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Posted by Not Always Right

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I work as a customer service agent for an online store. A customer’s package is being shipped by USPS. The tracking shows:
Tracking: "As per the agreement between the customer and carrier, this package has been redirected to a new address."
The customer calls me upon receiving this tracking update and immediately loses it:

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Dec. 2nd, 2025 01:45 pm
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Posted by Not Always Right

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This happened about 25 years ago, but the absurdity has stuck in my head. This happened in the late 90s, so many years before the heightened security of post-9/11 air travel, travelling back to Sydney from Singapore. I had on my keys one of those inert bullet keyrings, with a ring welded onto the striking […]

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[syndicated profile] crooks_and_liars_feed

Posted by Susie Madrak

MAGA is trying to hang on to a ruby-red congressional district today in a competitive special election that is considered a bellwether for the midterm elections. And boy, are they nervous. Here's hoping the results ratchet up their stress! Via the Washington Post:

The contest in Tennessee’s 7th District, which Trump won by more than 20 percentage points in 2024, has put the GOP on edge, while raising Democratic hopes about a massive upset or overperformance weeks after a strong showing in off-year elections across several states. Strategists in both parties say they see a competitive race that tilts toward the Republican candidate as each side has flooded the district with money, ads and prominent surrogates not typically seen in such a partisan stronghold.

That national attention was evident on Monday, with Trump and House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-Louisiana) campaigning for Republican Matt Van Epps and Democrat Aftyn Behn hosting a virtual rally featuring Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-New York) and former vice president Al Gore.

“It’s fair to say this Republican is a little nervous,” said Rep. Tim Burchett (R-Tennessee). “It’s an off-year. It’s a special election. It’s around the holiday, and there’s just a lot of things that could play into the Democrats’ favor.”

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Posted by Ed Scarce

You know things aren't going well when Republicans have to enlist Crazy Grandpa to help a Republican get over the line in tomorrow's special election in TN-07, a district that Trump carried by 22% only a year ago.

Source: USA Today

WASHINGTON ‒ President Donald Trump told Tennesseans "the whole world is watching" as Republicans work to avert a disaster in the Dec. 2 special election for Tennessee's 7th congressional district.

Trump, speaking through a cellphone held by House Speaker Mike Johnson, urged Tennesseans on the eve of the election to vote for Republican nominee Matt Van Epps in the race against Democrat Aftyn Behn, which has suddenly garnered national spotlight for being surprisingly close.
...
"Matt Van Epps ‒ he's a winner, he's going to be great," Trump said, later falsely accusing Behn of hating Christianity and country music. "How the hell can you elect a person like that?" the president said.

"Tomorrow morning, get out and vote," Trump said. "Let's make it a sweeping victory. The whole world is watching Tennessee right now and they're watching your district. The whole world. It's a big vote. It's going to show something, and it's going to show that the Republican Party is stronger than it's ever been."

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Mike’s Blog Roundup

Dec. 2nd, 2025 12:50 pm
[syndicated profile] crooks_and_liars_feed

Posted by Steve in Manhattan

Avedon’s Sideshow - of profanities, panthers, and the poverty line;

Crazy Eddie’s Motie News - how AIDS research led to COVID19 vaccines;

David Rothkopf - how to stop the descent into madness;

One Damn Thing After Another - Trump’s real mess;

The Mahablog - a nation in freefall?

Send tips, requests, and suggestions to mbru@crooksandliars.com (with ‘for MBRU' in the subject line).

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[syndicated profile] crooks_and_liars_feed

Posted by David Edwards

Indiana state Sen. Jean Leising (R) said she was the newest victim of threats after refusing a demand from President Donald Trump to redistrict the state ahead of the 2026 midterm elections.

In a Sunday post on X, Leising revealed that her home "was the target of a pipe bomb threat on Saturday evening."

"This is a result of the D.C. political pundits for redistricting," she explained.

The lawmaker thanked the Oldenburg Town Marshall and the Franklin County Sheriff's Office for responding to the threat.

Leising's message insisted that she would not "cave" to Trump's redistricting demands.

At least seven other state senators opposing redistricting have received threats in Indiana. The Indiana State Police were also investigating threats against Gov. Mike Braun (R) and Indianapolis City-County Councilmember Nick Roberts (D).

Republicans in the Indiana state House were expected to push forward with an effort to redistrict the state on Monday after Trump threatened to oust lawmakers who opposed his demand for new GOP seats.

The state Senate has previously shot down redistricting plans.

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Dec. 2nd, 2025 12:45 pm
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When I worked in an airline call center, we all got to know each other pretty well and we would sit around the lunch area and chat about all kinds of things. We especially got to know the people who were in our initial training class. One day a group of us were sitting around […]

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Posted by BeauHD

Tony Isaac quotes a report from NPR: The rise of AI assistants is rewriting the rhythms of everyday life: People are feeding their blood test results into chatbots, turning to ChatGPT for advice on their love lives and leaning on AI for everything from planning trips to finishing homework assignments. Now, one organization suggests artificial intelligence can go beyond making daily life more convenient. It says it's the key to reshaping American politics. "Without AI, what we're trying to do would be impossible," explained Adam Brandon, a senior adviser at the Independent Center, a nonprofit that studies and engages with independent voters. The goal is to elect a handful of independent candidates to the House of Representatives in 2026, using AI to identify districts where independents could succeed and uncover diamond in the rough candidates. [...] ... "This isn't going to work everywhere. It's going to work in very specific areas," [said Brett Loyd, who runs The Bullfinch Group, the nonpartisan polling and data firm overseeing the polling and research at the Independent Center]. "If you live in a hyper-Republican or hyper-Democratic district, you should have a Democrat or Republican representing you." But with the help of AI, he identified 40 seats that don't fit that mold, where he said independents can make inroads with voters fed up with both parties. The Independent Center plans to have about 10 candidates in place by spring with the goal of winning at least half of the races. Brandon predicts those wins could prompt moderate partisans in the House to switch affiliations. Their proprietary AI tool created by an outside partner has been years in the making. While focus groups and polling have long driven understanding of American sentiments, AI can monitor what people are talking about in real time. ... They're using AI to understand core issues and concerns of voters and to hunt for districts ripe for an independent candidate to swoop in. From there, the next step is taking the data and finding what the dream candidate looks like. The Independent Center is recruiting candidates both from people who reach out to the organization directly and with the help of AI. They can even run their data through LinkedIn to identify potential candidates with certain interests and career and volunteer history. ... The AI also informs where a candidate is best placed to win.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Posted by Bruce Schneier

In his 2020 book, “Future Politics,” British barrister Jamie Susskind wrote that the dominant question of the 20th century was “How much of our collective life should be determined by the state, and what should be left to the market and civil society?” But in the early decades of this century, Susskind suggested that we face a different question: “To what extent should our lives be directed and controlled by powerful digital systems—and on what terms?”

Artificial intelligence (AI) forces us to confront this question. It is a technology that in theory amplifies the power of its users: A manager, marketer, political campaigner, or opinionated internet user can utter a single instruction, and see their message—whatever it is—instantly written, personalized, and propagated via email, text, social, or other channels to thousands of people within their organization, or millions around the world. It also allows us to individualize solicitations for political donations, elaborate a grievance into a well-articulated policy position, or tailor a persuasive argument to an identity group, or even a single person.

But even as it offers endless potential, AI is a technology that—like the state—gives others new powers to control our lives and experiences.

We’ve seen this out play before. Social media companies made the same sorts of promises 20 years ago: instant communication enabling individual connection at massive scale. Fast-forward to today, and the technology that was supposed to give individuals power and influence ended up controlling us. Today social media dominates our time and attention, assaults our mental health, and—together with its Big Tech parent companies—captures an unfathomable fraction of our economy, even as it poses risks to our democracy.

The novelty and potential of social media was as present then as it is for AI now, which should make us wary of its potential harmful consequences for society and democracy. We legitimately fear artificial voices and manufactured reality drowning out real people on the internet: on social media, in chat rooms, everywhere we might try to connect with others.

It doesn’t have to be that way. Alongside these evident risks, AI has legitimate potential to transform both everyday life and democratic governance in positive ways. In our new book, “Rewiring Democracy,” we chronicle examples from around the globe of democracies using AI to make regulatory enforcement more efficient, catch tax cheats, speed up judicial processes, synthesize input from constituents to legislatures, and much more. Because democracies distribute power across institutions and individuals, making the right choices about how to shape AI and its uses requires both clarity and alignment across society.

To that end, we spotlight four pivotal choices facing private and public actors. These choices are similar to those we faced during the advent of social media, and in retrospect we can see that we made the wrong decisions back then. Our collective choices in 2025—choices made by tech CEOs, politicians, and citizens alike—may dictate whether AI is applied to positive and pro-democratic, or harmful and civically destructive, ends.

A Choice for the Executive and the Judiciary: Playing by the Rules

The Federal Election Commission (FEC) calls it fraud when a candidate hires an actor to impersonate their opponent. More recently, they had to decide whether doing the same thing with an AI deepfake makes it okay. (They concluded it does not.) Although in this case the FEC made the right decision, this is just one example of how AIs could skirt laws that govern people.

Likewise, courts are having to decide if and when it is okay for an AI to reuse creative materials without compensation or attribution, which might constitute plagiarism or copyright infringement if carried out by a human. (The court outcomes so far are mixed.) Courts are also adjudicating whether corporations are responsible for upholding promises made by AI customer service representatives. (In the case of Air Canada, the answer was yes, and insurers have started covering the liability.)

Social media companies faced many of the same hazards decades ago and have largely been shielded by the combination of Section 230 of the Communications Act of 1994 and the safe harbor offered by the Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998. Even in the absence of congressional action to strengthen or add rigor to this law, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) and the Supreme Court could take action to enhance its effects and to clarify which humans are responsible when technology is used, in effect, to bypass existing law.

A Choice for Congress: Privacy

As AI-enabled products increasingly ask Americans to share yet more of their personal information—their “context“—to use digital services like personal assistants, safeguarding the interests of the American consumer should be a bipartisan cause in Congress.

It has been nearly 10 years since Europe adopted comprehensive data privacy regulation. Today, American companies exert massive efforts to limit data collection, acquire consent for use of data, and hold it confidential under significant financial penalties—but only for their customers and users in the EU.

Regardless, a decade later the U.S. has still failed to make progress on any serious attempts at comprehensive federal privacy legislation written for the 21st century, and there are precious few data privacy protections that apply to narrow slices of the economy and population. This inaction comes in spite of scandal after scandal regarding Big Tech corporations’ irresponsible and harmful use of our personal data: Oracle’s data profiling, Facebook and Cambridge Analytica, Google ignoring data privacy opt-out requests, and many more.

Privacy is just one side of the obligations AI companies should have with respect to our data; the other side is portability—that is, the ability for individuals to choose to migrate and share their data between consumer tools and technology systems. To the extent that knowing our personal context really does enable better and more personalized AI services, it’s critical that consumers have the ability to extract and migrate their personal context between AI solutions. Consumers should own their own data, and with that ownership should come explicit control over who and what platforms it is shared with, as well as withheld from. Regulators could mandate this interoperability. Otherwise, users are locked in and lack freedom of choice between competing AI solutions—much like the time invested to build a following on a social network has locked many users to those platforms.

A Choice for States: Taxing AI Companies

It has become increasingly clear that social media is not a town square in the utopian sense of an open and protected public forum where political ideas are distributed and debated in good faith. If anything, social media has coarsened and degraded our public discourse. Meanwhile, the sole act of Congress designed to substantially reign in the social and political effects of social media platforms—the TikTok ban, which aimed to protect the American public from Chinese influence and data collection, citing it as a national security threat—is one it seems to no longer even acknowledge.

While Congress has waffled, regulation in the U.S. is happening at the state level. Several states have limited children’s and teens’ access to social media. With Congress having rejected—for now—a threatened federal moratorium on state-level regulation of AI, California passed a new slate of AI regulations after mollifying a lobbying onslaught from industry opponents. Perhaps most interesting, Maryland has recently become the first in the nation to levy taxes on digital advertising platform companies.

States now face a choice of whether to apply a similar reparative tax to AI companies to recapture a fraction of the costs they externalize on the public to fund affected public services. State legislators concerned with the potential loss of jobs, cheating in schools, and harm to those with mental health concerns caused by AI have options to combat it. They could extract the funding needed to mitigate these harms to support public services—strengthening job training programs and public employment, public schools, public health services, even public media and technology.

A Choice for All of Us: What Products Do We Use, and How?

A pivotal moment in the social media timeline occurred in 2006, when Facebook opened its service to the public after years of catering to students of select universities. Millions quickly signed up for a free service where the only source of monetization was the extraction of their attention and personal data.

Today, about half of Americans are daily users of AI, mostly via free products from Facebook’s parent company Meta and a handful of other familiar Big Tech giants and venture-backed tech firms such as Google, Microsoft, OpenAI, and Anthropic—with every incentive to follow the same path as the social platforms.

But now, as then, there are alternatives. Some nonprofit initiatives are building open-source AI tools that have transparent foundations and can be run locally and under users’ control, like AllenAI and EleutherAI. Some governments, like Singapore, Indonesia, and Switzerland, are building public alternatives to corporate AI that don’t suffer from the perverse incentives introduced by the profit motive of private entities.

Just as social media users have faced platform choices with a range of value propositions and ideological valences—as diverse as X, Bluesky, and Mastodon—the same will increasingly be true of AI. Those of us who use AI products in our everyday lives as people, workers, and citizens may not have the same power as judges, lawmakers, and state officials. But we can play a small role in influencing the broader AI ecosystem by demonstrating interest in and usage of these alternatives to Big AI. If you’re a regular user of commercial AI apps, consider trying the free-to-use service for Switzerland’s public Apertus model.

None of these choices are really new. They were all present almost 20 years ago, as social media moved from niche to mainstream. They were all policy debates we did not have, choosing instead to view these technologies through rose-colored glasses. Today, though, we can choose a different path and realize a different future. It is critical that we intentionally navigate a path to a positive future for societal use of AI—before the consolidation of power renders it too late to do so.

This post was written with Nathan E. Sanders, and originally appeared in Lawfare.

[syndicated profile] boingboing_feed

Posted by Ellsworth Toohey

Photocopy of a Russian passport (Reddit)

These nightmare-fuel images are photocopies of Russian passport photos, and they look like rejected concept art for an analog horror series for entirely mundane technical reasons.

When you photocopy a small passport photo, several things go wrong simultaneously. The copier's scanner crushes the tonal range — subtle gradations of light and shadow become stark black-and-white contrasts, turning eye sockets into voids and cheekbones into skull-like ridges. — Read the rest

The post Russian passport photocopies look like analog horror nightmares appeared first on Boing Boing.

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Dec. 2nd, 2025 12:00 pm
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Posted by Not Always Right

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I was reading stories about airport security. I have a single mastectomy, and did not reconstruct. I also never bothered to get an actual prosethetic as most of the time I go flat. I did get what I consider a beautiful tattoo to cover the scar. Most of the time, I don’t bother about being […]

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Trying To Reignite The Marriage

Dec. 2nd, 2025 12:00 pm
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Posted by Not Always Right

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Guest: "How do you turn on the fireplace?"
Me: "You don't. The gas system has been shut down for the summer."
Guest: "But I booked specifically for that!"
Me: "I don't know what to tell you, sir. It's 30°C outside (86°F)."

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(no subject)

Dec. 2nd, 2025 11:00 am
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Posted by Not Always Right

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(I’m a phone operator for [Food Delicery Company], part of my duties is to call customers that leave negative ratings after deliveries, to check on the reasons behind it, plenty of times the complaint are about riders either eating part of the food or doing stupid crap like throwing bags unsecured into windows. At other […]

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[syndicated profile] slashdot_feed

Posted by BeauHD

schwit1 shares a report from Behind The Black: In its war with the Ukraine, it appears Russia is still managing to obtain black market Starlink mini-terminals for use on its drones, despite an effort since 2024 to block access. [Imagery from eastern Ukraine shows a Russian Molniya-type drone outfitted with a mini-Starlink terminal, reinforcing reports that Russia is improvising satellite-linked UAVs to extend their communication and operational range.] SpaceX has made no comment on this issue. According to the article, Ukraine is "exploring alternative European satellite providers in response, seeking more secure and controllable communications infrastructure for military operations." While switching to another satellite provider might allow Ukraine to shut Starlink down and prevent the Russians from using it within its territory, doing so would likely do more harm to Ukraine's military effort than Russia's. There isn't really any other service comparable at this time. And when Amazon's Leo system comes on line it will face the same black market issues. I doubt it will have any more success than SpaceX in preventing Russia from obtaining its terminals. Overall this issue is probably not a serious one militarily, however. Russia is not likely capable of obtaining enough black market terminals to make any significant difference on the battlefield. This story however highlights a positive aspect of these new constellations. Just as Russia can't be prevented from obtaining black market terminals, neither can the oppressed citizens in totalitarian nations like Russia and China be blocked as well. These constellations as designed act to defeat the censorship and information control of such nations, a very good thing.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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Posted by Briana Viser

There are two kinds of people during the holiday season: there are the scrooges, the ones who just want all the Christmas music and holiday string lights to be over so they can get back to normality without carolers, and then there are the ones who have their Christmas sweater on by Thanksgiving.  If you're in the second category (and honestly, who isn't?), it probably means you also adore Christmas cats. The kind of cats who also wear Christmas sweaters, hang all over the Christmas tree, and celebrate the season in style. 

No pre-Christmas scroll is complete without cats. Any cat lover will know the enthusiasm and pizazz that cats bring to the holiday. They love to play with the ornaments on the tree, unwrap the presents before the fateful morning, and cozy up to you next to the fireplace while you watch your favorite sappy and petulant Christmas rom com. So as you sip something warm and scroll your way toward Christmas, let these sweater-wearing, tree-climbing, present-stealing felines deliver the pre-holiday magic you didn't even realize you needed. Enjoy these pawdorable, wholesome, and celebratory collection of Christmas cats being hissterical. Who said cats can't love Santa Claus or be on the naught or nice list?

[syndicated profile] icanhascheezburger_feed

Posted by Blake Seidel

One of the reasons why we love our cats so much is because they are so weird. On the outside, they look like fluffy little angels, you would never guess that one of them will spend hours sticking her face in our shoes, and falling asleep with her head inside. What a lovable little weirdo! The other is slightly less strange, but he does fall asleep in some truly ridiculous pawsitions. But if you thought our cats were weird, just wait until you read what this pawrent below is going through.

Her cat has a strange obsession with the apple of the earth, that silly spud we all know and love: potatoes. He's entranced by them, and will break into any cabinet containing potatoes. Not knowing what to do with her feisty feline child, she took to the internet and asked the helpful cat community what to do about it. Their answer? It's not as strange as it sounds.

Many pawrents stepped forward and said that their cat, too, had a cat that was once passionate for potatoes. They usually grow out of it, but suggested childproof locks or even going as far as storing the spuds in the microwave or oven. Scroll down to see more about this pawrent's problem and how she solved it!

[syndicated profile] icanhascheezburger_feed

Posted by Mariel Ruvinsky

There is one thing that we, here at ICHC, know for a fact, yet people still don't believe. Cats adopt their humans, not the other way around. We think that every person who actually owns a cat will agree with them. We don't own them, they actually own us. Because it's true. Because for most of us, adopting a cat wasn't a matter of thinking for a long time, deciding which cat we want, going to a shelter or buying a cat. It wasn't a process. For most of us, it just kind of… happened one day. Out of nowhere, a cat walked into our lives and never left. 

This happens to people so often that there's a whole genre of posts like this on the internet. "Not my cat". Quick search, and you will see. Thousands and thousands of people talking about how their cats just found them one day and claimed them. Because it's truly how it happens, and no matter how many posts like that we see, we never get sick of them. So, we've decided to put together some of our all time favorite ones for your enjoyment. 

(no subject)

Dec. 2nd, 2025 10:00 am
[syndicated profile] notalwaysright_feed

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(For context, I haven’t been on this network for years, and have changed my number since then.) Me: Hello? Caller: Hello ma’am my name is [name] I’m calling from [phone network] how are you? Me: (already knowing it’s a scam) I’m all right and yourself? Caller: I’m doing well thank you. I’m calling to tell […]

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