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Jul. 8th, 2026 07:08 pm
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[personal profile] flemmings
Hot again but drier than forecast and breezy as well, so I was fine getting up to physio and shopping. Because I stayed in yesterday and didn't wear a backpack, my shoulder was perfectly well-behaved. And then I put it on today and ouch. Physio acupunctured and taped shoulder so I trust it will go back to being quiet. Especially since tomorrow is supposed to be rain and thunderstorms off and on all day, so will be back to couch potatodom.

Finally got the form for my quarterly blood draw from my doctor's secretary-- who suddenly seems not to remember who I am: clearly out of sight, out of mind-- and now must get to the library to print it out and then get to the lab. I do hate the whole thing but needs must.

Finished only 100 Demons 27 last week. Had Witch King come through on an ebook library loan and am wading through that. Definitely wish I had it in paper, definitely wish there were not two narratives, find it oddly a downer for no good reason. Continue only because Kai has moments of sounding like Murderbot. And then there's the Ada Palmer that I'd like to concentrate on and can't. Perhaps I should let Witch King go to the 'two people waiting' and, well, concentrate on the nonfiction Renaissance, since nonfiction goes down so much easier in the hot weather we're forecast to have well into August.

どのおもちゃ?Which toy?

Jul. 8th, 2026 11:00 pm
[syndicated profile] maru_feed

Posted by mugumogu

伸びながら歩くみり。 Miri walks while stretching. みり:「さてと、そろそろやる気を出さなくっちゃ。」 Miri:[Well, it’s time to get motivated […]

Biscuit/Cookie.

Jul. 8th, 2026 10:29 pm
[syndicated profile] languagehat_feed

Posted by languagehat

Dave Wilton did a Big List post that starts:

One distinction between the British and North American lexicons is the usage of biscuit and cookie. What North Americans call a cookie, the British call a biscuit. And what Americans call a biscuit has no exact counterpart in British cuisine. American biscuits are savory and resemble a scone in some respects, but a scone is denser and less salty.

Nothing new there (and he goes on to etymology), but Syntinen Laulu left a comment on the companion discussion post that provided many details new to me, and I thought I’d pass it along:

It’s not quite that simple. For one thing, the British term biscuit encompasses savoury biscuits, sometimes called ‘cheese biscuits’ (which means biscuits for cheese, not cheese-flavoured). Many such biscuits are also known as crackers, as in the USA; but not all the types of biscuit eaten with cheese are of a crackery type.

For another thing, for nearly two centuries the English sweet biscuit has been overwhelmingly a shop-bought item. (I say ‘English’ advisedly, because many Scottish housewives continued to bake their own shortbread long after it became available in shops.) In my 1960s urban childhood it was normal to bake cakes both family-size and individual (e.g. scones, fairy cakes) at home, but home-baked biscuits were unusual. Since the 1830s the biscuit-baking industry had been popularising and standardising a wide range of sweet biscuits, all of them of dense dough baked hard so that they maintained a clean-cut symmetrical shape, stayed good for months if not years, and could survive being exported in tins to the far corners of the Empire without being reduced to crumbs. And although some were and are made in simple shapes and left quite plain, many types have elaborate shapes, are decorated, and/or include currants or jam, or are covered with icing (that’s frosting to Leftpondians) or chocolate, or are paired into ‘sandwiches’ with a flavoured filling.

But in the last couple of decades the British food industry has embraced the principle of the American cookie – made of cake-dough, baked long and slow to remain just a bit chewy, and more ‘home-made-looking’ – and marketed them by that name. These have become popular in the UK, and cookies are accepted by British people as a specific subcategory of the genus biscuit. So a British child asked ‘What are your favourite biscuits?’ might well say ‘Choc chip cookies!’ and a British host proffering a plate of only cookie-type biscuits might say either ‘Have a cookie’ or ‘Have a biscuit’. But if it were a plate of British-style biscuits, saying ‘Have a cookie’ would be clearly nonsensical: and if it were a mixture of both British and cookie-type biscuits, the offer ‘have a cookie’ would imply that the Garibaldis, Jammy Dodgers and Petticoat Tails on the plate weren’t meant for you.

NB also that in Scotland the word cookie traditionally meant a small soft slightly sweetened bun, intended to be split and filled with whipped cream (thus occupying much the same tea-time-treat space as the English scone). Whether this usage has survived the introduction of soft-biscuit cookies, I don’t know.

I’ll be interested to see what further knowledge Hatters provide.

wednesday reads and things

Jul. 8th, 2026 04:00 pm
isis: (charlie prince)
[personal profile] isis
Hello from Colorado, which is on fire :( We are not actually near any of the big fires, but we are getting smoke in the mornings from two of them, which means that several times in the past few weeks we've had to get up at 3 am and close the windows and turn on the air purifier. Anyway:

What I've recently read:

The Astrobiology Immersion Program by [archiveofourown.org profile] startingatmidnight, short-novel-length (~50K) Project Hail Mary gen, I think [personal profile] petra recommended it. AU in which on the way back to Erid, Rocky and Ryland Grace bodyswap. I love bodyswap as a trope and it's especially rich when the bodies are alien to each other. I thought it was a little long, and the handwaving a little handwavy, though the ultimate "why" resolution was super interesting, and I really liked that the story continues through to the consequences on Erid.

The Sisters Brothers by Patrick DeWitt, which is a sort of literary dark-humor western, with a really fun narrative voice. Charlie and Eli Sisters are Bad Men With Guns who wield them for a mysterious mogul called the Commodore. Except Eli's got a sensitive side, and he's starting to wonder why he's killing people for money when he could just settle down and run a trading post somewhere. My favorite part, oddly, was the throughline of Eli being completely unable to hold onto any money; if he doesn't give it away out of soft-heartedness as soon as he gets it, it's stolen, and I was delighted every time it happened.

The Rook by Daniel O'Malley, which was a recommendation from [personal profile] merit - I couldn't resist the premise of a woman waking up with amnesia and learning, through letters written from her former self, that she's a high-up bureaucrat in a secret organization of people with supernatural powers who deal with supernatural crimes and threats to the country. Sort of like Rivers of London but with Ghostbusters-level humor. ETA: and now I am reminded of another reason I really liked this: the main character, Myfanwy Thomas, discovers (somewhat to her surprise) that she is frighteningly competent at her job. Also there is a fantastic female character with whom I ship her (and there is fic). Anyway, lots of fun, and I'm now reading the second book in this series, Stiletto.

What I've recently watched:

S4 of Dark Winds, which unfortunately had quite a bit of action in LA - not that I have anything against LA, it's just it's not the familiar Four Corners scenery. As soon as they (metaphorically) hung a German on the wall I was expecting it to fire (metaphorically) Karl May, and I was not disappointed.

We've just watched the first episode of S2 of the live-action One Piece. I love how goofy it is!
[syndicated profile] otw_news_feed

Posted by therealmorticia

The Mass Effect Kink Meme a prompt meme for the Mass Effect games, is being imported to the Archive of Our Own (AO3).

In this post:

Background explanation

The archive is being imported to AO3 to preserve the works and make them available to a wider audience.

The purpose of the Open Doors Committee’s Online Archive Rescue Project is to assist moderators of archives to incorporate the fanworks from those archives into the Archive of Our Own. Open Doors works with moderators to import their archives when the moderators lack the funds, time, or other resources to continue to maintain their archives independently. It is extremely important to Open Doors that we work in collaboration with moderators who want to import their archives and that we fully credit creators, giving them as much control as possible over their fanworks. Open Doors will be working with Liara!Mod to import The Mass Effect Kink Meme into a separate, searchable collection on the Archive of Our Own.

We will begin importing works from The Mass Effect Kink Meme to AO3 no sooner than August 2026. However, the import may not take place for several months or even years, depending on the size and complexity of the archive. Creators are always welcome to import their own works and add them to the collection in the meantime.

What does this mean for creators who have work on The Mass Effect Kink Meme?

Most fanwork fills on The Mass Effect Kink Meme were posted anonymously. All the anonymous fills will be imported to AO3 using the collection’s archivist account. If the creator of a fill chose not to post anonymously, however, and if they have an email address listed on their Dreamwidth or LiveJournal profile, we will send an import notification to that email address.

We’ll do our best to check for an existing copy of any works before importing. If we find a copy already on AO3, we will invite it to the collection instead of importing it. All fanworks archived on behalf of a self-identified creator will include their name in the byline or the summary of the work.

All imported works will be set to be viewable only by logged-in AO3 users. If you claim your works, you can make them publicly-viewable if you choose. After 30 days, all unclaimed imported works will be made visible to all visitors.

Please contact Open Doors with your LiveJournal or Dreamwidth pseud(s) and email address(es), if:

  • You’d like us to import your works, but you need the notification sent to a different email address than you used on the original archive.
  • You already have an AO3 account and have imported your works already yourself.
  • You’d like to import your works yourself (including if you don’t have an AO3 account yet).
  • You would NOT like your works moved to AO3, or would NOT like your works added to the archive collection.
  • You are happy for us to preserve your works on AO3, but would like us to remove your name.
  • You have any other questions we can help you with.

Please include the name of the archive in the subject heading of your email. If you no longer have access to the email account associated with your LiveJournal or Dreamwidth account, please contact Open Doors and we’ll help you out. (If you’ve posted the works elsewhere, or have an easy way to verify that they’re yours, that’s great; if not, we will work with the Mass Effect Kink Meme mods to confirm your claims.)

Please see the Open Doors Website for instructions on:

If you still have questions…

If you have further questions, visit the Open Doors FAQ, or contact the Open Doors committee.

We’d also love it if fans could help us preserve the story of The Mass Effect Kink Meme on Fanlore. If you’re new to wiki editing, no worries! Check out the new visitor portal, or ask the Fanlore Gardeners for tips.

We’re excited to be able to help preserve The Mass Effect Kink Meme!

– The Open Doors team and Liara!Mod

Commenting on this post will be disabled in 14 days. If you have any questions, concerns, or comments regarding this import after that date, please contact Open Doors.

Saber-toothed cat video

Jul. 8th, 2026 10:25 am
neonvincent: For posts about cats and activities involving uniforms. (Krosp)
[personal profile] neonvincent
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll
BERJAYA

Whether they owe money, their souls, or their futures, these characters are in desperate straits...

Five SFF Works About Trying to Escape Massive Debt
[syndicated profile] foodpolitics_feed

Posted by Marion

An article in Food Business News caught my eye: The companies most exposed to consumer UPF concerns. 

The article is based on an analysis by BNP Paribus, which tracks the effects of the new dietary guidelines on the food industry.

It looked at the percent of 12 food companies’ products that are ultra-processed (Nova 4 classification).

COMPANIES % UPF

(Nova 4)

Oatley, Hershey, Flowers 92% or more
Kraft Heinz, Mondelez, Conagra, General Mills, Campbell 77% or more
J.M. Smucker., McCormick., Hormel, Smithfield 50%-60%

I had to look up Flowers Foods; they make popular bread brands.

Food Business News reports sales data:

Nova 1 products

  • Outsell Nova 4 by 7%.
  • Sales up 15% in yogurt, 10% in frozen meals and vegetables, 2.5% in fruit snacks and candy, 2% in nut butters and cereal/granola.

Nova 4 products

  • Sales up approximately 2% in yogurt and less than 1% in cereals/granola
  • Sales down 2.5% in nut butters, 2% in frozen meals and vegetables, and less than 2% in fruit snacks and candy

Comment

This could indicate a trend toward healthier diets, depending on what else people are eating.

It’s hard to know whether these trends are due to the new Dietary Guidelines, which recommended limits on ultra-processed foods, to the effects of GLP-1 drugs, or to inflation.

Whatever the reason, major food companies making lots of ultra-processed foods seem to be vulnerable right now.

I’m guessing they will be reformulating their products as soon as they can.

The post Ultra-processed foods are not increasing sales as much as unprocessed foods appeared first on Food Politics by Marion Nestle

American ancestry map

Jul. 8th, 2026 10:49 am
[syndicated profile] flowing_data_feed

Posted by Nathan Yau

BERJAYA

For dumb reasons, there are people in power who like to put down immigrants. However, for most people in the United States, you don’t have to look back very far to see where we came from. For the New York Times, Albert Sun, Jeff Adelson, and Larry Buchanan mapped American ancestry:

The lines of American ancestry today are not neatly drawn, and groups overlap and spill into one another. Some people don’t answer the census questions about their origins at all. For others, it’s complicated. Descendents of enslaved people, for example, may identify themselves as African American because they are unable to trace their roots to a specific place.

Many areas have truly mixed populations, with people of several different ancestries nearly equally represented.

Based on data from the American Community Survey, the shade of each region is a mix of colors that correspond to the mix of ancestries.

Tags: , ,

(no subject)

Jul. 7th, 2026 10:37 pm
flemmings: (Default)
[personal profile] flemmings
My nursing friend texted me this morning, did I want to meet up for coffee? But I was in one of my 'let's stay in bed all day' moods and had to decline. Eventually I did get up and found myself not quite as achy as yesterday: but once I was out of the bedroom and its air purifier, my sinuses filled and I sneezed mightily and coughed spasmodically and had all the symptoms of a really bad allergy day. Which may have been why I hadn't wanted to get out of bed. Nonetheless I intended to sweep up the carpet of seedlings out front, but my back at once had conniptions. So I heated up the beanbag wrap and took a bunch of muscle relaxants, not thinking how those might interact with the histamines in my system. Yeah, so I was a zombie the rest of the day and didn't go out at all. At least managed to swifter the kitchen floor but that was it. Stayed on the couch and read. Or doomscrolled, whichever.

DW tells me that the Kai story in vol.28 defeated me completely back in 2020, but with the help of my tablet and the Internet I've wrangled a bunch of vocabulary into comprehensibility. You'd think the wordtank might have the words for real estate (宅健) or lock (施錠) or come in handy (重宝する). I mean, they do, but not those phrases. We won't start on the slang meaning of float. It's still hack hack hack through some very ambiguous language and events. Oh, and カルト is a cult, not a cart, which explains how there could be a number of bodies found in a place: but why didn't the wordtank have that?  Sheesh.

Sew It Goes – DORK TOWER 07.07.26

Jul. 7th, 2026 05:00 am
[syndicated profile] dorktower_feed

Posted by John Kovalic

BERJAYAMost DORK TOWER strips are now available as signed, high-quality prints, from just $25!  CLICK HERE to find out more!

Dork Tower is kept going by a delightful Patreon community! Want to help? Then consider joining the DORK TOWER Patreon and ENLIST IN THE ARMY OF DORKNESS TODAY! (We have COOKIES!) (And SWAG!) (And GRATITUDE!)

 

What Australianists Agree On.

Jul. 7th, 2026 07:34 pm
[syndicated profile] languagehat_feed

Posted by languagehat

An interesting Facebook post from Claire Bowern:

I promise I will stop posting about the Dixon book shortly and go back to #chookbook updates, fieldwork book edits and complaints about email, but I was thinking this morning about what Australianists do and don’t seem to agree on, particularly the linguists. (“we disagree” here means “different people think different things, not “I think one thing and other people think something else”, just in case that’s not clear).

I’m pretty sure almost all of us agree that Pama-Nyungan is a language family, in the same way that Austronesian or Indo-European are language families. We don’t all agree on the composition of the family or its internal structure. We have radically different estimates of how old the family is (4-15kya!). We pretty much all agree that language change works the same way in Australia that it does elsewhere, but I’m pretty sure we don’t agree on how language change works and what processes are most important. Pretty much all of us are puzzled by the relative lack of sound change in Australia, but we don’t agree on what that implies and how to deal with it. We’ve all done fieldwork and understand the complexities of multilingual and multilectal communities and what that means for change, but we disagree about how that might scale up to the Holocene. We agree that all sorts of different data are important for reconstructing history, but we use different material in practice and place different weights on it.

(After the Routledge 2nd edition I said I would never edit another book ever ever again, but now I’m wondering if something that explores these questions from all different angles by people who disagree but can actually talk to each other might be worth doing.)

I’m not sure what “the Dixon book” is, but here’s her previous post about it:

One of the complaints about me in the new Dixon book is about challenging the number of “250 languages” (which appears to have struck a nerve because he reiterates this figure many times). All previous 20th century classifications have about 250 languages. That’s right. But they don’t have the same 250! They each miss different languages. So when you total them up, you get something like 380. Then you take into account more recent work in the Top End and another group of languages turn up. (And include palawa languages.) Then there’s a few known from name and report of intelligibility only, which I included but many don’t. Then on top of that you have the points where people differ about whether two varieties are “same” or “different”, which gives somewhere between about 420 and 480 languages. Summary: 250 is wrong. Definitely higher. How much higher depends on all the things linguists usually argue about. (All this is in Chapter 7 of OGAL but if you just kvetch at the classification at the front and admire the 80-odd footnotes about sources then maybe you might miss it.)

Big Apple Corps playing Golden

Jul. 7th, 2026 03:40 pm
neonvincent: For posts about cats and activities involving uniforms. (Krosp)
[personal profile] neonvincent

Bundle of Holding: Vast Grimm

Jul. 7th, 2026 03:15 pm
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll
BERJAYA

The current Skeleton Crew ruleboo plus a Legion of adventures.

Bundle of Holding: Vast Grimm

Hans Aarsleff (1925–2026)

Jul. 7th, 2026 05:07 pm
[syndicated profile] hiphilangsci_feed

Posted by The Editor

Portrait of Hans Aarsleff

Craig Christy

During my doctoral studies at Princeton (1977-1980), Hans (English Department) was one of my mentors, along with William G. Moulton (German Department) within the interdepartmental Program in Linguistics. His expansive interest in the history of ideas encouraged me to ask difficult questions and explore aspects of linguistic history that seemed to have escaped widespread attention. I can’t say I recall the exact ‘aha’ moment, but in the end it was the almost unspoken of concept of uniformitarianism that became the focus of my dissertation. Hans was always exceptionally generous with his time, and patience, even when otherwise busy packing for his annual getaway to Cape Cod. We stayed in touch over the past 50 years or so, and saw each other at ICHoLS venues (including the one he hosted at Princeton in 1984), and at his retirement party in 1997. Otherwise, we kept in touch by phone and by mail: as Hans later regretted, he never made the switch from typewriter to computer.

In 2016 Hans published “An Essay on the Context and Formation of Wilhelm von Humboldt’s Linguistic Thought” online, with assistance from his colleague at Princeton’s Firestone Library, John L. Logan (https://doi.org/10.1080/01916599.2016.1152726). From its publication to his death, Hans remained preoccupied with knowing how this essay had been received by the scholarly community. Though no official review was ever forthcoming, I kept him up to date on several mentions that I detected through online searches. Those familiar with Hans’s work will know he was heavily invested in ‘honest’ narratives involving both acknowledged and unacknowledged intellectual debts.  The far-ranging influence of Condillac was a recurrent theme in Hans’s writings. I still remember his joy upon finding a beautiful antiquarian edition of Condillac in Paris during the ICHoLS conference hosted at Fontenay-St. Cloud in 1999. I believe the last ICHoLS he attended was in 2002 (São Paulo/Campinas, Brazil).

After a stroke in 2021 Hans had in-home assistance, and remained sound of mind right up to the end. He had been doing very well in physical therapy following a recent bout of pneumonia, which, coupled with COPD, had been a bit of a challenge. On July 1 he passed away early in the morning, and we all incurred the loss of a towering member of our linguistic historiography community.

Portrait of Hans Aarsleff as a young man

Automated Moderation Is Here to Stay

Jul. 7th, 2026 04:21 pm
[syndicated profile] eff_feed

Posted by Jillian C. York, Corynne McSherry

This blog post is part 1 of a 2-part series. The second part will set out recommendations for companies and policymakers.

Six years ago—one month into a global pandemic—we argued that the automated moderation processes many platforms were rapidly adopting should be highly transparent, easily appealable, and temporary. We warned that "protocols adopted in times of crisis often persist when the crisis is over."

That warning proved prescient. The use of automation and artificial intelligence (AI) to identify, flag, and moderate content has become the new norm—a permanent feature of how platforms govern speech online. In this two part series, we’re take stock of this new norm, and considering what platforms can and should do to ensure that AI serves online expression rather than stifling it.

A brief history of automated content moderation

From spam filtering and keyword blacklists to the hash-matching technologies used to identify child sexual abuse material and terrorist content, automated technologies have been used in commercial content moderation for many years. While these tools have long posed risks to freedom of expression, their use was, for quite some time, relatively limited in scope.

Then, in 2017, a blog post published by Facebook (now Meta) described the company's "fairly recent" use of artificial intelligence to identify, classify, and remove violent extremist content. At the same time, Facebook emphasized caution, noting that it did not want to suggest there was "any easy technical fix."

Just one year later, Mark Zuckerberg appeared before the U.S. Senate's Commerce and Judiciary Committees and disclosed that "99 percent of the ISIS and Al Qaida content" removed by Facebook was flagged by AI "before any human sees it." He also stated that Facebook was "developing A.I. tools that can identify certain classes of bad activity proactively and flag it for our team at Facebook." At the time, we raised concerns about the ethical implications of using AI in this manner.

Then came 2020. The sudden reduction of the human moderation workforce, combined with a dramatic increase in social media use—and with it, a surge in misinformation—created the perfect conditions for platforms to expand their reliance on AI-driven moderation. It quickly became apparent that companies'—and particularly Meta's—approach to moderation during the pandemic represented a backslide in transparency, freedom of expression, and access to remedy. The increased reliance on automation was a significant factor.

The costs and benefits of AI content moderation

We knew in 2020 that the use of AI to moderate content would present problems for online freedom of expression. Today, those problems are well-documented. A 2025 joint declaration by special rapporteurs and representatives of the United Nations (UN), Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE), Organization of American States (OAS), and African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights (ACHPR) states:

“The use of AI content moderation can lead to over-removal, discrimination and censorship. Reliance on inherently biased datasets and opaque training processes can amplify pre-existing inequalities, risking homogenisation of expression, and erasure of linguistic and cultural diversity.”

EFF and many of our allies have documented these impacts. For example, our 2019 paper co-authored with Witness and Syrian Archive examined the impact of extremist content regulations—and their implementation through automation and AI—on human rights documentation. A 2020 report from Human Rights Watch highlighted the consequences of these removals, noting: "There is no way of knowing how much potential evidence of serious crimes is disappearing without anyone's knowledge."

The Center for Democracy and Technology's recent series on content moderation in the Global South demonstrates persistent inequities in content moderation of four “low-resource” languages—so-called because the relative scarcity of training data makes it more difficult to develop equitable and accurate AI models for them. 

Content moderation often disproportionately impacts vulnerable and historically marginalized groups, and AI content moderation is no different. GLAAD recognizes the role AI plays in scaling content moderation but notes that “when moderation systems lack nuance, transparency, and human oversight, they can fail to curb harassment and wrongly suppress legitimate LGBTQ content.”

These failures are not incidental. They are a predictable consequence of deploying automated systems to make complex judgments about language, culture, context, and identity at scale.

All of that said, automated content moderation can offer important benefits. The primary one: helping to spare human content moderators who must review content that varies from whimsical to horrific, often for little pay and with devastating mental health consequences. Outsourcing this work to the bots can offer some relief—though it’s worth noting that the humans hired to train the AI models face a similar dynamic.

In addition, AI models could potentially be trained over time to be more precise, accurate, and dynamic, helping to mitigate over-censorship and disinformation. The jury is still out on whether this potential will be realized; what we do know is that new approaches to the persistent problem of over and under-enforcement are desperately needed.

Automated moderation is no longer an experiment

Getting the balance between real costs and potential benefits depends a lot on the details: how automated systems are designed, trained, implemented, and audited.  

Despite advances in the sophistication and scale of automated moderation systems, many of the transparency, accountability, and due process safeguards advocated by civil society, researchers, and human rights experts have yet to be fully realized. At the same time, automated systems have become increasingly central to how platforms enforce their rules and govern online speech.

The question today is not whether companies will use AI to moderate content, but under what conditions they should do so. And now as ever, the answer is not that the public should just trust that platforms’ deployment of increasingly powerful systems will serve, rather than inhibit online expression. In fact, as automated systems become more sophisticated and more deeply embedded in platform governance, the need for transparency and accountability becomes more urgent. 

Help EFF Cut the AI Hype

Jul. 7th, 2026 04:17 pm
[syndicated profile] eff_feed

Posted by Aaron Jue

In the global race to build and dominate the AI industry, it can sure seem like the interests of ordinary people sit last on the agenda. It's just the opposite for EFF. While companies furiously jam AI tools into their veins and your eyeballs, EFF’s technologists, activists, and attorneys have been meticulously cutting through the hype to ensure AI can serve your privacy and free expression. Technology has leaned into a new era, and this summer you can help EFF fight for the people.

JOIN EFF

Over the next two weeks, we’re encouraging you to support the cause as an EFF member for as little as $10 each month. You can get great member swag every year like our privacy puffy stickers, Claw Back t-shirt, and Privacy Badger Crewneck.

A person wears an EFF Claw Back member t-shirt on the left. A person on the right wears a black sweatshirt with the Privacy Badger mascot on the chest.

Fight mass surveillance! Pictured: Claw Back member t-shirt and Privacy Badger Crewneck.

AI tools—beyond their marketing fluff—demonstrate both incredible potential and real danger. With the support of members around the world, EFF detangles the possibilities from the anxieties and threats with the care and nuance it deserves. In recent months, EFF:

The scope of AI, both the good and the bad, multiplies every day. If we want the AI-powered benefits of efficiency, scientific discovery, and greater accessibility to knowledge, then we also need strong protections against surveillance, harms to creativity and innovation online, perpetuating systemic bias, and privacy violations now.

With AI taking over the public consciousness, you can be assured that EFF will never stop advocating for you. Together, we can ensure that technology supports freedom, justice, and innovation for all people.

Join EFF

____________________

EFF is a member-supported U.S. 501(c)(3) organization. We've received top ratings from the nonprofit watchdog Charity Navigator since 2013! Your donation is tax-deductible as allowed by law.

[syndicated profile] infoisbeautiful_feed

Posted by David McCandless

We’re looking for a sharp editorial mind to help lead Beautiful News — our evidence-based optimism project — while supporting selected Information is Beautiful projects.

This is a rare opportunity to join our fully remote creative team and work directly with author and founder David McCandless on ambitious, unusual and socially impactful projects seen by millions around the world.

You’ll help research, shape, publish and amplify stories about progress, solutions and positive change across articles, newsletters, social media, short-form video and more.

We’re looking for someone who is curious, proactive and comfortable moving between research, writing, ideas and production. You might be a writer who researches, a researcher who writes, or a storyteller who loves data, visuals and making complex things understandable.

You’ll probably have experience in journalism, publishing, communications, policy, academia or a similarly editorial environment — and ideally already know and love what we do.

The role is:

  • Freelance
  • Part-time (approximately 3 days per week initially)
  • Fully remote
  • Flexible and asynchronous
  • Low-meeting, high-trust and highly autonomous

If the idea of helping create the next generation of visual journalism and positive news sounds exciting, we’d love to hear from you.

Applications close Monday 20th July.

👉 Find out more and apply here →

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