Bizarro Devs - Issue 161
Issue 161🤖👮 Atlanta prison introduces 6-foot tall AI-powered robot guards. Meta's blood money: how Facebook turns tragedy into profit. OpenAI safety expert quits: "We're not ready for what's coming."Happy November! Welcome to the latest issue of Bizarro Devs. As usual, we’ve got an interesting lineup of stories for you this month - including a truly bizarre tale involving dairy products. The Numbers Game section features what is probably the largest single number that has ever been featured in that section, and of course we’ve got some helpful tools as well. Are you ready? Let’s get started!
📰 From the Newsroom🤖👮 Atlanta Prison Introduces 6-Foot Tall AI-Powered Robot GuardsRemember the 2013 Matt Damon film Elysium featuring robot police? Fast forward to 2024 and robot police are no longer a sci-fi film plot device but a feature of real-life. Prison life that is. The Cobb County Sheriff’s Office in Atlanta, Georgia is deploying DEKA Sentry Robots to conduct perimeter patrols and security rounds in their facility.
The initiative comes at no initial cost to the department, with Sheriff Craig Owens highlighting an unexpected perk: unlike human officers, the robots never call in sick or request vacation time. As correctional facilities across the U.S. watch this pioneering program, it’ll be interesting to see if others follow suit. 🔪💸 Meta's Blood Money: How Facebook Turns Tragedy Into ProfitIn an eye-opening investigation by CalMatters and The Markup, researchers have uncovered how Meta, Facebook's parent company, monetizes political violence and tragic events through its advertising platform. The company publicly denounces violence, but the CalMatters / Markup report reveals a pattern of significant revenue generation from ads related to violent political events.
While Meta argues that advertisers naturally respond to current events, the company's ability to generate substantial revenue from political violence raises concerns about the incentive structures built into our digital ecosystem. Should tech platforms be allowed to profit from human suffering, or do we need stronger regulations to prevent the commodification of tragedy? What do you think?
😱💣 OpenAI Safety Expert Quits: "We're Not Ready for What's Coming"In a candid departure announcement, Miles Brundage, OpenAI's Senior Advisor for AGI Readiness, has revealed concerning insights about the state of artificial general intelligence (AGI) development. After six years in various leadership roles at one of AI's most prominent companies, Brundage is stepping away from his "dream job" - a decision that partially stems from his growing concerns about the industry's preparedness for increasingly powerful AI systems.
If you’re interested in joining Brundage’s future non-profit, he’s looking for individuals with backgrounds in nonprofit management, economics, international relations, public policy, as well as AI researchers and engineers. Even those with strong research and writing skills who are interested in research assistant positions are encouraged to fill out his form. ⛓️ Ten Must See Links of the MonthSponsored by Pinata: Add file uploads and retrieval in minutes so you can focus on your app. The easiest File API on the internet.
🎤 It’s How They Said It"There is no substantive evidence that Einstein wrote or spoke this statement." – Garson O’Toole (real name: Gregory Sullivan), who runs Quote Investigator - a website dedicated to tracing the earliest verifiable usage of attributable quotes. Einstein happens to be one of the most misquoted people on the internet. 🧮 The Numbers Game
⚒️ Tools and ResourcesVizzu: This free, open-source Javascript/C++ library uses a generic dataviz engine that generates many types of charts and seamlessly animates between them. You can use it to create static charts too, but its ability to build animated data stories and interactive explorers is the real standout feature. It lets you showcase your data from multiple perspectives and your viewers can easily follow along because of the animations. https://lib.vizzuhq.com/latest/ Faker: This helpful development tool is freely available to use for commercial and non-commercial purposes under the MIT license. It lets you generate massive amounts of fake (but realistic) data for testing and development purposes. You can generate names, genders, bios, job titles, addresses, street names, countries, account details, transactions, prices, product names, descriptions, and more. 🖼️ What Am I Looking At?If you’re thinking to yourself…that’s a piece of cheese… …then you’d be right. It is, in fact, a piece of cheese. But it’s not just any cheese. It’s one of three highly sought after cheddar cheeses produced in England. Okay, so it’s some cheddar cheese. What’s the big deal? The big deal is that a London cheese specialist called Neal’s Yard Dairy just had £300,000 worth of these three cheeses stolen in an apparent “cheese heist.” Yes, a cheese heist. Never in my wildest imagination would I have ever thought that stealing cheese was a thing. Someone needs to make a movie about this ASAP. Forget precious jewels, priceless works of art, or cold hard cash. We need an Ocean’s 11 style movie about stealing cheese. Imagine Clooney and Pitt with their dry humor dialogue going back and forth about cheese? I would absolutely watch that. All jokes aside, I hope the stolen cheese is recovered. Thus far, police have managed to arrest and question one man. He was released on bail and the investigation continues. 💬 What’s the Word?"Googol" (English) is the word given to the second highest possible number that we have a word for. It is a 1 followed by 100 zeros. The term was coined by nine-year-old Milton Sirotta and inspired the founders of Google, who were looking for a name that would reflect their mission to organize an immense amount of information on the web. A misspelling of "googol" eventually led to the name "Google," and it stuck as the official company name. 📊 Results of Last Month’s PollsIn one of last month’s featured stories, we looked at research out of California that showed that humans have two significant aging milestones - around the mid-40s and 60. It was surprising in the sense that it questioned our assumption about aging, namely that it’s more gradual. I agree with the majority vote here. I was also surprised, but I do think that follow-up studies need to be done to really give me more confidence in the conclusions. 🧑🏻💻👨🏽💻👩🏼💻 Tell a Friend or ColleagueIf you’d like to help us grow, just use the refer a friend button below and if any of your referrals subscribe to Bizarro Devs, then we’ll not only be forever grateful, but we’ll also recognize your efforts in the following way:
* The story or article needs to be relevant to the subject material we typically cover and is subject to editorial approval. In other words, it should be something that we would include in the newsletter naturally. Thanks for reading! If this is the first time you're here at Bizarro Devs and you enjoyed the content, then sign up here to join the fun for the remainder of 2024 and beyond. Until we see each other again, Invite your friends and earn rewardsIf you enjoy Bizarro Devs, share it with your friends and earn rewards when they subscribe. |
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Issue 160
Tuesday, October 1, 2024
🧬👵🏼 Research suggests humans age dramatically when we hit 44 and 60. Scientists create see-through mice using food dye. Vertical farm revolution: year-round berries in a fraction of the space. ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏
Issue 159
Tuesday, September 3, 2024
👨💻🔌 How I used ChatGPT to build my first WordPress plugin. 3 Harvard dropouts have designed a game-changing AI chip. IEEE Spectrum releases annual list of the top programming languages. ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏
Issue 158
Tuesday, August 6, 2024
🤖🃏 AI can strategically lie to humans: are we in trouble? Scientists use nanoparticles to remote control mice brains. Meet the new digital bouncers in North American and Australian bars. ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏
Issue 157
Tuesday, July 2, 2024
🧠🤖 The most dystopian thing you'll read this month (probably). How a smart, quiet Boston teenager stole millions in Crypto. Beyond ATS: AI interviewer ushers in new era of tech hiring. ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏
Issue 156
Tuesday, June 4, 2024
🎥🇨🇳 YouTuber finds AI replica of herself all over Chinese social media. New AI report reveals surprising findings. Is the world ready for a “SmellGPT?” ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏
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Tuesday, December 3, 2024
💰🪖 Silicon Valley's new gold rush: AI giants chase Pentagon dollars. US landlords caught using AI to fix rental prices. How China is stealing the world's semiconductor technology. ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏ ͏
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