Frederick Lane 🇺🇸🇮🇪🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🇺🇦

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Frederick Lane 🇺🇸🇮🇪🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🇺🇦 banner
Frederick Lane 🇺🇸🇮🇪🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🇺🇦

Frederick Lane 🇺🇸🇮🇪🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🇺🇦

@fsl3

Father and grandfather. Husband. Author and lecturer on the Cybertraps of emerging technologies. Pragmatic progressive. Die-hard Boston sports fan.

Brooklyn, NY Katılım Mayıs 2008
4.9K Takip Edilen4.3K Takipçiler
Frederick Lane 🇺🇸🇮🇪🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🇺🇦 retweetledi
Oliver Prompts
Oliver Prompts@oliviscusAI·
🚨 BREAKING: Someone just open-sourced software that sees you through walls using only WIFI signals. it’s called WiFi-DensePose. It maps your exact body pose in real-time. no cameras. no sensors. just your living room router. 100% Open Source.
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Nav Toor
Nav Toor@heynavtoor·
🚨 Someone just turned your WiFi router into a full-body surveillance system. No cameras. No wearables. No video. Just radio waves. It's called RuView. It uses the WiFi signals already in your room to detect human poses, track breathing, measure heart rate, and see through walls. Not a concept. Not a research paper. Working code you can run right now. Here's what this thing actually does: → Tracks full 17-point body pose using only WiFi signals → Detects breathing rate (6-30 BPM) without touching anyone → Measures heart rate (40-120 BPM) from across the room → Sees through walls, furniture, and debris up to 5 meters deep → Tracks multiple people simultaneously with zero identity swaps → Self-learns from raw WiFi data. No labeled datasets needed Here's how it works: WiFi signals pass through your room and hit the human body. The body scatters those signals differently based on position, breathing, even heartbeat. RuView reads that scattering pattern and reconstructs everything. A mesh of 4 ESP32 nodes ($48 total) gives you 360-degree coverage with 12 measurement links, 20 Hz updates, and sub-30mm precision. Here's the wildest part: It has a disaster response mode called WiFi-Mat. It detects survivors trapped under rubble through concrete walls, classifies injury severity using START triage protocol, and estimates 3D position. The kind of tool that saves lives after earthquakes. The Rust implementation processes 54,000 frames per second. That's 810x faster than the Python version. The entire Docker image is 132 MB. The AI model fits in 55 KB of memory. Runs on an $8 ESP32 chip. Train once, deploy in any room. No retraining. No recalibration. 1,100+ tests. SHA-256 verified capability audit. 22.4K GitHub stars. 2.7K forks. MIT License. 100% Open Source.
Nav Toor tweet media
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Guri Singh
Guri Singh@heygurisingh·
Apple has just published a paper with a devastating title: *The Illusion of Thinking*. And it's not a metaphor. What it demonstrates is that the AI models we use every day - yes, ones like ChatGPT - don't think. Not one bit. They just imitate doing so. Let me explain: 🧵👇
Guri Singh tweet media
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Moish Peltz
Moish Peltz@mpeltz·
Your AI conversations aren't privileged. Yesterday, Judge Jed Rakoff ruled that 31 documents a defendant generated using an AI tool and later shared with his defense attorneys are not protected by attorney-client privilege or work product doctrine. The logic is simple: an AI tool is not an attorney. It has no law license, owes no duty of loyalty, and its terms of service explicitly disclaim any attorney-client relationship. Sharing case details with an AI platform is legally no different from talking through your legal situation with a friend (which is not privileged). You can't fix it after the fact, either. Sending unprivileged documents to your lawyer doesn't retroactively make them privileged. That's been settled law for years. It just hadn't been tested with AI until now. And here's what really hurt the defendant: the AI provider's privacy policy (Claude), in effect when he used the tool, expressly permits disclosure of user prompts and outputs to governmental authorities. There was no reasonable expectation of confidentiality. The core problem is the gap between how people experience AI and what's actually happening. The conversational interface feels private. It feels like talking to an advisor. But unless you negotiate for an enterprise agreement that says otherwise, you're inputting information into a third-party commercial platform that retains your data and reserves broad rights to disclose it. Judge Rakoff also flagged an interesting wrinkle: the defendant reportedly fed information from his attorneys into the AI tool. If prosecutors try to use these documents at trial, defense counsel could become a fact witness, potentially forcing a mistrial. Winning on privilege doesn't make the evidentiary picture simple. For anyone advising clients or managing legal risk, this is a wake-up call. AI tools are not a safe space for clients to process their counsel's advice and to regurgitate their legal strategy. Every prompt is a potential disclosure. Every output is a potentially discoverable document. So what do we do about it? First, attorneys need to be proactive. Advise clients explicitly that anything they put into an AI tool may be discoverable and is almost certainly not privileged. Put it in your engagement letters. Make it part of onboarding. Don't assume clients understand this, because most don't. Second, if clients want to use AI to help process legal issues (and they clearly will, increasingly), then let's give them a way to do it inside the privilege. Collaborative AI workspaces shared between attorney and client, where the AI interaction happens under counsel's direction and within the attorney-client relationship, can change the analysis entirely. I'm excited to be planning this kind of approach, and I think it's where the industry needs to head. storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.usco…
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Sarah Longwell
Sarah Longwell@SarahLongwell25·
Pam Bondi is an absolute disgrace and Massie is 100% right that she’s leading a massive cover up of trafficking of underage girls.
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Covie
Covie@covie_93·
Let's thank James Comer for setting the precedent that a former president and first lady can be subpoenaed to answer question about epstein.
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Barack Obama
Barack Obama@BarackObama·
The killing of Alex Pretti is a heartbreaking tragedy. It should also be a wake-up call to every American, regardless of party, that many of our core values as a nation are increasingly under assault.
Barack Obama tweet media
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PoliticsGirl
PoliticsGirl@IAmPoliticsGirl·
I’m over this. Release the Epstein files. Bring them all down.
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Rep. Eric Swalwell
Rep. Eric Swalwell@RepSwalwell·
Heartbroken to hear of Tatiana Schlossberg’s passing after her courageous fight with leukemia. A powerful voice for cancer and medical research, let’s honor her legacy by continuing her fight. nytimes.com/2025/12/30/us/…
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Boze the Library Owl 😴🧙‍♀️
Saw someone say, “Stop hoarding books, we don’t need paper books anyway” and I can’t express how misguided this is. Online libraries disappear, digital books can be altered, and with Big Tech seeking to destroy history and literacy, print media has never been more essential.
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gil duran
gil duran@gilduran76·
This @WIRED piece by goes DEEP into Peter Thiel’s Antichrist fixation—a bizarre melding of biblical scripture and Nazi philosophy. Remember: This isn't just about AI. It's a much deeper story about the strange billionaire brain behind JD Vance. wired.com/story/the-real…
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Lakota Man
Lakota Man@LakotaMan1·
When President Clinton banned assault rifles in 1994, mass shootings dropped by 43%. After Republicans let the ban expire in 2004, they increased by 243% — please don’t tell me bans don’t work, because I don’t want to hear it.
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Adam Cochran (adamscochran.eth)
1/28 The Epstein "Birthday Book" is a disturbing read, filled with lots of crass 'jokes' related to the abuse of minors. This is just 1 document of the 300,000 files still sealed about Epstein's trafficking ring. Here are a few damning things I found in a quick skim:
Adam Cochran (adamscochran.eth) tweet media
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Liam Nissan™
Liam Nissan™@theliamnissan·
I love how when Trump goes five days without openly violating the U.S. Constitution we just all assume he passed away
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