned Talos to protect the island of Crete from invaders. He marched around the island three times every day and hurled boulders at approaching enemy ships.

 

At his core, the giant had a tube running from his head to one of his feet that carried a mysterious life source of the gods the Greeks called ichor. Another ancient text, Argonautica, which dates to the third century BCE, describes how sorceress Medea defeated Talos by removing a bolt at his ankle and letting the ichor fluid flow out, Mayor says.

 

The myth of Pandora, first described in Hesiod’s Theogony, is another example of a mythical artificial being, Mayor says. Although much later versions of the story portray Pandora as an innocent woman who unknowingly opened a box of evil, Mayor says Hesiod’s original described Pandora as an artificial, evil woman Hephaestus built and Zeus ordered to Earth to punish humans for discovering fire.

 

“There is a timeless link between imagination and science.”

 

“It could be argued that Pandora was a kind of AI agent,” Mayor says. “Her only mission was to infiltrate the human world and release her jar of miseries.”

 

In addition to creating Talos and Pandora, mythical Hephaestus made other self-moving objects, including a set of automated servants, who looked like women but were made of gold, Mayor says. According to Homer’s recounting of the myth, Hephaestus gave these artificial women the gods’ knowledge. Mayor argues that they could be considered an ancient mythical version of artificial intelligence.

 

The ancient myths that Mayor examined in her research grapple with the moral implications of Hephaestus’ creations.

 

“Not one of those myths has a good ending once the artificial beings are sent to Earth,” Mayor says. “It’s almost as if the myths say that it’s great to have these artificial things up in heaven used by the gods. But once they interact with humans, we get chaos and destruction.”

 

Mayor says the myths underscore humanity’s fascination with creating artificial life.

 

“People have an impulse to imagine things that aren’t possible yet,” Mayor says. “There is a timeless link between imagination and science.”

Anonymous ID: f99b3d Dec. 9, 2022, 5:22 a.m. No.17912164   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2167 >>2173 >>2254 >>2429 >>2525

George Webb - Investigative Journalist

@RealGeorgeWebb1

Furin cleavage sites have never been inserted between the S1 and S2 proteins before? Two years ago, I wrote about Induced Furin Cleavage for the LoVo cells at Fred Hutch in 1995 by the imported Russians at UW. Now more evidence of other engineered furin sites.

 

https://mobile.twitter.com/RealGeorgeWebb1/status/1601143900802273281

Anonymous ID: f99b3d Dec. 9, 2022, 5:25 a.m. No.17912173   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2176 >>2254 >>2429 >>2525

>>17912164

>Fred Hutch

 

The Race for a Coronavirus Vaccine Runs Through Fred Hutch

 

https://www.seattlemet.com/health-and-wellness/2020/11/the-race-for-a-coronavirus-vaccine-runs-through-fred-hutchinson-cancer-research-seattle

 

After a deflating announcement of more Covid-19 restrictions over the weekend, Seattle has since received a couple doses of good news. Today pharma giant Pfizer released data that suggests its vaccine candidate is 95 percent effective. And earlier this week Moderna, a Cambridge, Massachusetts–based biotech firm, reported that its coronavirus vaccine candidate reached just about the same efficacy, which would clear the FDA’s 50 percent standard for approval.

 

Moderna’s shot, called mRNA-1273, was developed in conjunction with the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and first administered to a group of volunteers at Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute in the Denny Regrade. But the vaccine’s revelatory phase three trial, and Pfizer’s, are both tied to a different Emerald City medical institution.

 

Since July, the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in South Lake Union has served as the operations hub for the NIH’s Covid-19 Prevention Network. This scientific command center coordinates the study of vaccines and monoclonal antibodies for SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes Covid-19, at trial sites across the globe. As companies race to produce the first effective coronavirus shot, the network preserves the integrity of these sprints, safeguarding the enrollment and assessment of phase three clinical trials with tens of thousands of subjects, like Moderna’s. “Our job is to deliver a vaccine with as much veracity and as quickly as we can,” Dr. Larry Corey, a co-leader of the network and a former president and director of Fred Hutch, said earlier this fall.

 

Fred Hutch labs examine the effects of coronavirus vaccines and the virus itself. But its work within the Covid-19 Prevention Network is often logistical, less photo-friendly than white lab coats bending over beakers (“lots of Zoom calls,” Corey said). That doesn’t make it any less vital. The network, for instance, must pinpoint trial sites and conduct community outreach to guarantee that studies represent the population. Its enrollment approach not only ensures the studies’ legitimacy but also can inform the vaccines’ eventual distribution: Certain shots may be more effective than others for various demographics. Consistent lab and enrollment processes across trials allow researchers to measure any differences. “We actually know we have designed these trials incredibly well,” Corey said.

 

Skeptics of “Operation Warp Speed” might question this scientific mad dash. The network falls under the Trump administration’s frightening umbrella term for the mission to deliver a vaccine as soon as possible. Its strategic engagement plan, however, cites a couple of the most common explanations for the potentially expedited results: the U.S.’s unusual upfront investment in producing vaccines after early-stage success, and a reduction of the oft-maligned “bureaucracy.” And Corey’s confidence about the final stages of the process stems from something more fundamental, something decades in the making: infrastructure. “We can enroll the right demography,” he said, “if we use the right sites and use the networks that we have built up over the last 20 years.”

 

 

For the past two decades, the HIV Vaccine Trials Network at Fred Hutch has run more than 50 vaccine clinical trials across five continents for the virus that causes AIDS. Corey co-founded the network in 1998 with the backing of his good friend Dr. Anthony Fauci, the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) director known today as the nation’s unofficial coronavirus czar. The two grew close in the 1980s, when they began studying treatments to address the HIV/AIDS crisis, and speak nearly every day. “He’s an extraordinary person of great intellect, and he’s a great communicator,” said Corey, adding, “He’s incredibly principled.”

p1

Anonymous ID: f99b3d Dec. 9, 2022, 5:25 a.m. No.17912176   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2187 >>2254 >>2429 >>2525

>>17912173

Before Operation Warp Speed entered the lexicon and Fauci became a fixture on every imaginable medium, the doctors discussed launching another network, this time to coordinate and study vaccine trials for the new coronavirus. Though the HIV Vaccine Trials Network hadn’t yet yielded shots that prevented the AIDS-causing virus’s transmission, the design of those studies was sound; it was just the elusive miracle vaccine that was missing. A similar setup at Fred Hutch would work just fine for Covid research, making it the natural choice for the Covid network’s coordinating center. It would just require even greater urgency. “I’m not going to minimize HIV,” says Corey, “but this coronavirus has affected all of us every day.”

 

Corey had just returned from a meeting about HIV overseas when the coronavirus outbreak emerged in the U.S. “It took me about two and a half to three weeks to get my head around the fact that we needed to pivot,” he says. “I was already starting to talk to the companies about working with the NIH in the clinical trials business by sort of the third week of March.”

 

It wasn’t hard to get buy-in from the infectious disease specialists at Fred Hutch, according to Corey. While the institution’s name suggests a site solely devoted to cancer research, its mission has long encompassed the study of other diseases that cause “human suffering and death.” Findings in one area of research have advanced discoveries in others, and its role in global health research continues to expand. Fred Hutch recently announced that its main campus would not just facilitate but host a phase three trial of the AstraZeneca vaccine candidate. It can also now tout a new Covid-19 clinical research center and a 106,000-square-foot research space in the renovated Lake Union Steam Plant.

 

The shiny digs shouldn’t overshadow the work of those toiling within them. Nor should the politics of licensure, Corey said. He stressed that scientists working 12 or 14 hours on experiments every single day are responsible for the “unbelievable feat” of developing a vaccine this quickly: “That’s what’s gotten us here.”

 

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Anonymous ID: f99b3d Dec. 9, 2022, 5:33 a.m. No.17912205   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2224 >>2254 >>2429 >>2525

Immunology 101: why intramuscular COVID-19 vaccination must fail

 

"The current intramuscular vaccines are designed to elicit systemic immunity

 

➡️ without conferring mucosal immunity in the nasal compartment, which is the first barrier that SARS-CoV-2 virus breaches before dissemination to the lung."

 

https://mobile.twitter.com/GauteNilsen/status/1541367602416680965

 

https://mobile.twitter.com/GauteNilsen/status/1541337741220249600

 

https://threadreaderapp.com/thread/1541337741220249600.html<too big to attach here, 31 posts with studies and videos

Anonymous ID: f99b3d Dec. 9, 2022, 5:56 a.m. No.17912291   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2429 >>2525

https://twitter.com/WallStreetSilv/status/1601184895673389057

 

 

Wall Street Silver

@WallStreetSilv

Censored SNL clip from 1998.

 

This aired one time … then was banned from ever being used again. 🔥

 

Do NOT retweet. NBC does not allow this to be shared.🚨

Anonymous ID: f99b3d Dec. 9, 2022, 6:02 a.m. No.17912320   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2429 >>2525

>>17912311

https://www.dw.com/en/russia-large-fire-rages-through-moscow-shopping-mall/a-64040651

 

Russia: Large fire rages through Moscow shopping mall

 

The blaze has caused the roof of the large shopping mall to collapse as firefighters struggle to tackle the flames. Investigators are looking into possible arson or failed safety regulations.

 

One of the largest shopping malls near the Russian capital was engulfed in flames on Friday with authorities saying they were looking into the possibility of an arson attack.

 

The fire spread across an area of around 7,000 square meters (75,000 square feet) at the Mega shopping mall in the town of Khimki on the outskirts of Moscow and just seven kilometers (four miles) from the capital's Sheremetyevo Airport.

 

Videos shared on social media showed thick black smoke rising from a large blaze while others showed people running away through the parking lot.

 

Russian authorities reported that one person had died and that the conflagration had caused part of the structure to collapse, hampering the efforts of rescue workers.

 

"Due to the collapse of the roof, the fire spread instantly to a large area," the region's emergency services said on Telegram. More than 70 firefighters and 20 fire trucks were on site tackling the blaze.

 

Firefighters battle a fire that hit a hypermarket of the OBI home improvement and gardening retailer at the Mega Khimki shopping mallFirefighters battle a fire that hit a hypermarket of the OBI home improvement and gardening retailer at the Mega Khimki shopping mall

The mall is one of the biggest in the Moscow regionImage: Sergei Savostyanov/Tass/dpa/picture alliance

News agencies had first cited emergency services saying that the incident was likely due to "arson," but state news agencies later said that failure to stick to safety regulations was the suspected cause.

 

The Mega mall had hosted numerous western chains before many of them pulled out of Russia following Moscow's invasion of Ukraine.

 

Firefighters battle a fire that hit a hypermarket of the OBI home improvement and gardening retailer at the Mega Khimki shopping mallFirefighters battle a fire that hit a hypermarket of the OBI home improvement and gardening retailer at the Mega Khimki shopping mall

The roof of the mall collapsed causing the fire to spread furtherImage: Sergei Savostyanov/Tass/dpa/picture alliance

Anonymous ID: f99b3d Dec. 9, 2022, 6:31 a.m. No.17912434   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>17912415

ThePraetorian Guard(Latin: cohortēs praetōriae) was a unit of the Imperial Roman army that served as personal bodyguards and intelligence agents for the Roman emperors.

Anonymous ID: f99b3d Dec. 9, 2022, 6:44 a.m. No.17912506   🗄️.is 🔗kun

can a memeanon share some pepe head transparencies? need straight ons and both side profiles.Anon is attempting to 'pepe' a few classic images.

 

ty in advance

o7