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A German Court Has Ruled That Google Is Liable for False Statements Generated by AI Overviews
The ruling holds that a company that designs, trains, operates, and manages an AI system must assume legal liability for any damages caused by the responses it generates. ⌘ Read more

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Pokemon Go als KI-Training fĂŒr Drohnen
Das Kultspiel Pokemon Go hat auch knapp zehn Jahre nach seinem Erscheinen noch Millionen Nutzerinnen und Nutzer. Diese lieferten bei ihrer virtuellen Suche nach den kleinen Fantasiewesen in dieser Zeit ĂŒber ihre Handys so viele Geodaten ĂŒber ihre reale Umwelt, dass das auch Entwickler von Systemen kĂŒnstlicher Intelligenz (KI) interessiert. Besonders brisant: Laut einem Bericht des „Guardian“ vom Freitag könnten diese Daten auch fĂŒr die Steuerung von Drohnen in Kriegsgebieten genutzt werden. ⌘ Read more

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Pokemon Go Data Was Used To Help Train AI Systems Being Developed For Military Drones
Pokemon Go players’ optional location scans reportedly helped train Niantic Spatial’s visual positioning system, which uses camera imagery and 3D maps to navigate when GPS is unavailable or jammed. According to DroneXL, that technology is now being paired with Vantor’s drone navigation software for milita 
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Comment l’épargnant europĂ©en finance assidument les licornes amĂ©ricaines qui vont l’écraser
Le constat est connu, rĂ©pĂ©tĂ©, et toujours aussi dĂ©primant : la croissance a dĂ©sertĂ© l’Europe. Le World Economic Outlook d’avril 2026 du FMI le confirme sans mĂ©nagement, avec une croissance mondiale autour de 3,1 %, des États-Unis Ă  2,3 %, une Inde Ă  6,5 %, une Chine qui tient Ă  4,4 %, et une zone euro qui se traĂźne Ă  [
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Daley wanted Moses going ‘full clip’ on Thursday. It didn’t happen. So what now?
Blues playmaker trained away from the main group on Thursday – with Ethan Strange running at No.6 – as he continues his rehabilitation from a hamstring strain. ⌘ Read more

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Adam Driver’s Movie Future Isn’t Star Wars, It’s Fighting James Bond
Adam Driver wants to continue playing Kylo Ren in the Star Wars universe. However, his real future as a movie villain should be with the James Bond franchise. In the Star Wars sequel trilogy, Driver played Kylo Ren, born Ben Solo, the son of Han Solo and Leia Organa. Kylo trained to be a Jedi [
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The post [Adam Driver’s Movie Future Isn’t Star Wars, It’s Fighting James Bond](https://www. 
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Show HN: We post-trained a model that pen tests instead of refusing your code
I’m Dimitrios at Cosine. Quick orientation first: the read-only scan is free and you can run it right now: that’s the part to try. The pen-test mode is gated behind written authorisation, because it’s live offensive testing against real systems; I’ll explain that below, it’s not a paywall thing.

The reason `cos` exists: most “AI security” tools wrap a general model, so they inherit its refusals — point one at a real offensive task and it hedges or declines, b 
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Australian Football Hall of Fame - A Haydn Bunton jnr-coached publican who trained tied to his wife’s ute: Footy’s newest Legend
Bill Walker is the newest Legend of the Australian Football Hall of Fame, on the night some of the game’s biggest names were inducted. ⌘ Read more

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**Turquie: «La nature du régime politique est en train de changer» **
Alors que le dirigeant du principal parti d’opposition vient d’ĂȘtre destituĂ©, le chercheur Yohanan BenhaĂŻm dĂ©crit la dĂ©rive suivie par le pouvoir prĂ©sidentiel de Recep Tayyip Erdoğan. Il analyse Ă©galement le positionnement de la Turquie dans la recomposition en cours du Moyen-Orient. ⌘ Read more

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Netflix Drops New Human Vapor Trailer From the Creator of Train to Busan
Netflix has released the trailer for Human Vapor, an upcoming series from Yeon Sang-ho. The Train to Busan creator reimagines Toho’s 1960 movie as an eight-episode thriller, releasing July 2. How Yeon Sang-ho is reimagining Human Vapor for Netflix The trailer introduces a killer who can transform his body into gas, slipping through any barrier [
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The post [Netflix Drops New Human Vapor Trailer From 
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Lara’s 25-year fight for better rail safety in WA just took a big step forward
The WA opposition has announced it will introduce a bill to state parliament to legislate mandatory train lighting, a safety measure that aims to save lives at passive rail crossings across Western Australia. ⌘ Read more

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340 Local News Outlets Now Blocking the Internet Archive
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Techdirt: Earlier this year Nieman Lab broke the story that major news publishers, including The New York Times, The Guardian, and USA Today Co., had started blocking the Internet Archive for fear that AI companies might scrape the nonprofit’s repositories for training data. As one of the last bastions of archival history 
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Meta Workers Can Opt Out of Workplace Tracking for Up to 30 Minutes
Meta is scaling back parts of its employee tracking initiative after staff objected to software that collected mouse movements, clicks, keystrokes, and other actions for AI training data. According to Reuters, the company will now let workers pause collection for up to 30 minutes and request exemptions. Reuters reports: [Stephane Kasriel, a 
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He-Man Star Nicholas Galitzine Was ‘Pooping A Lot,’ Reveals Why
Masters of the Universe star Nicholas Galitzine reveals he was “pooping a lot” in preparation for his role. Galitzine shares that he had to undergo intense physical training, which also involved following a strict diet. The actor’s new He-Man movie comes out later this week. Nicholas Galitzine was pooping a lot after He-Man diet Nicholas [
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The post [He-Man Star Nicholas Galitzine Was ‘Pooping A Lot,’ Reveals Why]( 
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In-reply-to » @lyse Thanks! There are a few points in there that I’ll add to my list.

@bender@twtxt.net Now that’s an interesting philosophical viewpoint right there. But this assumes that the “AI” we seemingly have available to us today is actually telligent, understands and has cognitive reasoning. It does not. All of these LLM models from big-tech companies like Anthropic, OpenAI, Google, Microsoft, Meta and Alibaba are all just very powerful, very large multidimensional neural networks with attention that are very good at statistical probabilities of ‘what comes next”. I think we get really upset over the wrong things sometimes. We need to continue to be upset that these đŸ€Ź companies have basically destroyed any meaningful value of the concept of Copyright and Intellectual Property and Works of art. The so-called “AI” we have today is just a tool. Can you say for certain that the typewriter and the computer ruined our ability to write? Perhaps yes, but we still learn how to do so, likewise, I still think that learning to write code, research, read and write are all valuable skills to learn. Later on once you have the basics, you can defer some of the “tedious” work to these models, because frankly, they’re far better at inferencing and pattern matching than you or i will ever be, not because they’re better at pattern-matching per se, but because they have been trained on a very large corpus and they are much much faster at doing the same basic things we are far superior at.

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In-reply-to » (#wflbuia) @arne This is interesting. Sorry I missed this, I just found this post of yours and wanted to contribute 😅 Here's something interesting about me... I don't ever talk to myself, like ever. I have no, what they call, "inner monologue". Maybe I'm odd, but my wife asked me this very same question a while back and I said the same, there is never anything in my head except ideas, visuals or sounds, sometimes all at once, but never an inner monologue of "talking to myself".

@prologic@twtxt.net I don’t believe you. For example, you are programming something, and you are planning the steps, or you struggle at certain point. Any train of thought, of any kind, has an addressing. “If I move this here, what will it happen?”. “Hmm if we’re to place this logic here, will it do what we need?“. “If I were to do this, will it work?” “Damn it, you are so stupid, James, how could you miss that?!!” And so on. 😅 And that’s just a minor thing.

Trust me, you do. We all do. Even the crazy ones.

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In-reply-to » I’ve started collecting reasons against AI usage here, so I don’t have to repeat myself all the time:

Of course, @movq@www.uninformativ.de! Most of my points are also included in your list.

First of all, programming is what I really do enjoy the most. So, it doesn’t make any sense at all to not do this anymore. “But you could use your now free time to do something much cooler and more valuable!”, others might reply. Fuck no, I don’t want to waste my time with other shit that doesn’t fulfill me, why on earth would I want to do that?

All this hallucination reduces quality badly. In my experience, it’s also happening much more rapidly than I expected. Even though developers are still supposed to own and understand whatever has been generated under their name and even be responsible for that, the sad reality is that teammates often blindly trust the AI output. “But I asked the AI and it told me that $this was impossible”, “I’ve no idea either, but the AI just generated it” are responses I get more often. What really makes my angry is when I point out a flaw and suggest an alternative and this is the reaction. It happened several times that just trying it out and seeing it clearly work to proof my point only took me half a minute, but people still did something handwavy else instead.

The learning effect is drastically reduced. The more time I spend on a topic, the better the odds that whatever I learned actually makes it over into long-term memory. It’s like if a collegue just says “do it like that” or “this solves your problem”, but neither explains the why or how. Somehow, people are still convinced that it’s a completely different story when you replace the human counterpart with a computer program in this equation.

Skills are unlearned. It’s like with automation in general, just much worse. You end up in a state where you’ve no clue how anything works under the hood or how to actually find out important information that are needed to solve your problem. You’re screwed when a process breaks out of the blue. Even though it can become also rather terrible, with classical automation you’re typically still be able to decipher how exactly the thing was supposed to do something.

The energy consumption is sooo high, I absolutely do not want to be a part in burning down our planet. I’m sure I find (and probably have long found without knowing) other ways to contribute to worsen our climate crisis.

The scraper part is already covered in detail in your list. :-)

I’m convinced that license and copyright violations are only played down or even refused entirely because companies want to make big money quickly. With the work of others of course. Their double standards are obvious, they still try to actively keep their own stuff secret and out of any training sets. At most for internal use only. Virtually noone in charge is interested in good long-term solutions. Short-term for the win, when disaster eventually strikes, the causers are long gone, the responsibilities in other hands.

Vendor lock-in is something that lots of folks are only realizing very slowly. It’s completely crazy to me. This drug dealer routine should be well-known by now. It’s fucking everywhere. Yet, people are always surprised when they found themselves caught in it.

Adding new AI stuff only increases complexity. But complexity is the enemy that everybody should fear and reduce as much as possible. Of course, this is not limited to AI at all. And everywhere I look around, people in charge looooove to make things way more complicated than they ever need to be. Yet, simplicity is the real art and much harder to achieve.

I don’t understand why we have to go back full force to the ambiguity of natural languages. This alone should be more than enough to realize what a stupid idea all that is. Linked to that is that the “instruction set” is interpreted differently with newer model versions. I mean, is has to be. Why else would somebody want to upgrade in the first place than to get more Powerfulℱ Featuresℱ?

Some people argue that with AI the democratization is empowered. However, in my view, the exact opposite is the case. Models are getting so large that you can basically not run them locally or even train them. So, you have to rely on whatever the vendor offers you and runs for you. In the end, this only gives the owners more power, the multi billionaires. Not exactly what I understand by democratization.

Finally, technology assessments are missing completely. Or they are faked such that mostly only the (questionable) benefits are listed. But all the negative impact is just ignored.

Let’s keep some popcorn around for when this all explodes. :-)

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A Fundamental Principle of Aeronautical Engineering Has Been Overturned
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Wired: Aerodynamic drag is a major “barrier” in high-speed airplanes, automobiles, and bullet trains. This is because a design with less aerodynamic drag allows the aircraft to move at higher speeds with less energy. When an aircraft or car body moves at high speed, a thin layer of air cal 
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Meet Mark Zuckerberg’s right-hand man
By Meghan Bobrowsky

Tensions were running high at Meta Platforms.

For weeks, rumours circulated that the company was planning a large layoff as it poured tens of billions of dollars into artificial intelligence. Then, employees were told their keystrokes and mouse clicks would be recorded to help train AI agents to use computers. ⌘ Read more

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I Spent a Week Recording Myself Doing Chores for Money. Who’s the Robot Now?
Cooking. Doing laundry. Tidying up. All your household tasks can be turned into data to train future humanoids—if you’re prepared for the consequences. ⌘ Read more

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Patrick Simon, sociodĂ©mographe: «Une nouvelle sociĂ©tĂ© est en train d’advenir, avec une multiplicitĂ© de rĂ©fĂ©rences culturelles et sociales»
La grande enquĂȘte «Trajectoires et origines 2», qui porte sur la diversitĂ© des populations en France, vient percuter de nombreuses idĂ©es reçues sur les personnes immigrĂ©es et leur descendance. Entretien avec le sociodĂ©mographe Patrick Simon, qui a codirigĂ© ce livre trĂšs attendu e 
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OpenAI Co-Founder Andrej Karpathy Joins Anthropic
OpenAI co-founder Andrej Karpathy has joined rival AI lab Anthropic. “The hire is a major coup for Anthropic in the high-stakes competition for elite AI talent – and another sign the company is emerging as a magnet for some of the industry’s most respected technical minds,” reports Axios. From the report: Karpathy will start this week on Anthropic’s pre-training team, which is re 
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An ICE Firearms Trainer Was Involved in At Least 4 Deadly Shootings
David Norman, a former Phoenix police officer who’s described himself as “a fucking savage,” now runs a company that provided training to Homeland Security’s Special Response Teams. ⌘ Read more

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La France annule ses vacances mais le gouvernement est totalement détendu
Paradoxalement, c’est quand les Français prennent des vacances qu’on sait que le pays tourne bien, et c’est lorsqu’ils les annulent qu’on sait que ça tourne au vinaigre. Et, actuellement, c’est exactement ce qui est en train de se produire. Le rĂ©cent sondage ELABE/BFMTV Ă©claire bien la situation : 6 Français sur 10 ont dĂ©jĂ  modifiĂ© ou [
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Laura Kövesi, la procureure européenne qui secoue la GrÚce
Les enquĂȘtes de la procureure en chef du parquet europĂ©en, devenue une figure Ă  AthĂšnes, mettent en lumiĂšre la corruption qui mine le pays et ses consĂ©quences, des lignes de train non rĂ©novĂ©es aux aides de l’UE dĂ©tournĂ©es. De quoi lui attirer les foudres de la majoritĂ© gouvernementale. ⌘ Read more

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I’m not always on the same page as Rob Pike, but this hit close to home:

Although trained in physics, I worked in the computing industry with pride and purpose for over 40 years. And now I can do nothing but sit back and watch it destroy itself for no valid reason beyond hubris (if I’m being charitable).

Ineffable sadness watching something I once loved deliberately lose its soul.

I spent my time trying to make it better. Not just write code, but find better or at least different ways to do so. Simpler, cleaner, more general, more comprehensible.

What’s happening today is a complete repudiation of everything I was trying to achieve.

“Simpler, cleaner, more general, more comprehensible”, that’s what I’ve been trying to establish in our teams as well. Obviously not to the same degree, but you get the idea.

And it all goes out the window now. We’re doing the complete opposite – and with full force.

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