GeorgeNews dishes on Fakebook. Worth reading if you don’t already know how and why it was originally created.
Dark to Light.👇🏻
Dark to Light.👇🏻
Forwarded from GEORGENEWS
ICYMI
NYT, Opinion: Dear DARPA Diary
William Safire
June 5, 2003
Unless you work for the government or the Mafia, it's a great idea to keep a diary.
I don't mean the minute-by-minute log that Florida Senator Bob Graham keeps in tidy, color-coded notebooks describing his clothes, meals and haircuts. That echoes the mythical Greek Narcissus.
Rather, I have in mind the brief notation of the day's highlight, the amusing encounter or useful insight that will someday evoke a memory of yourself when young. Such a journal entry -- perhaps an e-mail to your encoded personal file -- can now be supplemented by scanned-in articles, poems or pictures to create a ''commonplace book.'' You will then have a private memory-jogger and resource for reminiscence at family gatherings.
But beware too much of a good thing.
The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, or Darpa, stimulates outside-the-box thinking that has given us the Internet and the stealth bomber. On occasion, however, Darpa goes off half-cocked. Its Total (now Terrorist) Information Awareness plan -- to combine all commercial credit data and individual bank and academic records with F.B.I. and C.I.A. dossiers, which would have made every American's life an open book -- has been reined in somewhat by Congress after we privacy nuts hollered to high heaven.
Comes now LifeLog, the all-remembering cyberdiary. Do you know those hand-held personal digital assistants that remind you of appointments, store phone numbers and birthdays, tip you off to foibles of friends and vulnerabilities of enemies, and keep desperate global executives in unremitting touch day and night? Forget about 'em -- those wireless whiz-bangs are already yestertech.
Darpa's LifeLog initiative is part of its ''cognitive computing'' research. The goal is to teach your computer to learn by your experience, so that what has been your digital assistant will morph into your lifelong partner in memory. Darpa is sprinkling around $7.3 million in research contracts (a drop in its $2.7 billion budget) to develop PAL, the Perceptive Assistant that Learns.
For those who suspect that I am dreaming this up, get that lumbering old machine in your back pocket to access www.darpa.mil/ipto, and then click on ''research areas'' and then ''LifeLog.'' You are then in a world light-years beyond the Matrix into virtual Graham-land.
''To build a cognitive computing system,'' says proto-PAL, ''a user must store, retrieve and understand data about his or her past experiences. This entails collecting diverse data. . . . The research will determine the types of data to collect and when to collect it.'' This diverse data can include everything you (''the user'') see, smell, taste, touch and hear every day of your life.
But wouldn't the ubiquitous partner be embarrassing at times? Relax, says the program denoscription, presumably written by Dr. Doug Gage, who didn't answer my calls, e-mails or frantic telepathy. ''The goal of the data collection is to 'see what I see' rather than to 'see me.' Users are in complete control of their own data-collection efforts, decide when to turn the sensors on or off and decide who will share the data.''
That's just dandy for the personal privacy of the ''user,'' who would be led to believe he controlled the only copy of his infinitely detailed profile. But what about the ''use-ee'' -- the person that PAL's user is looking at, listening to, sniffing or conspiring with to blow up the world?
The human user may have opt-in control of the wireless wire he is secretly wearing, but all the people who come in contact with PAL and its willing user-spy would be ill-used without their knowledge. Result: Everybody would be snooping on everybody else, taping and sharing that data with the government and the last media conglomerate left standing.
And in the basement of the Pentagon, LifeLog's Dr. Gage and his PAL, the totally aware Admiral Poindexter, would be dumping all this ''voluntary'' data into a national memory bank, which would have undeniable recall of everything you would just as soon forget.
NYT, Opinion: Dear DARPA Diary
William Safire
June 5, 2003
Unless you work for the government or the Mafia, it's a great idea to keep a diary.
I don't mean the minute-by-minute log that Florida Senator Bob Graham keeps in tidy, color-coded notebooks describing his clothes, meals and haircuts. That echoes the mythical Greek Narcissus.
Rather, I have in mind the brief notation of the day's highlight, the amusing encounter or useful insight that will someday evoke a memory of yourself when young. Such a journal entry -- perhaps an e-mail to your encoded personal file -- can now be supplemented by scanned-in articles, poems or pictures to create a ''commonplace book.'' You will then have a private memory-jogger and resource for reminiscence at family gatherings.
But beware too much of a good thing.
The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, or Darpa, stimulates outside-the-box thinking that has given us the Internet and the stealth bomber. On occasion, however, Darpa goes off half-cocked. Its Total (now Terrorist) Information Awareness plan -- to combine all commercial credit data and individual bank and academic records with F.B.I. and C.I.A. dossiers, which would have made every American's life an open book -- has been reined in somewhat by Congress after we privacy nuts hollered to high heaven.
Comes now LifeLog, the all-remembering cyberdiary. Do you know those hand-held personal digital assistants that remind you of appointments, store phone numbers and birthdays, tip you off to foibles of friends and vulnerabilities of enemies, and keep desperate global executives in unremitting touch day and night? Forget about 'em -- those wireless whiz-bangs are already yestertech.
Darpa's LifeLog initiative is part of its ''cognitive computing'' research. The goal is to teach your computer to learn by your experience, so that what has been your digital assistant will morph into your lifelong partner in memory. Darpa is sprinkling around $7.3 million in research contracts (a drop in its $2.7 billion budget) to develop PAL, the Perceptive Assistant that Learns.
For those who suspect that I am dreaming this up, get that lumbering old machine in your back pocket to access www.darpa.mil/ipto, and then click on ''research areas'' and then ''LifeLog.'' You are then in a world light-years beyond the Matrix into virtual Graham-land.
''To build a cognitive computing system,'' says proto-PAL, ''a user must store, retrieve and understand data about his or her past experiences. This entails collecting diverse data. . . . The research will determine the types of data to collect and when to collect it.'' This diverse data can include everything you (''the user'') see, smell, taste, touch and hear every day of your life.
But wouldn't the ubiquitous partner be embarrassing at times? Relax, says the program denoscription, presumably written by Dr. Doug Gage, who didn't answer my calls, e-mails or frantic telepathy. ''The goal of the data collection is to 'see what I see' rather than to 'see me.' Users are in complete control of their own data-collection efforts, decide when to turn the sensors on or off and decide who will share the data.''
That's just dandy for the personal privacy of the ''user,'' who would be led to believe he controlled the only copy of his infinitely detailed profile. But what about the ''use-ee'' -- the person that PAL's user is looking at, listening to, sniffing or conspiring with to blow up the world?
The human user may have opt-in control of the wireless wire he is secretly wearing, but all the people who come in contact with PAL and its willing user-spy would be ill-used without their knowledge. Result: Everybody would be snooping on everybody else, taping and sharing that data with the government and the last media conglomerate left standing.
And in the basement of the Pentagon, LifeLog's Dr. Gage and his PAL, the totally aware Admiral Poindexter, would be dumping all this ''voluntary'' data into a national memory bank, which would have undeniable recall of everything you would just as soon forget.
Forwarded from GEORGENEWS
Followers of Ned Ludd, who in 1799 famously destroyed two nefarious machines knitting hosiery, hope that Congress will ask: is the computer our servant or our partner? Are diaries personal, or does the Pentagon have a right to LifeLog?
And so, as the diarist Samuel Pepys liked to conclude, to bed.
###
https://web.archive.org/web/20210211073504/https://www.nytimes.com/2003/06/05/opinion/dear-darpa-diary.html
And so, as the diarist Samuel Pepys liked to conclude, to bed.
###
https://web.archive.org/web/20210211073504/https://www.nytimes.com/2003/06/05/opinion/dear-darpa-diary.html
web.archive.org
Opinion | Dear Darpa Diary (Published 2003)
William Safire Op-Ed column on Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency LifeLog research initiative to develop personal digital assistants that learn from user's experiences; cites privacy concerns (M)
Forwarded from Police frequency
Media is too big
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Tucker Carlson: News organizations took money from the Chinese Communist Party.
Forwarded from Lisa W
Twitter
Randy Quaid
THERE IS A STORM COMING!
Forwarded from SoulSista
From 1 august 2021 in Denmark. Vaccine passports are abolished, no need to show proof of vaccination, no need to show negative test for unvaccinated. From 1 august we can go in to everything & normal life returns ! All test centers are gone . The reason is service branches need staff & those taking pcr tests, checking passports are now forced to take work in service jobs. So , Sweden, Norway, Iceland, Greenland , Faroe islands & Denmark are back to life before the pandemic. We are required to get tested if we have symtoms or if there is a surge in infections but otherwise back to normal. No forced tests or vaccines to return to work or back to school! Contradicts what is going on in usa & australia !!!
From a friend in Denmark.
From a friend in Denmark.
Forwarded from warmonger
What if:
Trump gets reinstated.
Ghislaine Maxwell documents get declassified, exposing many.
“Crimes against humanity”
Trump utilizes Executive Orders 13848 and 13818 (Exactly [30].) to seize said property, and more.
The largest wealth redistribution ever occurs.
Homelessness, starvation, disease via corporate greed; all become things of the past.
Could you imagine?
Trump gets reinstated.
Ghislaine Maxwell documents get declassified, exposing many.
“Crimes against humanity”
Trump utilizes Executive Orders 13848 and 13818 (Exactly [30].) to seize said property, and more.
The largest wealth redistribution ever occurs.
Homelessness, starvation, disease via corporate greed; all become things of the past.
Could you imagine?
Revelation comes in all kinds of ways. Will people start to see that natural medicine not only works, but that it’s been hidden from us and we’ve been sold a bill of goods?
How bad will it have to get before the people around you start to see the real time effects and benefits of alternative medicine? 👇🏻
How bad will it have to get before the people around you start to see the real time effects and benefits of alternative medicine? 👇🏻
Forwarded from SECURE COMMS
INGERSOLL LOCKWOOD UPDATE
White Pine needle tea is one of the most potent anti-oxidants there is and it’s known to treat cancer, inflammation, stress and depression, pain and respiratory infections. Pine tea also kills parasites.
“…inhibitory effects against components of the coagulation cascade and against the inappropriate replication and modification of RNA and DNA.”
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4241895/
White Pine needle tea is one of the most potent anti-oxidants there is and it’s known to treat cancer, inflammation, stress and depression, pain and respiratory infections. Pine tea also kills parasites.
“…inhibitory effects against components of the coagulation cascade and against the inappropriate replication and modification of RNA and DNA.”
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4241895/
Forwarded from Næġling reforged
Potential vaccine therapeutics:
https://news.1rj.ru/str/Beowulf_Sword_reforged/178
I made a few posts on pine needle tea:
https://news.1rj.ru/str/Beowulf_Sword_reforged/79
https://news.1rj.ru/str/Beowulf_Sword_reforged/178
I made a few posts on pine needle tea:
https://news.1rj.ru/str/Beowulf_Sword_reforged/79
Telegram
Næġling reforged
Updated list of potential therapeutics for the vaccine transmission and vaccine side effects:
Hydroxychloroquine
Ivermectin
Suramin
Shikimic acid
Garlic
Quercetin
Zinc
Artemisia Annua (sweet wormwood)
Possibly also N-acetyl-L-cysteine (NAC)
_____…
Hydroxychloroquine
Ivermectin
Suramin
Shikimic acid
Garlic
Quercetin
Zinc
Artemisia Annua (sweet wormwood)
Possibly also N-acetyl-L-cysteine (NAC)
_____…
Forwarded from Winkiemojie
CNN
Hackers block Italian Covid-19 vaccination booking system in ‘most serious cyberattack ever’
Hackers have attacked and blocked an Italian Covid-19 vaccination booking system, a source from Italy’s cybercrime police told CNN on Monday, marking the worst cyberattack the country’s health service has ever seen.