The Structure of Scientific Revolutions by Thomas Kuhn really inspired me as a philosophy undergrad. I also really enjoy anything by Bruno Latour.
The Structure of Scientific Revolutions by Thomas Kuhn really inspired me as a philosophy undergrad. I also really enjoy anything by Bruno Latour.
I'd love to pick your brain about this (coming from a usable S&P perspective with very surface-level understanding of DP), what about the implementation makes it challenging?
A white woman with long brown hair and a black turtleneck stands at a podium, talking to the audience. Included in the picture is a projector displaying a slide from her talk.
I'm so happy to have given a talk about some upcoming accessible security research at CACTUS today. π΅πΈ
A personal favorite of mine is dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/... by Robin Angelini, @katta.bsky.social, and @mdemeulder.bsky.social β₯οΈ
I donβt know if anyone else notices or cares, but when I see a presentation in which the speaker uses obviously generated-AI images to illustrate their slides, it makes me immediately less confident in whatever other content theyβre presenting.
Sooo many great books here!
I read Rua's new book in one go because I literally couldn't put it down. I can't recommend this enough.
Borsook's work was a central theme in my undergrad philosophy capstone. So glad to see her work being championed π
Happy Trans Day of Visibility to all you wonderful lovely people! π³οΈββ§οΈ
Thank you for sharing as much of yourselves as you are comfortable sharing; all our lives are richer for it β€οΈ
Human capital---encompassing cognitive skills and personality traits---is critical for labor market success, yet the personality component remains difficult to measure at scale. Leveraging advances in artificial intelligence and comprehensive LinkedIn microdata, we extract the Big 5 personality traits from facial images of 96,000 MBA graduates, and demonstrate that this novel ``Photo Big 5'' predicts school rank, compensation, job seniority, industry choice, job transitions, and career advancement. Using administrative records from top-tier MBA programs, we find that the Photo Big 5 exhibits only modest correlations with cognitive measures like GPA and standardized test scores, yet offers comparable incremental predictive power for labor outcomes. Unlike traditional survey-based personality measures, the Photo Big 5 is readily accessible and potentially less susceptible to manipulation, making it suitable for wide adoption in academic research and hiring processes. However, its use in labor market screening raises ethical concerns regarding statistical discrimination and individual autonomy.
they are openly advocating for the use of physiognomy in recruitment
make it stop
Clay sculptures of Finn and Jake from Adventure Time.
My first clay creations, of course it has to be Finn and Jake.
the worst possible thing you can do is hand your unlocked phone to a cop (or even your locked phone tbh)
βWhile Apple claimed that Siri only activated its listening mode after detecting its wake wordββHey SiriββThe Guardian reported that the assistant mistakenly turned itself on and began recording conversations in response to similar words and even the sound of zippers.β
I'm working on a starter pack... its focus is Information Warfare, Covert Ops and Propaganda... trying to fill gaps on existing lists of 'disinfo' experts and bring in a wider sweep of experts on covert ops & information warfare, broadly defined. go.bsky.app/7NTCqKZ
Psalm and I Who Have Never Known Men were some of my faves from this year :)
A visual display of six book covers, listed as such: The Mismeasure of Man, I Who Have Never Known Man, The Age of Surveillance Capitalism, The Book of Form and Emptiness, The Jakarta Method, and Animal Liberation Now.
I read over 60 books this year in an effort to get back into it. These are my six favorites!
something odd about being a researcher who doesnβt fit neatly into a single well-defined discipline: most established single-discipline experts tend to initially see your work as an ill-formed or incomplete version of whatever their discipline normally does
I created a starter pack for researchers who work at the nexus of HCI & cybersecurity / privacy here.
Please do let me know if you would like to be added to the list!I'm sure I've missed many folks.
go.bsky.app/RGsu5jn
reads: The Ways AI Decides How Low-Income People Work, Live, Learn, and Survive The use of artificial intelligence, or AI, by governments, landlords, employers, and other powerful private interests restricts the opportunities of low-income people in every basic aspect of life: at home, at work, in school, at government offices, and within families. AI technologies derive from a lineage of automation and algorithms that have been in use for decades with established patterns of harm to low-income communities. As such, now is a critical moment to take stock and correct course before AI of any level of technical sophistication becomes entrenched as a legitimate way to make key decisions about the people society marginalizes. Employing a broad definition of AI, this report represents the first known effort to comprehensively explain and quantify the reach of AI-based decision-making among low-income people in the United States. It establishes that essentially all 92 million low-income people in the U.S. statesβeveryone whose income is less than 200 percent of the federal poverty lineβhave some basic aspect of their lives decided by AI.
"92 million low-income people in the U.S. statesβeveryone whose income is less than 200 percent of the federal poverty lineβhave some basic aspect of their lives decided by AI"
www.techtonicjustice.org/reports/ines...
this is a damning report