@mall0rie@Crunchyroll@jadbsaxton Mallorie, thanks for letting us know. I've been meaning to check if Crunchyroll had Season 2 ready, now I can binge everything!
✨"Time marches ever onward."✨
Today, the finale of season 2 of Frieren: Beyond Journey's End airs on @Crunchyroll. Thank you to everyone for watching and loving this amazing series! 💜
I'm so grateful to our director @jadbsaxton for casting me in this role of a lifetime. And thanks to our engineer Seth, castmates @JillHarrisVO, Jordan Dash Cruz, @CliffordChapin, and everyone who makes this show special.
Until we meet again in 2027!
"Well, shall we be off, then?"
🦔A researcher invented a fake eye condition called bixonimania, uploaded two obviously fraudulent papers about it to an academic server, and watched major AI systems present it as real medicine within weeks.
The fake papers thanked Starfleet Academy, cited funding from the Professor Sideshow Bob Foundation and the University of Fellowship of the Ring, and stated mid-paper that the entire thing was made up. Google's Gemini told users it was caused by blue light. Perplexity cited its prevalence at one in 90,000 people.
ChatGPT advised users whether their symptoms matched. The fake research was then cited in a peer-reviewed journal that only retracted it after Nature contacted the publisher.
My Take
The researcher made the papers as obviously fake as possible on purpose. The AI systems didn't catch it. Neither did the human researchers who cited it in real journals, which means people are feeding AI-generated references into their work without reading what they're actually citing.
I've covered the FDA using AI for drug review, the NYC hospital CEO ready to replace radiologists, and ChatGPT Health launching this year. All of that is happening in the same environment where a condition funded by a Simpsons character and endorsed by the crew of the Enterprise was being presented as emerging medical consensus. The people making these deployment decisions seem to believe the pipeline from research to AI to patient is more supervised than it actually is. This experiment suggests it isn't supervised much at all.
Hedgie🤗
nature.com/articles/d4158…
The Avro York first flew July 5, 1942, a British transport using Lancaster bomber wings, tail, and 4 Merlin engines with a boxy fuselage. 258 built, it hauled 56 passengers or 16,500 lb cargo, served as Churchill’s VIP plane, and flew thousands of tons in the Berlin Airlift.
I keep hearing from followers who thought I stopped posting on @X
If you can see this post please place a blue dot like this 🔵 as a reply. Technically I should have 40k dots appear but I expect to see maybe at best 10 dots.
@2ray_degenemax If you're not following @MagnumKeith you should. Elmer Keith was a cowboy, hunting guide, weapons inspector and gun writer. He was involved in the development of the .357 Magnum cartridge, and was the chief instigator of the .44 Magnum and .41 Magnum cartridges.
@RealSamRogers There is a disturbing lack of Pink Floyd references not just in this thread but re: the WHOLE COVERAGE of this event. Or am I the only one who would reach for such low-hanging fruit?
The guy who invented Peeps has one of the most interesting stores I’ve ever heard:
Sam Born was a Russian Jewish immigrant who studied to become a rabbi in Ukraine.
- Came to America. Made candy instead.
- Named his company "Just Born", a pun on his last name plus the fact he made everything fresh daily.
- In 1953, it took 27 hours to make one tray of Peeps with 80 workers spooning marshmallow into molds by hand.
- Sam's son Bob automated it down to 6 minutes. Same machine design still runs today.
Today they make 2 billion Peeps a year.
All out of Bethlehem, PA.
#1 non-chocolate Easter candy for 20+ years.
Russian Jewish immigrant studying to be a rabbi accidentally builds most iconic Easter candy in America out of a town called Bethlehem, Pennsylvania.
Maybe the most American story I've ever heard.
Plus kids love to play on it. So it makes a very healthy family activity.
I really do think that families need to workout more together (Calisthenics is perfect for this). Very important to build a great relationship.
@LundukeJournal This endlessly astounds me. Who genuinely wants the State to be able to dictate what software runs on one's computer? People who dislike liberty and like the idea of the State controlling people, clearly.
Leftist Linux Distributions are more likely to embrace Age Verification.
Non-Political or Right-Leaning Linux Distros are more likely (almost certain) to reject Age Verification.
That appears to be predominantly true.
For example:
Fedora, Debian, & elementary OS all have extreme Leftist politics... and all are embracing, planning for, or facilitating Age Verification.
Omarchy, Devuan, & OpenMandriva are all decidedly "Non-Woke" from a political perspective... and all are rejecting Age Verification (in some way).
github.com/BryanLunduke/D…github.com/BryanLunduke/S…
There is this strange phenomena where people new to cybersecurity go way overboard trying to look cool and badass to give the facade of being really technical.
I'll tell you something right now. You probably won't like to hear it, but it is important.
Nobody cares about:
- Your certificates
- The conferences you've attended
- Your vendor swag
- What OS you're using
- How many LED's your computer has
Here is what your peers admire the most:
- If you're polite
- If you're willing to admit if you're wrong
- If you're easy to get along with
If you're just a chill nerd who is nice, easy going, willing to admit when you're wrong, you will go further than the big mean nerd with the galaxy brain