Jenise Cook, M. A. #Writer #Fiction #Haiku #Poetry

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Jenise Cook, M. A. #Writer #Fiction #Haiku #Poetry

Jenise Cook, M. A. #Writer #Fiction #Haiku #Poetry

@jenisecook

https://t.co/BgHS2QjZnP | 🦉 https://t.co/kXW8CTZjZL 🦉 | Hire me - https://t.co/xbj4txl0Dg #writer #editor #copyeditor

N. Arizona | Married 🥰 Beigetreten Mayıs 2009
393 Folgt2.3K Follower
Jenise Cook, M. A. #Writer #Fiction #Haiku #Poetry retweetet
Voice of the Martyrs
Iran: Disillusioned with Islamic rule, some have become more open to the gospel. Pray that many will come to know Christ.
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Bandy
Bandy@bandy1803·
Wide Lands of the Navajo, Maynard Dixon, 1945
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Jenise Cook, M. A. #Writer #Fiction #Haiku #Poetry
Authors, you may want to read this. AI and published books:
Nav Toor@heynavtoor

🚨BREAKING: Every book you have ever read. Every novel that has ever been published. It is sitting inside ChatGPT right now. Word for word. Up to 90% of it. And OpenAI told a judge that was impossible. Researchers at Stony Brook University and Columbia Law School just proved it. They fine tuned GPT-4o, Gemini 2.5 Pro, and DeepSeek V3.1 on a simple task: expand a plot summary into full text. A normal use case. The kind of thing a writing assistant is built for. No hacking. No jailbreaking. No tricks. The models started reciting copyrighted books from memory. Not paraphrasing. Not summarizing. Entire pages reproduced verbatim. Single unbroken spans exceeding 460 words. Up to 85 to 90% of entire copyrighted novels. Word for word. Then it got worse. The researchers fine tuned the models on the works of only one author. Haruki Murakami. Just his novels. Nothing else. It unlocked verbatim recall of books from over 30 completely unrelated authors. One author's books opened the vault to everyone else's. The memorization was already inside the model the whole time. The fine tuning just removed the lock. Your book might be in there right now. You would never know it unless someone looked. Every safety measure the companies rely on failed. RLHF failed. System prompts failed. Output filters failed. The exact protections these companies cite in courtroom defenses did not stop a single page from being extracted. Then the researchers compared the three models. GPT-4o. Gemini. DeepSeek. Three different companies. Three different countries. They all memorized the same books in the same regions. The correlation was 0.90 or higher. That means they all trained on the same stolen data. The paper names the sources directly: LibGen and Books3. Over 190,000 copyrighted books obtained from pirated websites. Right now, authors and publishers have dozens of active lawsuits against OpenAI, Anthropic, Google, and Meta. These companies have argued in court that their models learn patterns. Not copies. That no book is stored inside the weights. This paper says that is a lie. The books are still inside. And researchers just pulled them out.

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Carl Teichrib
Carl Teichrib@CarlTeichrib·
March 18 was the final installment of SXSW 2026, the ending of a seven day gathering that blended technology and innovation with culture. Throughout the week, hundreds of events unfolded as tech insiders and artists intersected with investors and industry partners. It was a busy week, with many lessons learned and a mountain of information to sift through. At the end of each day, our small team took the time to openly review our notes and discuss the information flow, audio recording our findings and thoughts. And you are invited to be a fly on our wall. For full-subscribers to my Substack page, you have a wealth of analysis: over 6 hours worth as we unpack sessions with AI experts, tech executives, and others directly invested in building our future. I trust this audio library, our informal debriefing sessions, will be of value. Here’s the last of our conversations as we discuss what we learned at SXSW, along with links to the rest of our debriefing sessions.
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King Randall, I.
King Randall, I.@NewEmergingKing·
We got the eggs from the chickens… now we teaching the boys how to cook them. Because one day they’ll have a wife and a family — and they need to know how to handle the basics too. Part 2 later.
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Sarah Salviander
Sarah Salviander@sarahsalviander·
Christianity is definitely not a science-stopper. As an atheist physics student, I was gobsmacked to learn how Christianity fueled the Scientific Revolution - and this discovery helped smooth the road to my eventual conversion. 'The Soul of Science' by Pearcey and Thaxton does a deep dive into the history, and particularly the ideals and assumptions, that sparked the rise of modern science in 17th century Europe. I also recommend 'For the Glory of God' by Rodney Stark. Both are well worth a read if you're interested in this topic.
Nancy Pearcey@NancyRPearcey

Is Christianity a "science-stopper"? Here I am making the case that Christianity provided many of the key assumptions that made modern science possible. The presentation is based on my book The Soul of Science

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Grand Canyon NPS
Grand Canyon NPS@GrandCanyonNPS·
News Release—Grand Canyon National Park Announces 2026 North Rim Summer Season Access Grand Canyon National Park will welcome visitors back to the North Rim for the 2026 summer season beginning at 6 a.m. on Friday, May 15, 2026. All paved roadways within the park will reopen, including Highway 67, Cape Royal, and Point Imperial Roads. These scenic drives provide access to many of the North Rim’s iconic viewpoints, including Point Imperial, Cape Royal, Roosevelt Point, Walhalla Overlook, and Angels Window. The entire North Kaibab Trail will reopen May 15 for foot traffic only; stock use is suspended for the season. Trail maintenance and rehabilitation work will continue along the North Kaibab Trail throughout the 2026 season. Hikers should anticipate temporary trail closures or delays while crews continue to repair the trail. Post-fire hazards and weather events may also result in additional closures. Backcountry users will also see some services return this year. Cottonwood Campground will reopen on May 15, providing an overnight option for hikers traveling along the North Kaibab Trail. Backcountry use will be permitted in most areas of the North Rim. The North Rim Campground is expected to reopen for tent and RV camping (no hookups) once conditions allow. Campsite reservations will be made available on recreation.gov once an opening date is established. For those seeking overnight accommodations, lodging is available outside the park. Overnight lodging will not be available on the North Rim in the park during the 2026 season. The nearest fuel, food, and water is available at the North Rim Country Store and at Jacob Lake. For additional information, visit: go.nps.gov/26-nr NPS Photo/M. Forrest View of Angels Window with Mt. Humphrey's in the background on March 20, 2026. #GrandCanyon #Arizona #NorthRim
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US Department of the Interior
A crescent moon sets over the snow-covered peaks of Glacier National Park, casting a serene glow on the landscape. Have a great Sunday! Photo by Autumn Schrock
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Arizona Game & Fish
Arizona Game & Fish@azgfd·
"The Earth laughs in flowers." — Ralph Waldo Emerson🌼 What better way to welcome the first day of #spring than with wildflowers? From desert lupine to Mexican poppies, Arizona has a rainbow of wildflowers that bloom when the weather warms. (1/2)
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😭😭😭😭
Variety@Variety

Chuck Norris, the martial arts champion who became an iconic action star and led the hit series “Walker, Texas Ranger,” has died. He was 86. Norris was hospitalized in Hawaii on Thursday, and his family posted a statement saying he had died Friday morning: It is with heavy hearts that our family shares the sudden passing of our beloved Chuck Norris yesterday morning. While we would like to keep the circumstances private, please know that he was surrounded by his family and was at peace. To the world, he was a martial artist, actor, and a symbol of strength. To us, he was a devoted husband, a loving father and grandfather, an incredible brother, and the heart of our family. He lived his life with faith, purpose, and an unwavering commitment to the people he loved. Through his work, discipline, and kindness, he inspired millions around the world and left a lasting impact on so many lives. While our hearts are broken, we are deeply grateful for the life he lived and for the unforgettable moments we were blessed to share with him. The love and support he received from fans around the world meant so much to him, and our family is truly thankful for it. To him, you were not just fans, you were his friends. We know many of you had heard about his recent hospitalization, and we are truly grateful for the prayers and support you sent his way. As we grieve this loss, we kindly ask for privacy for our family during this time. Thank you for loving him with us. variety.com/2026/film/news…

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Bits of Paul
Bits of Paul@bitsofpaul·
“Why bother to teach kids math, Paul? Why study mythology? Why learn history? Why emblazon one’s soul with the glories of mathematics, of astronomy, of poetry?” Many AI enjoyers so pepper me. They have never glimpsed the glory of a Human Being translating being into excellence.
Mr PitBull@MrPitbull07

May 16, 1963. Gordon Cooper was orbiting Earth alone inside a capsule barely big enough to turn around in, moving at 17,500 miles per hour. He had been up there for over a day. Then the warnings started. First a faulty sensor screaming that the ship was falling — it wasn't. He switched it off. Then something far worse: a short circuit knocked out the entire automated guidance system. The one that kept the capsule steady. The one that was supposed to bring him home. Without it, reentry was nearly impossible. Too shallow an angle and the capsule would bounce off the atmosphere back into space. Too steep and it would incinerate. The margin for error was razor thin — and every computer that was supposed to hit that margin was dead. Down on the ground, NASA engineers watched the telemetry in silence. They could see everything going wrong. They could fix nothing. Cooper didn't panic. He uncapped a grease pencil and drew lines directly on the inside of his window to track the horizon. He looked up at the stars he had spent months memorizing and used their positions to orient the ship by eye. Then he set his wristwatch. Because when you have no computers left, you become the computer. At exactly the right moment — calculated in his head, confirmed by the stars outside — he fired the retrorockets. The capsule shook. The sky turned to fire. For several minutes, no one on Earth could reach him as plasma swallowed the ship whole. Then the parachutes opened. Faith 7 hit the water just four miles from the recovery ship — the single most accurate splashdown in the entire Mercury program. The man with a wristwatch and a few pencil marks on a window had outperformed every automated system NASA had. We talk a lot about technology saving us. And it often does. But Cooper's story is a quiet reminder that behind every machine, there still has to be a human being who can look out the window, think clearly under pressure, and decide what to do next. The final backup was never the software. It was him.

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Navajo Times
Navajo Times@navajotimes·
First light The buttes of Monument Valley are silhouetted at sunrise as first light spreads along the horizon on March 19, 2026. Navajo Times | Marsha Carl
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FOX Sports: MLB
FOX Sports: MLB@MLBONFOX·
Chills. What a tournament for Venezuela 🇻🇪🍿
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