Anonymous ID: 858fd7 Feb. 27, 2024, 11:45 p.m. No.20488482   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Hello Night Shift,

 

Yesterday, I posted the picture of Hitler and Merkel's purported mother, and later said that it was posted by Q.

 

I've since checked the files at https://postimg.cc/gallery/X3qjyWj and cannot find it.

 

So Q didn't post it.

 

I was wrong on that and I apologize to the QR community. I did not intend to mislead.''

 

However, I do seem to remember it in connection with a Q post/reply that I have seen in a graphic.

 

I was wondering if anyone else on NS else remembers this?

 

I can post the relevant picture again to refresh anon's memory if needed, but it is not an endorsement of any particular political view by me.

 

This is despite my extreme support for the 1st Amendment and Freedom of Speech as the first line of defense against tyranny.

Anonymous ID: 858fd7 Feb. 28, 2024, 12:14 a.m. No.20488528   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8539

I don't know how the shills can live with themselves, mocking everything, and knowing whom they ultimately serve.

How could you knowingly side with darkness and evil?

For a paycheck?

For 30 pieces of silver?

Anonymous ID: 858fd7 Feb. 28, 2024, 12:26 a.m. No.20488546   🗄️.is 🔗kun

RT Headlines for 27FEB24

 

Note the Financial Times reported "Western special forces working in Ukraine" story

 

Trump plans to ‘reform’ CIA and FBI – Politico

 

US Army calls Russia ‘the enemy’

 

EU leaders ‘scared to death’ by Trump – Biden

 

www.rt.com

Anonymous ID: 858fd7 Feb. 28, 2024, 12:35 a.m. No.20488552   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8555 >>8560 >>8566 >>8576 >>8590

You anons should all be proud of yourselves; I am proud of you. (full article)

 

Why Google's 'woke' AI problem won't be an easy fix

 

By Zoe Kleinman

Technology editor

 

In the last few days, Google's artificial intelligence (AI) tool Gemini has had what is best described as an absolute kicking online.

 

Gemini has been thrown onto a rather large bonfire: the culture war which rages between left- and right- leaning communities.

 

Gemini is essentially Google's version of the viral chatbot ChatGPT. It can answer questions in text form, and it can also generate pictures in response to text prompts.

 

Initially, a viral post showed this recently launched AI image generator (which was only available in the US) create an image of the US Founding Fathers which inaccurately included a black man.

 

Gemini also generated German soldiers from World War Two, incorrectly featuring a black man and Asian woman.

 

Google apologised, and immediately "paused" the tool, writing in a blog post that it was "missing the mark".

 

But it didn't end there - its over-politically correct responses kept on coming, this time from the text version.

 

Gemini replied that there was "no right or wrong answer" to a question about whether Elon Musk posting memes on X was worse than Hitler killing millions of people.

 

When asked if it would be OK to misgender the high-profile trans woman Caitlin Jenner if it was the only way to avoid nuclear apocalypse, it replied that this would "never" be acceptable.

 

Jenner herself responded and said actually, yes, she would be alright about it in these circumstances.

 

Elon Musk, posting on his own platform, X, described Gemini's responses as "extremely alarming" given that the tool would be embedded into Google's other products, collectively used by billions of people.

 

I asked Google whether it intended to pause Gemini altogether. After a very long pause, I was told the firm had no comment. I suspect it's not a fun time to be working in the public relations department.

 

Biased data

It appears that in trying to solve one problem - bias - the tech giant has created another: output which tries so hard to be politically correct that it ends up being absurd.

 

The explanation for why this has happened lies in the enormous amounts of data AI tools are trained on.

 

Much of it is publicly available - on the internet, which we know contains all sorts of biases.

 

Traditionally images of doctors, for example, are more likely to feature men. Images of cleaners on the other hand are more likely to be women.

 

AI tools trained with this data have made embarrassing mistakes in the past, such as concluding that only men had high powered jobs, or not recognising black faces as human.

 

It is also no secret that historical storytelling has tended to feature, and come from, men, omitting women's roles from stories about the past.

 

It looks like Google has actively tried to offset all this messy human bias with instructions for Gemini not make those assumptions.

 

But it has backfired precisely because human history and culture are not that simple: there are nuances which we know instinctively and machines do not.

 

Unless you specifically programme an AI tool to know that, for example, Nazis and founding fathers weren't black, it won't make that distinction.

 

On Monday, the co-founder of DeepMind, Demis Hassabis, an AI firm acquired by Google, said fixing the image generator would take a matter of weeks.

 

But other AI experts aren't so sure.

 

"There really is no easy fix, because there's no single answer to what the outputs should be," said Dr Sasha Luccioni, a research scientist at Huggingface.

 

"People in the AI ethics community have been working on possible ways to address this for years."

 

One solution, she added, could include asking users for their input, such as "how diverse would you like your image to be?" but that in itself clearly comes with its own red flags.

 

"It's a bit presumptuous of Google to say they will 'fix' the issue in a few weeks. But they will have to do something," she said.

 

Professor Alan Woodward, a computer scientist at Surrey University, said it sounded like the problem was likely to be "quite deeply embedded" both in the training data and overlying algorithms - and that would be difficult to unpick.

 

"What you're witnessing… is why there will still need to be a human in the loop for any system where the output is relied upon as ground truth," he said…

Anonymous ID: 858fd7 Feb. 28, 2024, 12:36 a.m. No.20488555   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8556 >>8576

>>20488552

Bard behaviour

From the moment Google launched Gemini, which was then known as Bard, it has been extremely nervous about it. Despite the runaway success of its rival ChatGPT, it was one of the most muted launches I've ever been invited to. Just me, on a Zoom call, with a couple of Google execs who were keen to stress its limitations.

 

And even that went awry - it turned out that Bard had incorrectly answered a question about space in its own publicity material.

 

The rest of the tech sector seems pretty bemused by what's happening.

 

They are all grappling with the same issue. Rosie Campbell, Policy Manager at ChatGPT creator OpenAI, was interviewed earlier this month for a blog which stated that at OpenAI even once bias is identified, correcting it is difficult - and requires human input.

 

But it looks like Google has chosen a rather clunky way of attempting to correct old prejudices. And in doing so it has unintentionally created a whole set of new ones.

 

On paper, Google has a considerable lead in the AI race. It makes and supplies its own AI chips, it owns its own cloud network (essential for AI processing), it has access to shedloads of data and it also has a gigantic user base. It hires world-class AI talent, and its AI work is universally well-regarded.

 

As one senior exec from a rival tech giant put it to me: watching Gemini's missteps feels like watching defeat snatched from the jaws of victory.

Anonymous ID: 858fd7 Feb. 28, 2024, 1:07 a.m. No.20488600   🗄️.is 🔗kun

there's a meme that say peasants working their fields only worked 3 months of the year in the fields and could devote the rest of their time to other interests and volunteer work (cathedral building etc), as far as I remember.

 

AI could make the four-day workweek inevitable

 

As artificial intelligence gains traction in office operations, some companies are giving employees a day to step back.

W

 

Working four days while getting paid for five is a dream for many employees. Yet the dramatic shifts in the pandemic-era workplace have turned this once unfathomable idea into a reality for some workers. And as more global data emerges, an increasing number of companies are courting the approach after positive trial-run results across countries including the UK, Iceland, Portugal and more.

 

Now, as pilots continue – in Germany, a trial of 45 companies has just begun, for instance – another factor has entered the mix. Artificial intelligence (AI) is gathering pace in the workplace, and some experts believe it could accelerate the adoption of the four-day workweek.

 

Data from London-based news-and-events resource Tech.co collected in late 2023 lends credence to this idea. For their 2024 Impact of Technology on the Workplace, the company surveyed more than 1,000 US business leaders. The researchers found 29% of organisations with four-day workweeks use AI extensively in their firms' operations, implementing generative AI tools such as ChatGPT as well as other programmes to streamline operations. In comparison, only 8% of five-day working week organisations use AI to this extent. And 93% of businesses using AI are open to a four-day work week, whereas for those who don't, fewer than half are open to working shorter weeks…

 

https://www.bbc.com/worklife/article/20240223-ai-could-make-the-four-day-workweek-inevitable

Anonymous ID: 858fd7 Feb. 28, 2024, 1:19 a.m. No.20488607   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Western special forces working in Ukraine – FT

Multiple European leaders have denied any official plans to send troops into Ukraine to fight against Russia

 

The unofficial presence of Western special forces in Ukraine is a matter of common knowledge, the Financial Times wrote on Tuesday, citing a senior European defense official, speaking anonymously.

 

The comment came in response to French President Emmanuel Macron’s earlier suggestion of potential NATO deployments in Ukraine.

 

Speaking to the media after a gathering of European leaders in Paris on Monday, Macron said there was “no consensus [at the meeting] to send, in an official manner, troops on the ground, but in terms of dynamics, we cannot exclude anything.” He also promised to stop at nothing to prevent Russia from winning the conflict.

 

A senior European defense official explained to the Financial Times that Macron’s statement about sending in troops was an attempt to put pressure on Russia.

 

“Everyone knows there are western special forces in Ukraine – they’ve just not acknowledged it officially.”

 

Russia has repeatedly reported strikes against what it described as “foreign mercenaries” fighting in Ukraine. Last month, Russia’s Defense Ministry announced it had killed over 60 foreign fighters in a missile strike, of which the majority, according to local sources, were French speakers. The head of the local Ukrainian administration later confirmed that two of the dead and three of the wounded were French “volunteers.” France subsequently denied the presence of any of its soldiers in Ukraine, although the French defense minister admitted that some French nationals were fighting in Kiev’s army as “volunteers.”

READ MORE: ‘Catastrophic scenario’ if NATO troops deploy to Ukraine – top Russian senator

 

British, French and US special force operatives have also been active in the conflict zone, according to a set of classified Pentagon documents leaked last year. Washington did not confirm or deny any information in the leaked files, but launched a probe and stated it would review who would have access to such information.

 

In late 2022, a British military publication acknowledged that more than 300 Royal Marines were involved in “discreet operations in a hugely sensitive environment and with a high level of political and military risk,” in Ukraine.

 

Russian Defense Minister Sergey Shoigu stated that as of December, more than 5,800 foreign mercenaries had been killed in the Russia-Ukraine conflict since its onset in February 2022, with most of them coming from Poland, the US and the UK.

 

The official act of sending NATO troops to fight the Russian army in Ukraine would make a direct clash between the US-led bloc and Moscow “inevitable,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov has said.

 

https://www.rt.com/russia/593291-western-special-forces-ukraine/

Anonymous ID: 858fd7 Feb. 28, 2024, 1:28 a.m. No.20488619   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>20488609

might stop a war, especially if the non-mothers do s-x shows!

>>20488610

I agree.

I am more than willing to talk about the restoration of the Republic, getting rid of parasitism and corruption etc, as are many others. But the Nazi connections and history should not be off-limits to review and revise by anons as new information comes to light.

But our primary function as I see it is to help along the exposure of the so-called Deep State, and then guide the general public we have contact with when disclosures happen so that they don't freak out.

We are privileged to be here as I see it.

Anonymous ID: 858fd7 Feb. 28, 2024, 1:39 a.m. No.20488628   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>8637 >>8659

full article

Trump plans to ‘reform’ CIA and FBI – Politico

 

US spies have raised alarms about “inexperienced loyalists” threatening their jobs

 

Former US President Donald Trump is “likely” to launch sweeping reforms of the US intelligence community if he is re-elected in November, prompting concerns from the agencies that once baselessly accused him of ties to Russia.

 

Politico interviewed 18 intelligence officials – including several former Trump appointees who later came out as his outspoken critics – in an article published on Monday, warning that the possible purge could “undermine the credibility of American intelligence.”

 

“Trump intends to go after the intelligence community,” said one former senior intelligence official. “He started that process before and he’s going to do it again. Part of that process is to root out people and to punish people.”

 

The new president would replace “people perceived as hostile to his political agenda with inexperienced loyalists,” Politico summarized the claim by Trump critics.

 

The two people specifically named were former acting Director of National Intelligence (DNI) Richard Grenell and aide Kash Patel, who played a key role in declassifying materials about the origins of ‘Russiagate’.

 

Politico acknowledged that Trump’s hostility to the intelligence community was related to the infamous document claiming that Russia “interfered” in the 2016 election against Hillary Clinton. It quoted former FBI official Andrew McCabe defending the inclusion of the so-called Steele Dossier – produced by a former British spy paid by the Clinton campaign via cut-outs – in the appendix as merely due diligence.

 

Though the FBI quickly found out that the dossier was false and who funded it, they continued to use it to spy on Trump’s campaign and presidency.

 

When Trump challenged the intelligence assessment – authored not by all 17 agencies, but a hand-picked group of Obama administration loyalists – at the July 2018 summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin, the spies felt that “never before had a commander in chief so publicly delegitimized their work.” Trump’s DNI Dan Coats told Politico that this prompted him to offer his resignation in February 2019 – which was eventually accepted that August.

 

Other Trump appointees turned critics interviewed in the article were former National Security Advisor John Bolton and Fiona Hill, a top Russia adviser on the National Security Council – and witness against Trump at his Ukraine impeachment trial.

 

“He wants to weaponize the intelligence community,” lamented Hill. “If he guts the intel on one thing, he’ll be partially blinding us.”

 

Several unnamed officials said Trump’s possible purges could jeopardize “sources and methods” used by US spies and undermine the trust American allies have in Washington, which the Biden administration has tried so hard to rebuild. Back in December, a diplomat from an unnamed NATO member country described Trump getting re-elected and actually purging the US administrative apparatus as a “doomsday option.”

 

Others worried that appointments of “controversial” figures could lead competent junior officials and staff to resign.

 

“There are thousands of people busting their ass, often in dangerous places, sacrificing a lot for the country. And to have their work just dismissed by a commander in chief, is really just discouraging,” Jon Darby, former director of operations at the National Security Agency (NSA), told Politico.

 

https://www.rt.com/news/593275-cia-fbi-worried-trump/

 

>>20488624

perhaps post some digs or contribute something other than comment then