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Education

Gaggle Knows Everything About Teens And Kids In School (buzzfeednews.com) 57

Gaggle monitors the work and communications of almost 5 million students in the U.S., and schools are paying big money for its services. Hundreds of company documents unveil a sprawling surveillance industrial complex that targets kids who can't opt out. Caroline Haskins writes via BuzzFeed News: Using a combination of in-house artificial intelligence and human content moderators paid about $10 an hour, Gaggle polices schools for suspicious or harmful content and images, which it says can help prevent gun violence and student suicides. It plugs into two of the biggest software suites around, Google's G Suite and Microsoft 365, and tracks everything, including notifications that may float in from Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram accounts linked to a school email address. Gaggle touts itself as a tantalizingly simple solution to a diverse set of horrors. It claims to have saved hundreds of lives from suicide during the 2018-19 school year. The company, which is based in Bloomington, Illinois, also markets itself as a tool that can detect threats of violence.

But hundreds of pages of newly revealed Gaggle documentation and content moderation policies, as well as invoices and student incident reports from 17 school districts around the country obtained via public records requests, show that Gaggle is subjecting young lives to relentless inspection, and charging the schools that use it upward of $60,000. And it's not at all clear whether Gaggle is as effective in saving lives as it claims, or that its brand of relentless surveillance is without long-term consequences for the students it promises to protect. [...] [S]tudent surveillance services like Gaggle raise questions about how much monitoring is too much, and what rights minors have to control the ways that they're watched by adults.
"My sense about this particular suite of products and services is that it's a solution in search of a problem," said Sarah Roberts, a UCLA professor and a scholar in digital content moderation, "which is to say that the only way that the logic of it works is if we first accept that our children ought to be captured within a digital system, basically, from the time they're sentient until further notice."

While Gaggle claims that its tool promotes a sense of "digital citizenship," BuzzFeed News says the newly revealed documents show that students often don't understand that their work and communications are being surveilled until they violate the rules.

Comment Re: I have asthma (Score 0) 221

and it's patently patronising and inhuman what they are trying to sell people on with this, I mean, sure, attack the ordinary people's stupid lives but no, let's talk about how dirty bastards who have trouble because of urban and indoor air quality to just breathe, are gumming up the upper atmosphere with chemicals that doctors swear are safe. My asthma is bronchial and immune function related and my main causes of my problem are wheat and stress, usually a virus helps kick it off properly. It's not nearly as scary as full blown asthma, but times walking 10km a day homeless in amsterdam while wheezing and feeling like your whole body is going to catch fire and explode is not something you play politics with.

Comment Re:I have asthma (Score 0) 221

I was using butane-containing salbutamol during my bouts of chronic (mainly gluten protein damage to my intestines being the cause) asthma. It's terrible stuff, 4 hours and after a week using it you get asthma *from* it. 4 months ago I finally got a salmeterol inhaler. I only wanted the damn salmeterol, and idc about breathing a whiff of butane but instead it's got fluoropropane or something and some other supposedly asthma-fighting fluoro something or other. Flutikazon propionate. Both fluoro-anything and propionic acid are on my shitlist because fluoro-compounds have a natural affinity especially with the thyroid and I already know my endocrine system is not happy with hard proteins that abrade my intestines and lead to allergic reactions, in this case, triggering my asthma. The salmeterol is great. But for my case, the biggest improvement comes from eliminating industrial wheat from my diet. In my opinion, the medical profession is far too allergic to iodine and far too fond of rat poison glass eating fluoro compounds. I know that they are 'safe' in short term exposure because few things in the body can rip a fluorine atom from fluorocarbons, but I also know enough chemistry to know that despite being over 98% (B.P) that some remnant trace chemicals in all kinds of industrial chemical products have relatively unknown effects especially when you consider how many of them end up combining inside our bodies. Anyway, these watermelon environmentalists who think this matters at all, I want to see them all with histamine inhalers and come back to me again about how important tiny amounts of questionably environmentally affecting (all 'greenhouse gases' except water are heavier than air!!!!) anything. First I'd like to see what the effect of fire retardants, monomer off-gasing from pvc and other plastics made out of toxic waste is having on us and the immediate area around us than this hogwash about heavier than air gases constituting a tiny fraction of natural emissions has any effect whatsoever. And anyone who thinks the bankrollers of these so-called scientists are interested in our longevity and quality of life are very very sadly naive about human nature.

Comment Re:Problem solved! (Score 0) 221

Please explain to me again how a heavier than air gas gets significantly mixed up in the upper atmosphere again? Same goes for most chloro-fluorocarbons as well. There is a volcanic plains-land in Africa where (radon containing) carbon dioxide leaks out of the ground and pools up in holes that end up full of animal skeletons once they pass out from it. Yes, carbon dioxide is also heavier than air. This climate hooey is transparently obviously nonsense from anyone who did redox chemistry in middle school. But PhD's say it so it must be true. Water is the greenhouse gas, and combined with the earth's magnetic field this is why we can live here. These other things matter less than how much photons and electrons the sun is spewing at us.
Medicine

Asthma Carbon Footprint 'As Big As Eating Meat' (bbc.com) 221

Cambridge University researchers say some inhalers are bad for the environment because they release greenhouse gases linked to global warming. They recommend patients with asthma talk to their doctors to see if there's a "greener" medication they could switch to to help cut their carbon footprint and save the environment. The BBC reports: There are more than five million people with asthma in the UK. The research looked at the environmental impact of different inhaler medications prescribed to patients on the NHS in England. In 2017, about 50 million inhalers were prescribed. Seven out of every 10 of them were metered-dose inhalers - the type that contain greenhouse gases. The gas -- hydrofluoroalkane -- is used as a propellant to squirt the medicine out of the inhaler.

Metered-dose inhalers account for nearly 4% of NHS greenhouse gas emissions, according to experts. The researchers estimate replacing even one in every 10 of these inhalers with a more environmentally friendly type (dry powder inhalers) would reduce carbon dioxide equivalent emissions by 58 kilotons. That's similar to the carbon footprint of 180,000 return car journeys from London to Edinburgh, they say. And at the individual level, each metered-dose inhaler replaced by a dry powder inhaler could save the equivalent of between 150kg and 400kg (63 stone) of carbon dioxide a year - similar to the carbon footprint reduction of cutting meat from your diet.

Comment Why do ice cubes float on water? (Score 0) 214

Sea level can only rise if the ice that melts was not already in the sea. If more of the ice was floating than not in the water, in fact the sea level will drop, though such a thing would only happen if vulcanism was causing the temperature rise, not greenhouse. Until I see verifiable numbers on the ratio of ice in versus out of the oceans, I'm so totally gonna say that this 'science' is aiding political goals. Specifically, chicken little malthusian only the party has the right to live type.

Comment async isn't blocking (Score 0) 174

As a newly minted Go programmer, I have direct experience of sub-microsecond level concurrent process scheduling and writing these things. Prior to this I already had an intuitive understanding relating to the amount of dead time (blocking) caused by needing to frequently synchronise. In business, that is called a 'meeting'. We have had BBSs since the 80s and now anyone can spin up an async collab communication and data sharing system with just a few web forms and a payment, even you can DIY and take open source stuff and quickly deploy it for a basic collaborative communication system. If the managers of today still don't get why it's better I don't have to pick up the phone and listen to their bitching, especially such as when I am having lunch with my girlfriend, or other such things, they are on their way to the poorhouse, because those who do will keep and attract better quality workers.

Comment Re:Yay (Score 0) 57

You are being generous. C and C++ have had them with escaped line breaks nearly forever, and c++ automatically concatenates multiple single line strings wrapped in "" as well. But pretty much if it's a web language it has to have it. Go, PHP, Ruby...
Businesses

Comcast Argues 'We've Never Sold Customers' Data' (mediapost.com) 56

An anonymous reader quotes MediaPost: Faced with a new controversy related to online privacy, Comcast said this week that it doesn't draw on information about the sites broadband users visit for advertising or targeting. The company said Thursday that it deletes information every 24 hours about the domain names people navigate to online. "Millions of Comcast customers look up billions of addresses online every day," Chief Privacy Officer Christin McMeley wrote on the company's blog. "We've never used that data for any sort of marketing or advertising -- and we have never sold it to anyone."

The company's statement came one day after the publication Motherboard reported on Comcast's efforts to rally opposition on Capitol Hill to Google's plan to encrypt domain names... "While cloaked as enhancing user privacy, Google's DNS encryption will in fact vastly expand Google's control over and use of customer data, and will result in the complete commercialization of DNS data for Google's own ends," [Comcast's] presentation states. Google has said its plans were mischaracterized by broadband organizations, and that it has no intention of centralizing the web, or changing people's existing DNS providers to Google by default. "Any claim that we are trying to become the centralized encrypted DNS provider is inaccurate," a company spokesperson said last month...

One day after Motherboard posted the material reportedly prepared by Comcast, the cable provider touted its privacy policies in a blog post. "Where you go on the Internet is your business, not ours," McMeley wrote. "As your Internet Service Provider, we do not track the websites you visit or apps you use through your broadband connection. Because we don't track that information, we don't use it to build a profile about you and we have never sold that information to anyone."

Several years ago, Comcast opposed Federal Communications Commission privacy regulations that would have required broadband providers to obtain consumers' opt-in consent before drawing on their web-browsing activity for advertising. The FCC passed those rules in 2016, but the regulations were revoked by Congress the following year.

Comment Re:Frankly, it isn't as shitty as its reputation. (Score 0) 170

It would have been better if BASIC was the scripting language. Or Pascal, which isn't *that* far different. But instead, it looks like C, implicit casts like C, and the thing that annoys me the most, and why Java would have been better, is it's parsed and processed when you run it, not compiled. This webassembly thing is a joke too. Where is my MOVQ and BEQ?

Comment and in other news (Score 1) 206

people who get paid indirectly out of taxes now are officially outnumbering those whose income depends on making customers happy, not in squeezing the highest tax contributors, middle class small businesses. and in other other news, scientists discover that energy is lost in transmission wires, battery chargers, lithium batteries, western china is starting to look like khazakstan (and so are the three eyed fish and 6 legged babies) from rare earth mineral mines and refineries, choking on the ash from dirty coal generators and spewing plastic bags into the pacific and indian ocean.
Oracle

Should JavaScript Be Renamed? (kieranpotts.com) 170

Software engineer Kieran Potts asks: does JavaScript need to be renamed? There's no doubt there are problems with JavaScript's branding...

- Correctly, "JavaScript" refers to a subset of ECMAScript specified by Mozilla, but the word is used interchangeably to refer to multiple different ECMAScript supersets, depending on context.

- JavaScript is a trademark of Oracle Corporation, which doesn't fit comfortably with the language's position as a central component of the web platform, which is meant to be built entirely from open technologies and standards.

- There isn't even an official logo for JavaScript, let alone a cute mascot like Go's gopher or PHP's elephant.

- And famously, JavaScript is unrelated to Java. This has confused the hell out of non-technical managers and recruiters for decades.

The article also suggests "a standard convention" to identify the runtime's host system (for example, "WebJS" or "ServerJS").

But in response to the question of rebranding JavaScript, "the most common, knee jerk reaction was a quick guffaw and an exclaimed 'no!'" notes tech columnist Mike Melanson, "while others offered that the simple contraction to JS would suffice."

Comment Death to Dinosaurs (Score 1) 206

Seriously. Microsoft has never been innovative, nor has it handed much out to any kind of innovative research. Microsoft is first and foremost a pig feeding at the public trough. Which black hole of taxpayer money has nearly 100% Windows machines throughout even a lot of their data centres? the pentagon and DoD... Paying lawyers to write laws and donating to pliable congressmen is the most profitable business strategy in the world and if you know the name it's probably playing that game.

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