Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi Killed in Helicopter Crash
May 20th, 2024Via: Reuters:
Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi, a hardliner and potential successor to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, was killed in a helicopter crash in mountainous terrain near the Azerbaijan border, officials and state media said on Monday.
The charred wreckage of the helicopter which crashed on Sunday carrying Raisi, Foreign Minister Hossein Amirabdollahian and six other passengers and crew was found early on Monday after an overnight search in blizzard conditions.
Former CDC Director Admits Covid Shots Caused ‘Significant Side Effects’ Among Young Healthy People
May 19th, 2024The limited hangout kabuki theater continues, “Those vaccines saved a lot of lives.”
Via: Died Suddenly:
This is huge:
The former director of the U.S. Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) admits Covid shots caused ‘significant side effects’ among young healthy people.
He also admitted that the vaccine wasn’t really “necessary” for people under 50 years old.
He THEN… pic.twitter.com/YR9yFlYtwV
— DiedSuddenly (@DiedSuddenly_) May 19, 2024
Canada: “Digital Safety Commission”
May 19th, 2024Via: Russell Brand:
U.S. Fears Undersea Cables Are Vulnerable to Espionage From Chinese Repair Ships
May 19th, 2024Also the U.S.: The Creepy, Long-Standing Practice of Undersea Cable Tapping:
In 2005, the Associated Press reported that a submarine called the USS Jimmy Carter had been repurposed to carry crews of technicians to the bottom of the sea so they could tap fiber optic lines. The easiest place to get into the cables is at the regeneration points — spots where their signals are amplified and pushed forward on their long, circuitous journeys. “At these spots, the fiber optics can be more easily tapped, because they are no longer bundled together, rather laid out individually,” Deutsche Welle reported.
Via: The Wall Street Journal:
U.S. officials are privately delivering an unusual warning to telecommunications companies: Undersea cables that ferry internet traffic across the Pacific Ocean could be vulnerable to tampering by Chinese repair ships.
State Department officials said a state-controlled Chinese company that helps repair international cables, S.B. Submarine Systems, appeared to be hiding its vessels’ locations from radio and satellite tracking services, which the officials and others said defied easy explanation.
OpenAI’s Long-Term AI Risk Team Has Disbanded
May 18th, 2024Via: Wired:
In July last year, OpenAI announced the formation of a new research team that would prepare for the advent of supersmart artificial intelligence capable of outwitting and overpowering its creators. Ilya Sutskever, OpenAI’s chief scientist and one of the company’s cofounders, was named as the colead of this new team. OpenAI said the team would receive 20 percent of its computing power.
Now OpenAI’s “superalignment team” is no more, the company confirms. That comes after the departures of several researchers involved, Tuesday’s news that Sutskever was leaving the company, and the resignation of the team’s other colead. The group’s work will be absorbed into OpenAI’s other research efforts.
Related: ChatGPT Can Talk, but OpenAI Employees Sure Can’t
What Are The Privacy Risks Of ChatGPT-4o? “They Stress that the Training Information Is not Used to Profile People, or to Learn About Them”
May 18th, 2024Via: Forbes:
The privacy implications of ChatGPT are two-pronged, says Oliver Willis, partner at BDB Pitmans. “From a user’s perspective, how does ChatGPT collect and use data about you when you are using it? From everyone else’s perspective, was ChatGPT trained on information about you and what will it tell users about you?”
In its privacy policy, OpenAI acknowledges that the information used to train ChatGPT includes personal data, says Willis. “They stress that the training information is not used to profile people, or to learn about them, but some people will see the use of this data as inherently intrusive.”
OpenAI also acknowledges that using personal data to train ChatGPT means responses sometimes includes information about individuals. “OpenAI offers a mechanism for restricting the use of their data to train ChatGPT, but it is less clear what OpenAI will do for someone who objects to it disclosing their personal data in a chat response,” says Willis.
ChatGPT collects all the data inputted by a user and will retain that information indefinitely to train its models unless you opt out—which isn’t easy to do, says Matthew Holman, partner at Cripps LLP.
“In practice it is really hard for individuals to exercise GDPR rights against large language models (LLMs) such as ChatGPT,” says Holman. For example, he says, it can “create inaccurate information or hallucinate; it is able to change information without explanation and it can be almost impossible to have your data erased once it is imputed into the LLM.”
UK Says Proposed Pandemic Treaty ‘Not Acceptable’
May 18th, 2024Mmm hmm. The sane move would be to pull out of the WHO and arrest the perpetrators of the Covid scam.
Via: AFP:
A proposed World Health Organization treaty on preparing for future pandemics is currently “not acceptable” to Britain, a UK health minister said on Tuesday.
The WHO’s 194 member states have spent two years trying to reach a landmark global agreement on pandemic prevention, preparedness and response following the devastation caused by Covid-19.
Despite showing a desire for commitments aimed at preventing another Covid-style disaster, big differences have emerged between country blocs on how to achieve them.
Nations decided to keep negotiating for another two weeks after their deadline passed on Friday without agreement.
“The current text is not acceptable to us, therefore unless the current text is changed and refined we will not be signing up,” Conservative minister Andrew Stephenson told the UK parliament.
Remember The One About A Tesla Cybertruck Towing A Porsche 911 Appearing To Beat A Porsche 911 In A Drag Race?
May 18th, 2024Via: Motortrend:
We ran six quarter-mile drag races, and each one had the same outcome: The Porsche 911 Carrera T wins and the Tesla Cybertruck Beast loses. In the world of drag racing, it’s not a particularly close race, either.
DNA Contamination in Pfizer COVID Vaccine Exceeded 500 Times Allowable Levels
May 17th, 2024Via: The Defender:
A new peer-reviewed study raises concerns about the methods used to test for potential DNA impurities in the Comirnaty COVID-19 mRNA vaccine produced by Pfizer and BioNTech.
In the study published this month in Methods and Protocols, German researchers Brigitte König and Jürgen O. Kirchner questioned the reliability of the quantitative PCR (qPCR) technique Pfizer-BioNTech used to measure DNA contamination in the vaccine’s active substance.
The researchers experimented with dissolving Comirnaty’s lipid nanoparticles. They found DNA impurity levels ranging from 360 to 534 times higher than the 10 ng (nanogram) per dose limit set by regulators globally.
NATO Considers Sending Trainers to Ukraine
May 17th, 2024Ok, New York Times. We’ll pretend that special forces from NATO countries haven’t been there the entire time…
Via: ZeroHedge:
The continued inevitable and disastrous slide into a WW3 nuclear-armed confrontation between Russian and the West continues as The New York Times reports NATO appears to actually be seriously mulling sending troops to Ukraine to serve in the role as ‘trainers’ at a moment Kiev is desperate to tap and train up new manpower. And this would be closer to front line positions as well.
“NATO allies are inching closer to sending troops into Ukraine to train Ukrainian forces, a move that would be another blurring of a previous red line and could draw the United States and Europe more directly into the war,” NY Times wrote Thursday. What has changed? The Zelensky government is now directly requesting it, apparently on a formal level for the first time of the conflict, according to officials.
The Times confirms “Ukrainian officials have asked their American and NATO counterparts to help train 150,000 new recruits closer to the front line for faster deployment.”