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Big Tech Execs Commissioned into the Army [16:52 | JUL 03 2025 | Glenn Greenwald]


cross-posted from: lemmy.world/post/32434347

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Generated Summary:

Main Topic: The increasing integration of Big Tech companies with the US government and military, specifically focusing on the commissioning of tech executives into the Army Reserve.

Key Points:

  • Tech Execs Joining the Army: Executives from Meta, OpenAI, and Palantir are joining the US Army Reserve as part of a new "Innovation Corps" (Detachment 2011) to bring tech upgrades to the military.
  • Motivations: The tech executives cite patriotism and a desire to equip the military for conflicts with high-tech adversaries like China. The speaker suggests the tech sector will also profit from this arrangement.
  • Fascism Analogy: The speaker draws a parallel to fascism, where there is no separation between the public and private sectors, and corporations and the government work together for the same goals.
  • Debunking the "Aversion" Myth: The speaker refutes the idea that Silicon Valley was previously averse to working with the military, citing examples like the Snowden revelations and existing contracts between tech companies and intelligence agencies (CIA, NSA).
  • Historical Context: The speaker references John Poindexter and Palantir's origins, highlighting the long-standing relationship between Silicon Valley and the intelligence community.
  • Alarming Language: The speaker finds the language used by the tech executives about uniting American innovation with the military's mission to be alarming, echoing the core tenet of fascism.
  • Eisenhower's Warning: The speaker invokes Dwight Eisenhower's warning about the militarization of American life, suggesting that this integration is a realization of that warning on a grander scale.

Highlights:

  • The commissioning of tech executives into the Army Reserve is presented as a significant development, symbolizing the deepening ties between Big Tech and the US military.
  • The speaker emphasizes the potential dangers of this integration, drawing parallels to fascism and raising concerns about the erosion of the separation between corporate and state power.
  • The historical context provided challenges the narrative of a recent shift in Silicon Valley's relationship with the military, revealing a long history of cooperation.

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Emerald Lake loop Yoho National Park, BC


Nature walk, 3.2 mi loop
406 ft
Hiked 6/5/25

An extremely popular lake in Yoho National Park, this nature walk can be done as a full loop or shortened to near nothing and still be enjoyable. Named for its vibrant color, Emerald lake is surrounded on all sides by stunning views of the local mountains, and serves as an access to several great larger hikes such as Yoho Pass/Yoho Lake.

Looking south across Emerald lake towards Mount Burgess which is reflected in the rippled water.

The view from the south side of Emerald lake showing the avalanche zone of Emerald peak, which was still closed due to avalanche risk at the time.

Looking north from Emerald lake shows the vast avalanche field and flood plains that feeds the lake. Carmar peak, Mt Marpole, and the ridge leading up to the President sit in the background.



La musica e il dilemma: che aspetto avrebbe avuto l'immortale Lady Greensleves? - Il blog di Jacopo Ranieri









[JS Required] The Locknet: How China Controls Its Internet and Why It Matters


Questa voce è stata modificata (2 mesi fa)


[JS] The Locknet: How China Controls Its Internet and Why It Matters


Questa voce è stata modificata (1 settimana fa)


Large majority of French, German and Spanish public back tough EU stance on Big Tech, despite risk to Trump relations


Around half also believe Big Tech companies are more powerful than the EU
Questa voce è stata modificata (2 mesi fa)

Kilgore Trout doesn't like this.



Large majority of French, German and Spanish public back tough EU stance on Big Tech, despite risk to Trump relations


Around half also believe Big Tech companies are more powerful than the EU
Questa voce è stata modificata (2 mesi fa)


Researchers finds high levels of dangerous air particles(PM2.5) in air near electric vehicle fast charging stations.


  • At the charging stations, daily concentrations of dangerous air particles, known as PM2.5, ranged from 7.3 to 39.0 micrograms per cubic meter.
  • Urban sites without fast-charging stations had concentrations of PM2.5 ranging from only 3.6 to 12.4 micrograms per cubic meter.
  • The tiny particles likely come from particle resuspension around Direct Current Fast Charging power cabinets. Cooling fans designed to prevent the electronics from overheating can also stir up dust and particles from internal surfaces.
Questa voce è stata modificata (2 mesi fa)


Researchers finds high levels of dangerous air particles(PM2.5) in air near electric vehicle fast charging stations.


  • At the charging stations, daily concentrations of dangerous air particles, known as PM2.5, ranged from 7.3 to 39.0 micrograms per cubic meter.
  • Urban sites without fast-charging stations had concentrations of PM2.5 ranging from only 3.6 to 12.4 micrograms per cubic meter.
  • The tiny particles likely come from particle resuspension around Direct Current Fast Charging power cabinets. Cooling fans designed to prevent the electronics from overheating can also stir up dust and particles from internal surfaces.
Questa voce è stata modificata (2 mesi fa)


“Guidare in America”


Non avevo troppo idea che guidare negli Stati Uniti fosse così… crazy… (e ormai questo è l’unico aggettivo che so usare per porre enfasi positiva, un po’ come i redditor che usano sempre e solo la parola “wholesome”, ma lasciamo stare…) ma a quanto pare quelli lì hanno fatto anche cose… non direi buone, però […]

octospacc.altervista.org/2025/…


“Guidare in America”


youtube.com/watch?v=LxLw120wrq…

Non avevo troppo idea che guidare negli Stati Uniti fosse così… crazy… (e ormai questo è l’unico aggettivo che so usare per porre enfasi positiva, un po’ come i redditor che usano sempre e solo la parola “wholesome”, ma lasciamo stare…) ma a quanto pare quelli lì hanno fatto anche cose… non direi buone, però ecco, la proverbiale medaglia che da un lato è schifosa marcia dall’altro lato è evidentemente quasi scintillante.

Si parla ovviamente di guidare veicoli personali a motore, e quindi nel 99% dei casi automobili… mostri gargantueschi che ricordano automobili, si intende, ma da nazionalista europea giustamente sto già digressando. Gli autobus lì nell’isolotto oltreoceanico sono rari come miraggi, i treni quasi letteralmente non sanno cosa siano, e le distanze di tutti i giorni sono talmente grosse che parlare di monopattini (un saluto al nostro caro e sempre sul pezzo Salvini, a tal proposito) e bici elettriche sarebbe completamente fuori contesto… però, guardando tutta la cosa dalla prospettiva di un ipotetico guidatore, anziché pedone e cittadino (magari europeo…) con il desiderio di vivere in ambienti a misura umana, davvero bisogna dire che lì se la passano bene, alla grande, al top, al SUV, al…

Che lì il carburante costi in media poco (anche se non in tutti gli stati è economico quanto in Florida; o costoso quanto in Florida, suppongo) lo si sapeva già… anche se, da gran tirchia e abituata alla gratuità del camminare (e della bici non elettrica, appena me la prendo), pure 50 dollari per ~60 litri di benzina a me fanno male al cuore… ma altre cose mi colgono un po’ di sorpresa, invece. Tipo, non avevo mai pensato al fatto che le loro strade fossero sensibilmente più larghe delle nostre… suppongo che in video e film a caso non si noti e bisogna provare di persona per accorgersene, però, quindi ok. Così come (al di fuori dei vari scherzi) ignoravo che lì siano tutti relativamente imbranati a guidare… perché qui in Italia la gente non mi sembra chissà quanto competente, e perché non immaginavo che lì avessero automobili così avanzate da arrivare letteralmente a guidarsi da sole (anche quelle non fighette-Tesla “full self driving”, e che evidentemente li rendono più incapaci).

Insomma, roba da pazzi questa America, e quindi forse un po’ riesco a capire innanzitutto come mai il sogno americano non sia morto tra chi vive lì, e poi in che modo i loro bimbi siano capaci di imparare a guidare a soli 8 anni solo grazie a YouTube. E questo per non parlare di come sono assolutamente implosa quando Francescone ha detto che lì per prendere la patente si spendono appena 50 dollari (e il web mi conferma che la media in tutti gli USA è tra 50 e 100 dollari)… altro che il latrocinio non solo italiano, ma europeo! Qui io devo stare sveglia la notte per architettare come dovrei fare a prendermi la patente senza troppa sbatta e riuscendo ancora a scroccarla ai miei genitori — giusto per tenerla nel cassetto per le emergenze, proprio giusto a prendere polvere, perché invece di guidare in Italia non c’ho sbatta e preferisco farmi le strade provinciali in pattini a rotelle — e invece loro stanno beati nella Land of The Free (la stessa dove è molto pericoloso criticare il presidente, ma intanto…)

#America #car #DaCostaACosta #driving #FrancescoCosta #guidare #USA




Judge rejects executive order claiming ‘invasion’ at the border


A federal judge Wednesday ruled as unlawful an executive order by President Donald Trump that barred asylum by claiming an “invasion” at the southern border and the need to protect states.

“The President cannot adopt an alternative immigration system, which supplants the statutes that Congress has enacted,” District of Columbia U.S. District Judge Randolph Moss wrote in his opinion.

“Here, nothing in the (Immigration and Nationality Act) or the Constitution grants the President or his delegees the sweeping authority asserted in the Proclamation and implementing guidance,” continued Moss, who was appointed by former President Barack Obama.

The order from Moss also prevents the U.S. Department of Homeland Security from enforcing the executive order.

He also agreed to certify a class for potential asylum-seekers, which comes after last week’s Supreme Court ruling that curtailed nationwide injunctions from lower courts. Certifying a class was suggested by the court to give judges an avenue to make an order broader.

https://northdakotamonitor.com/2025/07/02/repub/trump-dealt-loss-as-judge-rejects-executive-order-claiming-invasion-at-the-border/



Bondi made changes to DOJ policy. Her former client Pfizer might have benefited


For the past several years, pharmaceutical giant Pfizer has been under investigation by the U.S. Department of Justice for potential foreign corruption violations related to its activities in China and Mexico, according to the company’s financial filings.

But that appears to have changed after the Trump administration tapped Pam Bondi — previously an outside legal counsel for Pfizer — to lead the Justice department as attorney general.

In the company’s most recent annual report, filed three weeks after Bondi took office in early February, there was no longer any reference to the Justice Department investigations into the company’s potential violation of the Foreign Corrupt Practice Act. A quarterly report in May also contains no reference to these investigations.



[JS] The Past, Present, and Future of Police Body Cameras


Artificial intelligence (AI) is reshaping the criminal justice system. Law enforcement agencies are using it to predict crime, expedite response, and streamline routine tasks. One of the most promising applications can be found in body camera programs, where AI is transforming unmanageable archives of footage into active sources of insight.

AI can now analyze hundreds of hours of video in seconds. Early pilot programs suggest that these video-reviewing tools, when guided by human oversight, can uncover critical evidence that might otherwise be overlooked, reduce pretrial bottlenecks, and identify potential instances of officer misconduct. But these benefits come with risks. Absent clear guardrails, the same technologies could drift toward government overreach, blurring the line between public safety and state surveillance.

The line between public security and state surveillance lies not in technology, but in the policies that govern it. To responsibly harness AI and mitigate these risks, we recommend that agencies and policymakers:


  • Establish and enforce clear use policies. Statewide rules for body camera use and AI governance ensure consistency across jurisdictions, particularly in areas like body camera activation, evidence sharing, and public disclosure.
  • Pair technology with human oversight. AI should enhance—not replace—human decision-making. Final judgments must rest with trained personnel, supported by independent policy oversight from civilian review boards.
  • Safeguard civil liberties. Safeguards must be in place to protect individual rights, limit surveillance overreach, and ensure data transparency. For example, limiting facial recognition during constitutionally protected activities like protests will help ensure AI is aligned with democratic ideals.


With the right guardrails in place, AI can elevate body cameras from after-action archival tools to always-on intelligence tools, informing decisions in the moment, when it matters most.
Questa voce è stata modificata (1 settimana fa)


[JS Required] The Past, Present, and Future of Police Body Cameras


Artificial intelligence (AI) is reshaping the criminal justice system. Law enforcement agencies are using it to predict crime, expedite response, and streamline routine tasks. One of the most promising applications can be found in body camera programs, where AI is transforming unmanageable archives of footage into active sources of insight.

AI can now analyze hundreds of hours of video in seconds. Early pilot programs suggest that these video-reviewing tools, when guided by human oversight, can uncover critical evidence that might otherwise be overlooked, reduce pretrial bottlenecks, and identify potential instances of officer misconduct. But these benefits come with risks. Absent clear guardrails, the same technologies could drift toward government overreach, blurring the line between public safety and state surveillance.

The line between public security and state surveillance lies not in technology, but in the policies that govern it. To responsibly harness AI and mitigate these risks, we recommend that agencies and policymakers:


  • Establish and enforce clear use policies. Statewide rules for body camera use and AI governance ensure consistency across jurisdictions, particularly in areas like body camera activation, evidence sharing, and public disclosure.
  • Pair technology with human oversight. AI should enhance—not replace—human decision-making. Final judgments must rest with trained personnel, supported by independent policy oversight from civilian review boards.
  • Safeguard civil liberties. Safeguards must be in place to protect individual rights, limit surveillance overreach, and ensure data transparency. For example, limiting facial recognition during constitutionally protected activities like protests will help ensure AI is aligned with democratic ideals.


With the right guardrails in place, AI can elevate body cameras from after-action archival tools to always-on intelligence tools, informing decisions in the moment, when it matters most.


Republican FCC scraps ban on prison phone price gouging, a gift to some of his big donors


The Federal Communications Commission will no longer enforce a rule capping the price of prison phone calls, according to an announcement made Monday by FCC Chairman Brendan Carr.

The move suspends a 2024 FCC decision that capped the price of in-state phone calls at 6 cents minute for prisons and large jails and 7 cents per minute for medium-sized jails. Before the decision, a 15-minute phone call could cost as much as $11.35 at large jails in some states. Under the 2024 rules, those same phone calls would cost 90 cents.




“Not an easy project to build:” Australian developer switches on the biggest solar farm in the UK


Australian-based renewable energy and storage investor Quinbrook Infrastructure Partners says its new 373 MW Cleve Hill Solar Park – the biggest in the UK – has begun commercial operations.

The Cleve Hill solar park, situated in Kent in England’s south, consists of over 550,000 solar panels and is expected to provide clean electricity equivalent to the needs of 102,000 homes, and is being hailed as a landmark on multiple fronts.

It is four times the size of the next largest operational UK solar project, and will also feature a 150 MW co-located battery energy storage system (BESS), making it also the largest co-located solar plus storage project ever constructed in the UK power market.

Cleve Hill was also the first solar and battery storage project to be consented as a Nationally Significant Infrastructure Project (NSIP) by the UK government, and secured the first solar contract for difference (CfD) by the UK Government-backed Low Carbon Contracts Company.






in reply to MirchiLover

If I was to ask an 'AI' tool to generate a character called 'Garry Tan', it would probably produce that exact image.


Best Free AI Tools for Beginners (2025)


Technology reshared this.

in reply to MirchiLover

The other day I was bored and asked AI to play a game. Then I ended the "conversation" because I realised this "game's" environmental impact. If it was clean energy-powered I'd find a way to run it in perpetuity to waste OpenAI's money, but the environmental impact is more important


Kilmar Ábrego García alleges torture and abuse in El Salvador mega-jail


According to new court documents filed on Wednesday as part of a lawsuit his wife brought against the Trump administration, Mr Ábrego García and 20 other detainees were repeatedly beaten when they arrived at El Salvador's Terrorism Confinement Centre, or Cecot.

Once there, according to the documents, Mr Ábrego García and 20 other deported inmates "were confined to metal bunks with no mattresses in an overcrowded cell with no windows, bright lights that remained on 24 hours a day, and minimal access to sanitation".

Mr Ábrego García has also alleged that he and the other prisoners were "forced to kneel" from 9 PM to 6 AM, "with guards striking anyone who fell from exhaustion".

At one point, guards allegedly threatened to confine him with gang members who would "tear" him apart.

His mistreatment led to him losing 30lbs (14kg) within the first two weeks of his incarceration in El Salvador, according to the complaint.



The migrant camps being set up in USA today is worse if not similar to the internment camps made for the japanese-americans during world war 2.


In USA, both US citizens and immigrants are being caught and sent to detention centers or immigration camps. There the people will be kept and will be deported to another country on a later date. And that person will be deported to another country irrespective of whether he or she originated from there or not. It is even worse than what the USA did during the world war 2 to the japanese americans. During the war the japanese americans were forcefully relocated to internment camps. It is very shameful period of US american history. Probably in 60 or more years later people will read about these events in their history books. They will understand how a deranged president did all these. And the fact that the USA president had support of majority of people. USA needs a revolution today. Just like the american revolutionary war a similar war needs to be fought by the sane people of USA. Otherwise whatever good that has been achieved since July, 4th 1776 will all be lost.
in reply to metaStatic

How can you say "be careful what you wish for, violent revolution never ends well for anarchists no matter who wins." ?
What about the outcome of the american revolutionary war ? What was it's outcome. Was the outcome not good ? Any revolution must have sound basis, logical basis. I am not talking about religious revolution. I am saying that USA today has been overtaken by idiot fascists. And even democrats won't do anything about it. Look at Luigi Mangione. How many democrats have openly supported him ? American people need to understand that trump and his friends are idiotic fascists. They are not completely like hitler. Hitler and his associates were smart and because of which they were able to destroy the world. But trump is basically a GATEWAY. If people tolerate trump today then there are people more evil and smarter than trump who will come to power. Imagine via trump if zuckerberg or musk or any other person comes to power. What will then happen to the common USA citizen ?
Questa voce è stata modificata (2 mesi fa)
in reply to toppy

How can you say "be careful what you wish for, violent revolution never ends well for anarchists no matter who wins." ? What about the outcome of the american revolutionary war ? What was it's outcome. Was the outcome not good ?


The Revolutionary War is an excellent example of the winners of a violent revolution turning around and wielding state power against their former supporters - look up Shays' Rebellion.

More generally, the outcome of the Revolutionary War was good for America's landowning oligarchy. Not so good for ordinary white Americans. Definitely not good for slaves, nonwhites, and the Native Americans of the continent - particularly since one of the biggest reasons for revolution was that the colonists wanted to break their treaties with Native American tribes, kill them all and steal their land, and Britain wouldn't let them.



DHS to cut 75% of staff in its intelligence office amid heightened threat environment


The Department of Homeland Security's intelligence arm plans to cut nearly three-quarters of its full-time employees, shaving its Office of Intelligence & Analysis down from about 1,000 staff to just 275, according to four sources briefed on the matter.

The exact timing of the cuts remains unclear; sources tell CBS News the staff reductions have been in the works for months but were temporarily on hold because of rising tensions overseas after the recent U.S. strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities. The decision has raised concerns among the nation's police and intelligence gathering agencies, as the U.S. reckons with a heightened threat environment.

DHS' Office of Intelligence & Analysis — created after the September 11 terrorist attacks — is the only member of the U.S. intelligence community tasked with sharing threat information to state, local, tribal and territorial governments across the country.



windowsiche opzioni che mancano su internet!


Ecco un’altra bella cosa che ho visto in Windows appena stasera… e che non avrei voluto veramente vedere, perché che cazzo, prodotto miliardario dell’azienda miliardaria eppure è tutto rotto. Nell’applet Opzioni Internet del Pannello di Controllo (inetcpl.cpl), la scheda Privacy mi sembra un pochino, come dire… vuota. Vedo tutto questo bianco al centro, dove sia […]

octospacc.altervista.org/2025/…


windowsiche opzioni che mancano su internet!


Ecco un’altra bella cosa che ho visto in Windows appena stasera… e che non avrei voluto veramente vedere, perché che cazzo, prodotto miliardario dell’azienda miliardaria eppure è tutto rotto. Nell’applet Opzioni Internet del Pannello di Controllo (inetcpl.cpl), la scheda Privacy mi sembra un pochino, come dire… vuota. Vedo tutto questo bianco al centro, dove sia a memoria che a logica dovrebbe esserci qualcosa…
Schermate Internet Properties come descritte.
Giustamente, ho cercato la stessa schermata informazioni sul Windows vecchio più recente che avevo ad immediata disposizione… ossia Windows 2000, perché si emula per bene nel browser, quindi è a portata di link… e si, mettendola affianco alla mia la differenza è abbastanza lampante. Lì dovrebbe esserci uno slider (in stile vecchio…) per il grado di privacy, eppure sul mio beneamatissimissimo Windows 10 22H2 qualcuno (forse il drago di Mozilla, che vuole ostacolare Internet Explorer?) si è mangiato i pezzi (e a niente serve chiudere e riaprire). Per fortuna non credo mi servisse, però porca miseria, come si fa… 😩

#glitch #inetcpl #InternetExplorer #legacy #Windows #Windows10


reshared this

in reply to Octt

windowsiche opzioni che mancano su internet!
ma quelle non sono opzioni che si applicano solo al fu IE?
in reply to TiTiNoNero

Re: windowsiche opzioni che mancano su internet!


@77nn@goto.77nn.it

Si, si applicano solo ad IE, e infatti per questo NON mi servono, visto che IE non si usa più... però Microsoft dovrebbe scegliere: o toglie completamente IE dal sistema, quindi anche le sue impostazioni, o le cose a riguardo le tiene non rotte 😂



Undercover Border Police executed a Palestinian raising his hands in surrender in the city of Nablus


Surveillance footage from a security camera recorded what happened outside the barbershop around 1:00 P.M. (DST): Rami al-Kukhun and the other young man are seen conversing calmly when suddenly a burst of gunfire is directed at them. The young man is shot in the leg but manages to escape. Al-Kukhun falls to the ground with his hands raised, and then an undercover officer dressed in a galabiyeh approaches him and fires several more bullets at him, the last at point-blank range.

https://www.btselem.org/video/20250630_undercover_border_police_executed_a_palestinian_raising_his_hands_in_surrender_in_the_city_of_nablus#full



Mole or cancer? The algorithm that gets one in three melanomas wrong and erases patients with dark skin


The Basque Country is implementing Quantus Skin in its health clinics after an investment of 1.6 million euros. Specialists criticise the artificial intelligence developed by the Asisa subsidiary due to its "poor” and “dangerous" results. The algorithm has been trained only with data from white patients.
in reply to Leon

Again, no.

There are actual normal reasons that can explain this. Don't assume evil when stupidity (or in this case, physics) does it. Darker patches on darker skin are harder to detect, just as facial features in the dark, on dark skin are garder to detect because there is literally less light to work with

Scream racism all you want but you're cheapening the meaning of the word and you're not doing anyone a favor.

in reply to Phoenixz

Don’t assume evil when stupidity


I didn't, though? I think that perhaps you missed the "I don’t think necessarily that people who perpetuate this problem are doing so out of malice" part.

Scream racism all you want but you’re cheapening the meaning of the word and you’re not doing anyone a favor.


I didn't invent this term.

Darker patches on darker skin are harder to detect, just as facial features in the dark, on dark skin are garder to detect because there is literally less light to work with


Computers don't see things the way we do. That's why steganography can be imperceptible to the human eye, and why adversarial examples work when the differences cannot be seen by humans.

If a model is struggling at doing its job it's because the data is bad, be it the input data, or the training data. Historically one significant contributor has been that the datasets aren't particularly diverse, and white men end up as the default. It's why all the "AI" companies popped in "ethnically ambiguous" and other words into their prompts to coax their image generators into generating people that weren't white, and subsequently why these image generators gave us ethnically ambigaus memes and German nazi soldiers that were black.



Mole or cancer? The algorithm that gets one in three melanomas wrong and erases patients with dark skin


The Basque Country is implementing Quantus Skin in its health clinics after an investment of 1.6 million euros. Specialists criticise the artificial intelligence developed by the Asisa subsidiary due to its "poor” and “dangerous" results. The algorithm has been trained only with data from white patients.


Video of US contractors cheering after firing at Gaza civilians ignites fury online





Video of US contractors cheering after firing at Gaza civilians ignites fury online


A new Associated Press (AP) report detailing how American contractors guarding aid distribution sites used live ammunition, stun grenades and pepper spray against starving Palestinians seeking food has sparked fierce criticism online.