13
13
Oct 22, 2023
10/23
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 13
favorite 0
quote 0
, former dean of the university of chicago law school. former provost of the university of chicago, and i think best known people might not associate his name, but his best known contribution. in 2015, he was author of the so-called chicago free speech principles, which have now been adopted by dozens of universities all over the country. and what are those principles, those principles basically reaffirm a university's commitment to, the very ideals that you and i have been talking about, freedom for the thought that we hate as the predominant value, not only in a free society, but in particular in an academic institution where the fearless and vigorous pursuit of truth is especially important and. the chicago principles recognize that civility and courtesy are very important and, should be pursued whenever possible, voluntarily, but never at the cost of conveying idea. so if i have an idea and i can convey it in a way that is respect artful and civil and courteous, i do so rather than a rude and way. but i should never self-censor a parti
, former dean of the university of chicago law school. former provost of the university of chicago, and i think best known people might not associate his name, but his best known contribution. in 2015, he was author of the so-called chicago free speech principles, which have now been adopted by dozens of universities all over the country. and what are those principles, those principles basically reaffirm a university's commitment to, the very ideals that you and i have been talking about,...
18
18
Oct 31, 2023
10/23
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 18
favorite 0
quote 0
[laughter] i think it says a lot about the university of chicago. the institute of politics and the terrific work you do in the course the community. you've chosen this as a first place to be a graduation year 1993 that was a long time ago. when i walked up on campus today it was very different in terms of how nice it i is. that's a nice hotels quite different. one thing that is not changed is the commitment to free expression. and a rigorous study of critical thinking and that is a reflection here tonight. i really appreciate the opportunity to be here and thank you for agreeing to do this. >> thank you and thank you iop for inviting me. there's a lot of talk about threats to democracy. and i think the most clear and present danger and democracy is the undermining of the first amendment values. as to self-government not just all about getting out to vote. it is critically important for our society and that is what iop standsro for. i was happy to attend. >> so let's get to it, ready? [laughter] i thought i would start continuing on the university of
[laughter] i think it says a lot about the university of chicago. the institute of politics and the terrific work you do in the course the community. you've chosen this as a first place to be a graduation year 1993 that was a long time ago. when i walked up on campus today it was very different in terms of how nice it i is. that's a nice hotels quite different. one thing that is not changed is the commitment to free expression. and a rigorous study of critical thinking and that is a reflection...
27
27
Oct 16, 2023
10/23
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 27
favorite 0
quote 0
visions and revisions series at the university of chicago press. newport's research has been supported recently by university of connecticut humanities. university of, illinois at chicago libraries and, the black metropolis research consortium. she received a ph.d. in history temple university in 2016. newport hails tulsa, oklahoma and tacoma and lives in west hartford, connecticut. dr. amanda klonsky is a lecturer at the university of chicago crown school of social work and the author of the forthcoming book pandemic of punishment to be published by beacon press. this pivotal work chronicles the experience of people in american jails and prisons during the covid crisis. until recently, she served as a at the ucla law covered bars data project. amanda led education programs in jails and prisons for more than 15 years and holds a doctorate in education leadership from harvard universal. thank you very much for being here. thanks to everyone for coming and thanks for supporting. good. can you hear me now? thanks, everyone, for coming. nice to see yo
visions and revisions series at the university of chicago press. newport's research has been supported recently by university of connecticut humanities. university of, illinois at chicago libraries and, the black metropolis research consortium. she received a ph.d. in history temple university in 2016. newport hails tulsa, oklahoma and tacoma and lives in west hartford, connecticut. dr. amanda klonsky is a lecturer at the university of chicago crown school of social work and the author of the...
20
20
Oct 28, 2023
10/23
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 20
favorite 0
quote 0
[laughter] >> i think it says a lot about the university of chicago, the institute of politics and the community that you have chosen this as your first place to be. i graduated from here in 1993, that was a long time ago. when i walked onto campus, it is very different in terms of how nice it is. it is quite different. one thing that has not changed is the commitment that uc has to free expression and a rigorous study of critical thinking. i think that is a reflection here tonight. i appreciate this opportunity to be here. thank you for agreeing to do this. >> thank you. i thank ip[ fp -- i thank iop for inviting me. the most clear and present danger to democracy is the undermining of our first amendment values. before voting comes deliberation and debate. that is essential to self-government. so, it is critically important for our society to have open and robust debate and that is what iop stands for. i am happy to attend. >> let's get to it. are you ready? >> yes. i would start on the theme of your book, which is -- i brought a copy. christmas is coming up. you can get them on amazo
[laughter] >> i think it says a lot about the university of chicago, the institute of politics and the community that you have chosen this as your first place to be. i graduated from here in 1993, that was a long time ago. when i walked onto campus, it is very different in terms of how nice it is. it is quite different. one thing that has not changed is the commitment that uc has to free expression and a rigorous study of critical thinking. i think that is a reflection here tonight. i...
33
33
Oct 27, 2023
10/23
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 33
favorite 0
quote 0
smith went to the last republican attorney general, who was formerly of the university of chicago. and levi puffed on his pipe and said, it's one damn thing after another." i thought it was an excellent description of my tenure as attorney general. >> that was my question. did it prove to be? bill: it's always been one damn thing after another but hard to believe it was more trying circumstances at least in recent history than try to serve in this administration given the political climate. i will say my chief of staff was ed levy's grandson, will levy. you had a very successful career and a sterling reputation, and you were willing to take that chance to go in and serve as trump's second attorney general. why did you do that? bill: well, there are a number of reasons. i had no desire to go back in. it was to me, personally, it was a downside. jan: you didn't seek out the job? bill: not at all. matter of fact, i was advancing other people. i knew the president would lower the boom on jeff sessions after the midterm election. so conservative legal circles were abuzz about who should
smith went to the last republican attorney general, who was formerly of the university of chicago. and levi puffed on his pipe and said, it's one damn thing after another." i thought it was an excellent description of my tenure as attorney general. >> that was my question. did it prove to be? bill: it's always been one damn thing after another but hard to believe it was more trying circumstances at least in recent history than try to serve in this administration given the political...
21
21
Oct 23, 2023
10/23
by
ALJAZ
tv
eye 21
favorite 0
quote 0
thank so much pull post and associate professor at the university of chicago. thank you for your time. thank you very much. the that's bringing you some of the world news now. one votes of being counted in argentina is presidential election populous candidates in front runner have a malay is facing economy ministers, surgery or masa, and conservative candidate, patricia bull ridge, south america, 2nd largest country is currently experiencing sky rocketing inflation and soaring poverty. alas, in america, edison, lucy and human has moved from point a series on the part of the day that they are investing, that there will be a 2nd. the campaign right here in the mail. this time in the day that when people build their time because makes sense, that is 138.3. depending on the results in the us, the head of a synagogue in detroit has been stab to death. the downtown synagogue confirmed its president, samantha wall was killed on saturday. police say a trial of blood lead to home. i say the majority of is unclear, but it doesn't a piece of a hate crime. the death has spa
thank so much pull post and associate professor at the university of chicago. thank you for your time. thank you very much. the that's bringing you some of the world news now. one votes of being counted in argentina is presidential election populous candidates in front runner have a malay is facing economy ministers, surgery or masa, and conservative candidate, patricia bull ridge, south america, 2nd largest country is currently experiencing sky rocketing inflation and soaring poverty. alas, in...
49
49
Oct 15, 2023
10/23
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 49
favorite 0
quote 0
you know, african-americans at the time and so the university of chicago was one of the first major institutions that existed in, the bronzeville community that, when the influx happened, they quickly relocated their campus from bronzeville to today's high part. yeah, and i think what you get to is that, you know, this happens a lot, i think in politics, especially chicago politics, is it comes down to you know the valuable real estate that bronzeville was sitting on. absolutely. absolutely. and so, yeah, that was the city was the city was expanding from towards what we would consider the the near southside. so it was expanding from area. as a matter of fact, south and african-americans live in and it's very similar to what we have today in terms of gentrification. now, certain that at one time were areas where poor african-americans live now are prized property and so the city organizes itself kind of remove them and them to other areas and by the way, i find it really interesting see something going on like that right now where woodlawn has been a historic african-american community, where afr
you know, african-americans at the time and so the university of chicago was one of the first major institutions that existed in, the bronzeville community that, when the influx happened, they quickly relocated their campus from bronzeville to today's high part. yeah, and i think what you get to is that, you know, this happens a lot, i think in politics, especially chicago politics, is it comes down to you know the valuable real estate that bronzeville was sitting on. absolutely. absolutely....
29
29
Oct 28, 2023
10/23
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 29
favorite 0
quote 0
think most universities do have some difficulties but the first one that comes to mind is the university of chicago which of course is famous for his sister chicago statement of freedom of expression as well as the calvin report which argues for institutional neutrality, the idea the university shall not officially take positions on social and political issues of the day and that's starting to get more traction university north carolina has adopted third, which is very important as well is that shills report which says faculty should be appointed and promoted only on the basis of merit. merit in teaching research and intellectual service to the community. i think about one thing that falls afoul of it is used for things like diversity dei statements, mandatory dei statements in high regard and that the school that is doing some good things, purdue university a few years ago they decided they're going to change what they're doing another new student orientation program and they have an excellent sort of free expression free-speech program that offered students with the first step foot on campus they
think most universities do have some difficulties but the first one that comes to mind is the university of chicago which of course is famous for his sister chicago statement of freedom of expression as well as the calvin report which argues for institutional neutrality, the idea the university shall not officially take positions on social and political issues of the day and that's starting to get more traction university north carolina has adopted third, which is very important as well is that...
48
48
Oct 3, 2023
10/23
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 48
favorite 0
quote 0
university of chicago had gone winless in 1918, and they were really a top notch football team, but theyere decimated by the draft and and various other factors. university of chicago beat great lakes 123 to nothing, just nine months after a great lakes had been the national champion in the rose bowl. so but regimental football very much continued. again, dwight eisenhower coached at camp mead and then at fort benning. there was a lot of barracks. one versus the signal corps and company b versus company f and and that type of stuff. i think it was really seen as a way to get recruits into good shape a lot, a lot similar to the way the military used boxing and various other athletic events. and athletic competitions to to really harden the the raw recruits, get them into shape. yes. what were the most common type of formations and style of offense and how did that progress during football or did it progress? you know, whether quick, quickly or did it progressed more as the nfl came into being? i don't think there was a lot of innovation among the military teams at the time. a lot of them
university of chicago had gone winless in 1918, and they were really a top notch football team, but theyere decimated by the draft and and various other factors. university of chicago beat great lakes 123 to nothing, just nine months after a great lakes had been the national champion in the rose bowl. so but regimental football very much continued. again, dwight eisenhower coached at camp mead and then at fort benning. there was a lot of barracks. one versus the signal corps and company b...
69
69
Oct 22, 2023
10/23
by
CNNW
tv
eye 69
favorite 0
quote 0
going to ask universities to take positions and denounce this and denounce that, and maybe the university of chicago has it right. let human beings take positions on these things. let the university stay out of it. >> and as best as possible, keep it to a civil discourse if we can. fareed zakaria, always appreciate it. thank you so much. appreciate the time. >> pleasure. >>> up next, hear from a group of israeli volunteers who took on hamas fighters when the surprise attack on their kibbutz started. that fascinating conversation with erin is coming up. you're live in the "cnn newsroom." is it possible my network could take my business to the next level? it is with comcast business. powering all your devices with gig-speed wifi. and you get fast downloads and uploads. pick it up! pick it up! oh we got this! because it's powered by the next generation 10g network. more speed for your business? it's not just possible. it's happening. get started for $59.99 a month for 12 months. plus, ask how to get an $800 prepaid card with a qualifying internet bundle. comcast business, powering possibilities. >>> am
going to ask universities to take positions and denounce this and denounce that, and maybe the university of chicago has it right. let human beings take positions on these things. let the university stay out of it. >> and as best as possible, keep it to a civil discourse if we can. fareed zakaria, always appreciate it. thank you so much. appreciate the time. >> pleasure. >>> up next, hear from a group of israeli volunteers who took on hamas fighters when the surprise attack...
17
17
Oct 13, 2023
10/23
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 17
favorite 0
quote 0
university of chicago had gone winless in 1918, and they were really a top notch football team, but theyere decimated by the draft and and various other factors. university of chicago beat great lakes 123 to nothing, just nine months after a great lakes had been the national champion in the rose bowl. so but regimental football very much continued. again, dwight eisenhower coached at camp mead and then at fort benning. there was a lot of barracks. one versus the signal corps and company b versus company f and and that type of stuff. i think it was really seen as a way to get recruits into good shape a lot, a lot similar to the way the military used boxing and various other athletic events. and athletic competitions to to really harden the the raw recruits, get them into shape. yes. what were the most common type of formations and style of offense and how did that progress during football or did it progress? you know, whether quick, quickly or did it progressed more as the nfl came into being? i don't think there was a lot of innovation among the military teams at the time. a lot of them
university of chicago had gone winless in 1918, and they were really a top notch football team, but theyere decimated by the draft and and various other factors. university of chicago beat great lakes 123 to nothing, just nine months after a great lakes had been the national champion in the rose bowl. so but regimental football very much continued. again, dwight eisenhower coached at camp mead and then at fort benning. there was a lot of barracks. one versus the signal corps and company b...
26
26
Oct 2, 2023
10/23
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 26
favorite 0
quote 0
university of chicago had gone winless in 1918, and they were really a top notch football team, but theyere decimated by the draft and and various other factors. university of chicago beat great lakes 123 to nothing, just nine months after a great lakes had been the national champion in the rose bowl. so but regimental football very much continued. again, dwight eisenhower coached at camp mead and then at fort benning. there was a lot of barracks. one versus the signal corps and company b versus company f and and that type of stuff. i think it was really seen as a way to get recruits into good shape a lot, a lot similar to the way the military used boxing and various other athletic events. and athletic competitions to to really harden the the raw recruits, get them into shape. yes. what were the most common type of formations and style of offense and how did that progress during football or did it progress? you know, whether quick, quickly or did it progressed more as the nfl came into being? i don't think there was a lot of innovation among the military teams at the time. a lot of them
university of chicago had gone winless in 1918, and they were really a top notch football team, but theyere decimated by the draft and and various other factors. university of chicago beat great lakes 123 to nothing, just nine months after a great lakes had been the national champion in the rose bowl. so but regimental football very much continued. again, dwight eisenhower coached at camp mead and then at fort benning. there was a lot of barracks. one versus the signal corps and company b...
25
25
Oct 23, 2023
10/23
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 25
favorite 0
quote 0
of west virginia. julia earned a doctoral degree, ohio state university, and has at the university of chicago, princeton university and the university of notre dame. she was a nieman fellow at harvard. elizabeth taylor is the coauthor of american pharoah mare richard j daley daily. she's the coeditor of the national book review. she is on the current board and is the president of the national book critics circle. she's the past literary editor, magazine editor for the chicago the national correspondent for time magazine. and she's the previous creative director, slash row lit fest of sorry me mayor creative director of printers row lit fest under current she's under contract with liveright book liveright norton, a book involving women in civil war reconstruction america. we will be having books there, books for sale right outside here via the bookstore there. and we will be doing a signing at the table us at the end of the program. thank very much. truly to it's so great to be here with you but i feel like there should be a starbucks whirring in the because truly and i formed a deep friendship we worked
of west virginia. julia earned a doctoral degree, ohio state university, and has at the university of chicago, princeton university and the university of notre dame. she was a nieman fellow at harvard. elizabeth taylor is the coauthor of american pharoah mare richard j daley daily. she's the coeditor of the national book review. she is on the current board and is the president of the national book critics circle. she's the past literary editor, magazine editor for the chicago the national...
16
16
Oct 8, 2023
10/23
by
CSPAN3
tv
eye 16
favorite 0
quote 0
richard epstein, a law professor at, the new york university and the university of chicago. epstein has an argument for many, has made arguments for a drastically curtailed state not so much on basis of arguments of abstract, but on the basis very optimistic predictions about what an unregulated market will produce. so, for example, with to health care he wants there to be no government provision of health because he thinks that private will take care of it. i think and you know this is an unprovable disagreement that the private providing health care for, all the people who can't afford it is way beyond the means of private charity. it is, you know, even if you got rid of all of the waste and inefficiency that there is, we are talking about some approaching 10% of the us economy. so we have a disagreement as of prediction about that. there are other of hayek who bring comparable levels of optimism to and use that to support their libertarian as a milton friedman who i talk about in the book is another murray rothbard. murray rothbard is for the most important political phil
richard epstein, a law professor at, the new york university and the university of chicago. epstein has an argument for many, has made arguments for a drastically curtailed state not so much on basis of arguments of abstract, but on the basis very optimistic predictions about what an unregulated market will produce. so, for example, with to health care he wants there to be no government provision of health because he thinks that private will take care of it. i think and you know this is an...
145
145
tv
eye 145
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> chicago, biohub is partnered up to work with those at the university of illinois university of chicagoorthwestern university. the company is set to move into the new building in january. >> the history of san francisco's iconic anchor brewing company might not soon be on display at the smithsonian in washington, dc. the san francisco historical society recently donated a collection of artifacts. it's from the nation's first craft brewery. things like photographs, special holiday brew labels, pint glasses and beer making equipment. they will become part of the national museum of american history. anchor brewing closed in july after. 127 years in business. >> all right. let's get to the weather business. >> yeah, right. it is warm out there. how long will that last? meteorologist sandy patel is here. sandy? yeah, we have another day or two of this, and then we're done. >> all right, dan and alma, let me show you the high temperatures for today. record high in half. moon bay, 90 degrees today. old record was 82, set in 2013. it was a warm to hot one fremont 88. but you got up to 97 degree
. >> chicago, biohub is partnered up to work with those at the university of illinois university of chicagoorthwestern university. the company is set to move into the new building in january. >> the history of san francisco's iconic anchor brewing company might not soon be on display at the smithsonian in washington, dc. the san francisco historical society recently donated a collection of artifacts. it's from the nation's first craft brewery. things like photographs, special...
12
12
Oct 14, 2023
10/23
by
IRINN
tv
eye 12
favorite 0
quote 0
possession of america for 84 years, in the possession of the oriental studies center of the university of chicago, and these 84 years are because they have had them for several years. at the time of dating 80 years ago, when 3 years of these were available to america, it should have been examined the words and interviews at the end of this trip , it would have shown well which side of iran was isolated, or the faces and groups. yes, we suggested a red carpet for them, and it's a bitter irony the fact that he then goes behind the united nations and threatens, saying that they will go and take revenge shows how the tehran regime can achieve whatever it wants, the voice of the iranian people was louder this time than ever. regimes. al-aqsa storm is a worthy name for the operation that correctly showed the surprised face of the zionists against the palestinian resistance forces, the zionist usurper, both militarily and in terms of information , was an irreparable failure, a turning point in the history of palestine, which was defeated by a group that has been under siege for years is under the superv
possession of america for 84 years, in the possession of the oriental studies center of the university of chicago, and these 84 years are because they have had them for several years. at the time of dating 80 years ago, when 3 years of these were available to america, it should have been examined the words and interviews at the end of this trip , it would have shown well which side of iran was isolated, or the faces and groups. yes, we suggested a red carpet for them, and it's a bitter irony...
35
35
tv
eye 35
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> chicago, biohub is partnered up to work with those at the university of illinois university of chicago northwestern university. the company is set to move into the new building in january. >> the history of san francisco's iconic anchor brewing company might not soon be on display at the smithsonian in washington, dc. the san francisco historical society recently donated a collection of artifacts. it's from the nation's first craft brewery. things like photographs, special holiday brew labels, pint glasses and beer making equipment. they will become part of the national museum of american history. anchor brewing closed in july after. 127 years in business. >> all right. let's get to the weather business. >> yeah, right. it is warm out there. how long will that last? meteorologist sandy patel is here. sandy? yeah, we have another day or two of this, and then we're done. >> all right, dan and alma, let me show you the high temperatures for today. record high in half. moon bay, 90 degrees today. old record was 82, set in 2013. it was a warm to hot one fremont 88. but you got up to 97 degr
. >> chicago, biohub is partnered up to work with those at the university of illinois university of chicago northwestern university. the company is set to move into the new building in january. >> the history of san francisco's iconic anchor brewing company might not soon be on display at the smithsonian in washington, dc. the san francisco historical society recently donated a collection of artifacts. it's from the nation's first craft brewery. things like photographs, special...
122
122
Oct 27, 2023
10/23
by
COM
tv
eye 122
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> as a university of chicago economist aptly put it, if you want to inject money into a local economytter to drop it from a helicopter then invested in a new ballpark. >> desus: wait, that's an option? i wish there were drop a giant bag of money in my neighborhood. rest in peace to the person it lands on, but it would be a payday for the rest of us! so the economic boost the promised doesn't pan out and i know that personally because i saw that in the bronx. in exchange for that 20 acres of parkland, the yankees promised to donate $40 million to the affected areas, but the immediate community has not seen a dime from the team. and more immediately and more importantly, we haven't seen a world series in like 20 years. like, if you want to screw my community out of 40 million, fine, that's business. let me not getting a ring? that's personal. [applause] i mean, at the very least, these teams could toss out some more shirts during games. all you have 25,000 fans in the arena and only toss out ten t-shirts? and they are all size xl? do mediums cost more? also, can we please get a t-shirt
. >> as a university of chicago economist aptly put it, if you want to inject money into a local economytter to drop it from a helicopter then invested in a new ballpark. >> desus: wait, that's an option? i wish there were drop a giant bag of money in my neighborhood. rest in peace to the person it lands on, but it would be a payday for the rest of us! so the economic boost the promised doesn't pan out and i know that personally because i saw that in the bronx. in exchange for that...
28
28
Oct 29, 2023
10/23
by
BBCNEWS
tv
eye 28
favorite 0
quote 0
this is professor ben zhao from the university of chicago.his lab say they've developed a solution. they call it glaze. at its core, glaze uses the fact that there is this ginormous gap, difference between the way that humans see visual images and how machine learning models see visual images. because we see things differently, glaze can make changes that are almost imperceptible to the human eye, but that dramatically alter how a machine sees it. so if you're an artist, you glaze your art, you post it online, you can rest comfortably knowing that a model that's trying to steal your style from that piece will learn a very different style that's incorrect. and when it's trying to mimic you, it willjust fail, hopefully spectacularly. as you can see, the ai artwork generated from a piece with glaze is similar in content but not really in style. to learn more, we asked the team to show us glaze in action. start here. you can see some changes - already, kind of on the texture on the... the right side one is the original and this| is the glazed one
this is professor ben zhao from the university of chicago.his lab say they've developed a solution. they call it glaze. at its core, glaze uses the fact that there is this ginormous gap, difference between the way that humans see visual images and how machine learning models see visual images. because we see things differently, glaze can make changes that are almost imperceptible to the human eye, but that dramatically alter how a machine sees it. so if you're an artist, you glaze your art, you...
9
9.0
Oct 25, 2023
10/23
by
RUSSIA24
tv
eye 9
favorite 0
quote 0
so, at the university of chicago they created a tool called “nightight”, which, as they describe it,evel is invisible and cannot be detected by automated means to the human eye, but it misleads artificial intelligence algorithms; when trained on such pictures, the neural network begins to make more and more mistakes and produces as a result... what was asked of it. according to the description, this is all very similar to earlier experiments that attempted to deceive by adding subtle details to the pattern recognition system. it worked quite well then, however, and neural network developers quickly learned to find and neutralize such injections into the image. we're running discounts on repeats of profitable seafood products, for example, big bullies mega meat from the hot thing with a 40% discount for only 239 rubles. kidkateka is alpha pay, the freedom to pay as it suits you, pay as you wish with alpha pay, with any smartphone. that night our friend is no longer there. repeatedly forced to get up to admire the stars. my friend, if you get up more than twice at night, afalase, at th
so, at the university of chicago they created a tool called “nightight”, which, as they describe it,evel is invisible and cannot be detected by automated means to the human eye, but it misleads artificial intelligence algorithms; when trained on such pictures, the neural network begins to make more and more mistakes and produces as a result... what was asked of it. according to the description, this is all very similar to earlier experiments that attempted to deceive by adding subtle...
12
12
Oct 25, 2023
10/23
by
RUSSIA24
tv
eye 12
favorite 0
quote 0
so, at the university of chicago they created a tool called “nightightshade”, which, as they describeel is invisible to the human eye and is not detected by automated means, but it misleads artificial intelligence algorithms; when trained on such pictures, the neural network begins to make more and more mistakes and produce as a result something other than what was asked of it. by as described, this is all very similar to earlier experiments with attempts to deceive by adding subtle details of the image recognition system. and then it worked quite well, however, neural network developers quickly learned to find and neutralize such injections into the image. after this flight, you will be the world... record holder for time spent in orbit. a little bit of adrenaline, starts to move, check whether there are carabins, no, how important is international cooperation, the resettlement of humanity, at least within solar limits system, it seems to me that one country will not settle in any way, and the left seat is yours, good , because i’m in the central one, i’m like a commander, oh my god,
so, at the university of chicago they created a tool called “nightightshade”, which, as they describeel is invisible to the human eye and is not detected by automated means, but it misleads artificial intelligence algorithms; when trained on such pictures, the neural network begins to make more and more mistakes and produce as a result something other than what was asked of it. by as described, this is all very similar to earlier experiments with attempts to deceive by adding subtle details...
10
10.0
Oct 18, 2023
10/23
by
RUSSIA24
tv
eye 10
favorite 0
quote 0
his friends, so america is now abandoned by ukraine, that’s what mir shan, professor says university of chicagonk so. admiral kirby's comment that we are not going to continue funding ukraine in the long term basically means that ukraine is finished. that is, as everyone understands, if we stop funding, they are doomed, they will have no weapons, they will not have the financial resources to continue this fight, and the russians will crush them, president biden and others have said that we support the ukrainians to the end, that we are not going to abandon them, well, we are abandoning them right now, it’s hard for me to imagine, especially in light of the failure. this does not mean that it will be easy, this does not mean that ukraine will not snap back, this does not mean that terrorist attacks and shelling of our territory will stop, this does not mean that they will stop give weapons, but the volume, attention and concentration are no longer the same, that is, already off the hill, the tendency, in the big world, the tendency is fundamentally important, leaning on zelinsky is harmful, ukra
his friends, so america is now abandoned by ukraine, that’s what mir shan, professor says university of chicagonk so. admiral kirby's comment that we are not going to continue funding ukraine in the long term basically means that ukraine is finished. that is, as everyone understands, if we stop funding, they are doomed, they will have no weapons, they will not have the financial resources to continue this fight, and the russians will crush them, president biden and others have said that we...
160
160
Oct 14, 2023
10/23
by
CNNW
tv
eye 160
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> in a different era or the vietnam war at the university of chicago, i think it was 1967, academics were tasked with the responsibility of how do you address these political and cultural hot spot topics. what did they determine? >> the calvin report is what i advocate for, that came out of the '67 moment. the institution is not setting the political positions and shouldn't create orthodoxies on our campuses. we will withhold that and let the discussion take place among the professors and students. we think that's very wise. we have been watching some including stanford really come out in favor of neutrality. at the same time, having done this for 22 years, the fact it took this incident to decide to be neutral, i understand the sin sierms and skepticism. and harvard has come out with free speech rules now. the proof will be in the pudding but i welcome the change and i hope it's for real. >> craig, thank you. good luck with the new book. >> thank you so much, michael. always great seeing you. >>> still to come, more of your best and worst social media comments and the final result o
. >> in a different era or the vietnam war at the university of chicago, i think it was 1967, academics were tasked with the responsibility of how do you address these political and cultural hot spot topics. what did they determine? >> the calvin report is what i advocate for, that came out of the '67 moment. the institution is not setting the political positions and shouldn't create orthodoxies on our campuses. we will withhold that and let the discussion take place among the...