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Jan 29, 2025
01/25
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ai services use, is taken from available information publicly available information on sites like wikipedialable information of publishers website, etc publicly available information of publisi this nebsite, etc publicly available information of publisi this joins te, etc publicly available information of publisi this joins ts flurry etc but while this jeine e flurry other similar global cases but while this jeine e flurry o openai lar global cases but while this jeine e flurry o openai and jlobal cases but while this jeine e flurry o openai and other cases are this services are facing. this ,, crucial because over smartphone users 690 million smartphone users and shape data, india is and shape mobile data, india is the second—largest market the secend—lergeet market fer how the secend—lergeet merket fer how this case willactually ' will actually make the up will actually make the pathway commonly for openai and ai services as �*ai services as well and ether a! eervieee ee wellvene' ”refer” we...” the ether a! eervieee ee well'ene . ~ ~ . ,,, ~ �*the regulations ether a! eervieee ee well'eh
ai services use, is taken from available information publicly available information on sites like wikipedialable information of publishers website, etc publicly available information of publisi this nebsite, etc publicly available information of publisi this joins te, etc publicly available information of publisi this joins ts flurry etc but while this jeine e flurry other similar global cases but while this jeine e flurry o openai lar global cases but while this jeine e flurry o openai and...
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Jan 29, 2025
01/25
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while also maintaining information use are they use are from public like wikipedia or they use are fromdia or they use are from public available accidents of publicly available accidents of etc on publishers books etc on publishers this is not the websites. this is not the first case that al is facing, case that open ai is facing, has been a flurry of similar against cases globally against firms but it becomes technology firms but it becomes crucial when it comes to india. crucial—whee it cemes te indie: this. crucial—whee it cemes te mda this. 690 million consider this. 690 million smartphone imartphone users and cheap data, it makes second largest market for al services and all companies are wanting to have 2 here. openai for that even openai for that matter. shapes up would be a even openai for that matter. shapl forp would be a even openai for that matter. shapl for how uld be a even openai for that matter. shapl for how artificial com-anies can intelligence companies can operate in india and e-= how they operate here. services how they operate here. thank you for reporting there. g
while also maintaining information use are they use are from public like wikipedia or they use are fromdia or they use are from public available accidents of publicly available accidents of etc on publishers books etc on publishers this is not the websites. this is not the first case that al is facing, case that open ai is facing, has been a flurry of similar against cases globally against firms but it becomes technology firms but it becomes crucial when it comes to india. crucial—whee it...
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Jan 22, 2025
01/25
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KNTV
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but part of the problem for me, wikipedia. single!" they think i'm just running around town. >> kelly: we are going to get the word out now. she is single and mingling! [applause] how is it on the app? because i'm single and i'm afraid. i have friends on them and i'm like, i'm afraid. i'm afraid of people i know. >> patricia: very slowly. i also do check up with people that know that person. and i go very slowly. we could be talking for six months on here before i ever have coffee with you. and then, you know. i believe in going very slow. >> kelly: if you get there, you have to sit there for how long? this is a wted afternoon. >> patricia: i don't
but part of the problem for me, wikipedia. single!" they think i'm just running around town. >> kelly: we are going to get the word out now. she is single and mingling! [applause] how is it on the app? because i'm single and i'm afraid. i have friends on them and i'm like, i'm afraid. i'm afraid of people i know. >> patricia: very slowly. i also do check up with people that know that person. and i go very slowly. we could be talking for six months on here before i ever have...
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Jan 8, 2025
01/25
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i knew they had just wikipediaed it that day these are the same people explaining it now. think that ben is right. trump's foreign policy is don't come in my yard. don't even throw your ball in my yard. and china likes to push and push. and we have seen it since the first few moments of the biden administration when the chinese ambassadors were so rude to blinken's face right to his face that the respect is simply not there you see it in the philippines, in the so south cha sea. you see it with australia and neighbors. see it in panama and greenland. the united states' sovereignty and the western hemisphere our dominance in the western hemisphere must be respected even if if people who are wick wikipediaing it for the first time don't understand that. >> laura: the other point about this, ben, when trump expects our allies to treat us as allies, that's somehow met with howls of indignation. jim himes from connecticut, congressman, spoke about this today. watch. >> president-elect trump is talking about taking greenland, renaming the gulf of mexico, getting european countri
i knew they had just wikipediaed it that day these are the same people explaining it now. think that ben is right. trump's foreign policy is don't come in my yard. don't even throw your ball in my yard. and china likes to push and push. and we have seen it since the first few moments of the biden administration when the chinese ambassadors were so rude to blinken's face right to his face that the respect is simply not there you see it in the philippines, in the so south cha sea. you see it with...
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>> thank you. >> jimmy: there you go. >> is that enough for you, wikipedia?he show, you ask about my mom, she hates it. [ laughter ] >> jimmy: why does she hate it? >> she doesn't like to be involved in show business. she doesn't want people to know i have a mom. she lives in singapore. she's doing great, thank you. and she never comes to america. hates coming here. i can't imagine why. >> jimmy: what do you do with her when she comes? >> she came recently because i've been on tour doing stand-up comedy. "hey, mom, come on tour with me a little bit, see a little bit of america." i was at her mercy as to what date she picked, meaning which city she'd attend. she ended up picking the florida dates. >> jimmy: oh. >> she went to florida. we went to fort lauderdale and orlando together. and she ended up loving it. >> jimmy: she did, she loved florida? you took her to our weirdest state. [ laughter ] >> i know, i know. i kept telling her, "this is not normal america, stop falling in love with the place." she actually loved it. hey, you know what, i went to tampa. i
>> thank you. >> jimmy: there you go. >> is that enough for you, wikipedia?he show, you ask about my mom, she hates it. [ laughter ] >> jimmy: why does she hate it? >> she doesn't like to be involved in show business. she doesn't want people to know i have a mom. she lives in singapore. she's doing great, thank you. and she never comes to america. hates coming here. i can't imagine why. >> jimmy: what do you do with her when she comes? >> she came...
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Jan 15, 2025
01/25
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but at the very top of the wikipedia page they had a disclaimer that this was not to be confused with the parent rights movement which was described as a civil rights movement primarily interested in human rights affecting related to family law including child custody. i'm not sure if there's a real distinction, maybe there is that we will be talking about both. i'm really thrilled to be joined by a terrific panel. each panelist will spend a few minutes talking about their work and reflecting on this particular space. we will then have a moderated discussion with time for questions at the end. for those who are tuned in online, my understand is that our instructions as to how you get into those i've got an ipad here. so first, will estrada, a senior counsel for the home school legal defense association. he also served as the first president of parental rights.org and the parental rights foundation. chris gottlieb is a contractor of nyu law family defense clinic and is an assistant professor of clinical law. tom rawlings has a long career in juno juvenile justice, d protection and capa
but at the very top of the wikipedia page they had a disclaimer that this was not to be confused with the parent rights movement which was described as a civil rights movement primarily interested in human rights affecting related to family law including child custody. i'm not sure if there's a real distinction, maybe there is that we will be talking about both. i'm really thrilled to be joined by a terrific panel. each panelist will spend a few minutes talking about their work and reflecting...
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Jan 21, 2025
01/25
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CSPAN2
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was going to be using the correct terms and i first stumbled on parental rights movement, which wikipedia described as a socially conservative political movement aimed at restricting school's ability to teach or practice certain viewpoints on gender sexuality and race without parental consent, but at the very top of the wikipedia page they had a disclaimer that this was not to be confused with the parents rights movement which was described as a civil rights movement primarily interested in human rights affecting, related to family law including custody. i'm not sure if there's a real distinction, maybe there is, but we will be talking about both and i'm really thrilled to be joined by a terrific panel. each panelist will spend a few minutes just talking about their work and reflecting on this particular space. we'll then have a moderated discussion with time for questions at the end. for those who are tuning in online, my understanding is that there are instructions as to how you can enter those and i've got an ipad here. so first will estrada, will for the home school legal defense asso
was going to be using the correct terms and i first stumbled on parental rights movement, which wikipedia described as a socially conservative political movement aimed at restricting school's ability to teach or practice certain viewpoints on gender sexuality and race without parental consent, but at the very top of the wikipedia page they had a disclaimer that this was not to be confused with the parents rights movement which was described as a civil rights movement primarily interested in...
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Jan 28, 2025
01/25
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wikipedia, it's where comedy writers go to learn three foods from weird countries. [ laughter and applausehowl ] why's the wolf back? the point is trump would rather everyone focus on the mostly meaningless fights he's picking with small countries than on the blatant corruption going on in his administration, like his wildly unpopular pardons of violent insurrectionists or his illegal firings of government watchdogs. >> president trump on friday night firing at least a dozen inspector generals. those are the internal watchdogs who monitor federal agencies. now, that's according to the "washington post" and the "new york times." this purge likely violates a federal law that requires the white house to give congress at least 30 days notice before their removal. >> can you talk to us about the firing of the inspectors general? why did you do that? >> because it's a very common thing to do. not all of them. some people thought that some were unfair, or some of them are not doing their job. >> seth: some people thought some were unfair or some were not doing the -- he can't even explain his own
wikipedia, it's where comedy writers go to learn three foods from weird countries. [ laughter and applausehowl ] why's the wolf back? the point is trump would rather everyone focus on the mostly meaningless fights he's picking with small countries than on the blatant corruption going on in his administration, like his wildly unpopular pardons of violent insurrectionists or his illegal firings of government watchdogs. >> president trump on friday night firing at least a dozen inspector...
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Jan 8, 2025
01/25
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ALJAZ
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it's similar to what was introduced on x, but it also follows the model established by wikipedia. one of the most used and most respected fact searching platforms. community notes is a great model that empowers user ids to build trust and support reliable content on the platform. it's pretty great that it is seeking scalable solutions like empowering it's community. need to provide input on questionable posts to improve trust and support for expression in audit services. but at the same time, communities are only as well informed this the information to which they have access to wait. so don't sit down. could you the president elect donald trump has been famously opposed to the fact of checking after a presidential debates in september with candidate to come on that harris trump threatened to shut down a b. c. news for effect checking him in real time. and he's full related about his extensive social media, encore being constantly subject to a cruise online review by the media and others. lock stuck above was one of the many tech figures financially contributing to trans selection
it's similar to what was introduced on x, but it also follows the model established by wikipedia. one of the most used and most respected fact searching platforms. community notes is a great model that empowers user ids to build trust and support reliable content on the platform. it's pretty great that it is seeking scalable solutions like empowering it's community. need to provide input on questionable posts to improve trust and support for expression in audit services. but at the same time,...
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Jan 3, 2025
01/25
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CSPAN3
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and that was before we had the internal at wikipedia social media, which is even more corrosive. i mean, there are people here who have staff that is only promoting their political agenda. they don't do policy. i, i, i find that breathtaking. but i count it. starting with what gingrich did and then continuing with the weaponization of this. and frankly, democrats occasionally game as good as they got. it's not any one group or individual. but i put the turning point with what happened with with gingrich turning this into open warfare. what would surprise people about how this institution works that they couldn't see from the outside? i think people are surprised that there still are people that work in a collegial basis, even. even today, there are still some members of the governing wing of the republican party. in fact, when i gave my sort of my exit speech, one of my colleagues got up on the other side of the aisle and said something nice about my work. i, i think people would be surprised about how much camaraderie there is even in these toxic times. and social media. and i,
and that was before we had the internal at wikipedia social media, which is even more corrosive. i mean, there are people here who have staff that is only promoting their political agenda. they don't do policy. i, i, i find that breathtaking. but i count it. starting with what gingrich did and then continuing with the weaponization of this. and frankly, democrats occasionally game as good as they got. it's not any one group or individual. but i put the turning point with what happened with with...
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Jan 2, 2025
01/25
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CSPAN2
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gladwell, according to to your wikipedia page, you interned attenuationsal journalism certainer, which-- at national journalism senter and conservative and worked at washington post and still at the new yorker. that's an eclectic list of >> i remain a canadian and some part of me is reluctant to give up my canadian identity. i still have very strong attachment to that country. >> back to the revenge of the tipping point, rosa beth cancer looms large in the book. who was she? >> she's active and extraordinarily brilliant socialologist and wrote a very famous article in the early 1970s and group proportions and she -- the story that she had been asked by fortune 500 company to do consulting work, the hadn't haired enough women and came up with the theory that said that group proportions and the number of outsiders in a group really matters. when you have too few of a newcomer, the newcomer it's not their home. they're under incredible pressure and cannot perform to high expect taces and he's not treated appropriately. but only when the outsider reach a certain level of critical mass can
gladwell, according to to your wikipedia page, you interned attenuationsal journalism certainer, which-- at national journalism senter and conservative and worked at washington post and still at the new yorker. that's an eclectic list of >> i remain a canadian and some part of me is reluctant to give up my canadian identity. i still have very strong attachment to that country. >> back to the revenge of the tipping point, rosa beth cancer looms large in the book. who was she?...
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Jan 10, 2025
01/25
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KPIX
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and then when i was doing "nebraska," wikipedia outed me. they truly did. >> stephen: damn it.ing on hulu. june squibb, everybody. we'll be right back. >> stephen: that's it for "the late show," everybody. tune in next week when i'll be joined by david schwimmer, janet yellen, and julia garner. now stick around for "after midnight" good night!
and then when i was doing "nebraska," wikipedia outed me. they truly did. >> stephen: damn it.ing on hulu. june squibb, everybody. we'll be right back. >> stephen: that's it for "the late show," everybody. tune in next week when i'll be joined by david schwimmer, janet yellen, and julia garner. now stick around for "after midnight" good night!
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Jan 16, 2025
01/25
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KPIX
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come on, wikipedia. come on. no, i don't want to donate.what the asean countries are either. so, it is with a heavy heart that i withdraw my nomination to be secretary of defense. i am not qualified to run the "mil-tary." evidently all i'm good for is wearing a suit on tv and reading off a prompter. just like pete hegseth. we got a great show for you tonight! my guests are adam scott and treasury secretary janet yellen. but when we come back, my tech segment, cyborgasm! oh, it's spicy tonight. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ >> stephen: give it up for louis cato and "the late show" band, everybody. welcome back. there you go. [cheers and applause] i'm refreshed. i am refreshed. back on the planet. folks, i am continually amazed by modern technology. it allows us to put satellites in space, beam medical images to doctors across the planet, or for some rando on the plane to airdrop me a pic of his junk. thank you, 12b. it was unsolicited but better than trying to watch "black adam." and i like to bring you all the latest tech news in my tech segment, cyborgasm! ♪ ♪
come on, wikipedia. come on. no, i don't want to donate.what the asean countries are either. so, it is with a heavy heart that i withdraw my nomination to be secretary of defense. i am not qualified to run the "mil-tary." evidently all i'm good for is wearing a suit on tv and reading off a prompter. just like pete hegseth. we got a great show for you tonight! my guests are adam scott and treasury secretary janet yellen. but when we come back, my tech segment, cyborgasm! oh, it's spicy...
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Jan 22, 2025
01/25
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FBC
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i love wikipedia myself and don't rely entirely on that and don't rely entirely on chatgpt.ney being made on stocks here for awhile. i wish gen z was more involved and obviously they can't be yet but they're going to probably have to be according to them. they say that they need $9.5 million to be financially successful. take a look at this, this maybe is how it's going to look for them in real life if they don't somehow get their act together. all right, we'll watch as -- this is how we start, deborah, and how it goes. you're wait because 9.5 million take as long time to come. it's maybe being unrealistic and it's at least ambitious. >> yeah, but i think my generation is understanding inflation and how much it's affecting us, and this shows how scared we are to buy homes and affording school and having children and children and groceries and everything and we're not being given a great economy and glad we have trump back to fix it. i'm 24 and plan to have kids in a few years, god explg buy a home and i don't want to need $10 million to live a normal life in the united state
i love wikipedia myself and don't rely entirely on that and don't rely entirely on chatgpt.ney being made on stocks here for awhile. i wish gen z was more involved and obviously they can't be yet but they're going to probably have to be according to them. they say that they need $9.5 million to be financially successful. take a look at this, this maybe is how it's going to look for them in real life if they don't somehow get their act together. all right, we'll watch as -- this is how we start,...
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Jan 2, 2025
01/25
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peter: according to your wikipedia page he began at the conservative american spectator, was an interna conservative journal center and worked at the washington post and you are still at the new yorker. that is an eclectic list of publications. malcolm: i have traveled all over the ideological spectrum, that is correct. peter: where have you landed? malcolm: [laughter] somewhere in the middle, i think. i am not terribly interested in playing partisan games. if i were to make an accounting of all my stance on various issues i suspect half would fall on the republican side and half on the democratic side. peter: to continue our collection of akleh -- eclectic identifications, born in england, raised in canada, part mennonite, part jamaican? malcolm: my family joined to the mennonite church. but yes, i am half jamaican. i was born in england, my father is english and my mother is jamaican. peter: how did you end up in canada? malcolm: my father was a mathematician who got a job at the university of waterloo, a big canadian science school, like a canadian m.i.t. and we moved there from eng
peter: according to your wikipedia page he began at the conservative american spectator, was an interna conservative journal center and worked at the washington post and you are still at the new yorker. that is an eclectic list of publications. malcolm: i have traveled all over the ideological spectrum, that is correct. peter: where have you landed? malcolm: [laughter] somewhere in the middle, i think. i am not terribly interested in playing partisan games. if i were to make an accounting of...
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Jan 28, 2025
01/25
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COM
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appointing people, firing people, writing executive orders, taking greenland, making wikipedia-like editsral globe. but unfortunately, as of now, he's democratically grabbing our pussy. [audience reacts] yeah. yeah. we said yeah. he has the consent of the people. for god's sake, his deportation orders are so popular, they have collabs! >> tv personality dr. phil tagged along on a chicago raid. >> you've never been deported before? >> you're dr. phil. you got to be dr. phil. >> yeah. how do you know me? >> no, i've seen you on "dr. phil," you know. on tv. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> jon: "how do you know me?" you've been in one thing! how do you know i am dr. phil? because you're on the "dr. phil" show! you're dr. phil! "how do you know me?" "uh, weren't you in "goodfellas?" no, you are [bleep] dr. phil. i would know that little egghead anywhere. little bald mustache southern drawl. "how do you know me." that picture. i guess dr. phil finally cashed someone outside. [cheers and applause] how about that? [laughter and applause] no, no. we are almost done. look, the trump administration were clearl
appointing people, firing people, writing executive orders, taking greenland, making wikipedia-like editsral globe. but unfortunately, as of now, he's democratically grabbing our pussy. [audience reacts] yeah. yeah. we said yeah. he has the consent of the people. for god's sake, his deportation orders are so popular, they have collabs! >> tv personality dr. phil tagged along on a chicago raid. >> you've never been deported before? >> you're dr. phil. you got to be dr. phil....
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Jan 3, 2025
01/25
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CSPAN
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and that was before we had the internal at wikipedia social media, which is even more corrosive. i mean, there are people here who have staff that is only promoting their political agenda. they don't do policy. i, i, i find that breathtaking. but i count it. starting with what gingrich did and then continuing with the weaponization of this. and frankly, democrats occasionally game as good as they got. it's not any one group or individual. but i put the turning point with what happened with with gingrich turning this into open warfare. what would surprise people about how this institution works that they couldn't see from the outside? i think people are surprised that there still are people that work in a collegial basis, even. even today, there are still some members of the governing wing of the republican party. in fact, when i gave my sort of my exit speech, one of my colleagues got up on the other side of the aisle and said something nice about my work. i, i think people would be surprised about how much camaraderie there is even in these toxic times. and social media. and i,
and that was before we had the internal at wikipedia social media, which is even more corrosive. i mean, there are people here who have staff that is only promoting their political agenda. they don't do policy. i, i, i find that breathtaking. but i count it. starting with what gingrich did and then continuing with the weaponization of this. and frankly, democrats occasionally game as good as they got. it's not any one group or individual. but i put the turning point with what happened with with...
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Jan 1, 2025
01/25
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CSPAN2
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glad well according to your wikipedia page you began were career at conservative american spectator interned at the national journalism center which is conservative and also worked at the washington post, and currently a new yorker that's quite a list of -- of publications, isn't it? >> yeah. if i traveled all over the ideological spectrum that's correct. yes. >> where have we landed? >> somewhere in the middle i think. i'm the not someone -- i'm not terribly interested in playing partisan political games. if i n were to kind of make an accounting of -- g of all of my stands on various issues, i suspect half of them would fall in the republican side and that follow the democratic side. >> just to continue our collection of eclectic identifications, born in england raised in canada part mennonite part p jamaican. >> my family is in recent years joined mennonite church but i was born in england my father is english my mom is jamaican. so i am -- i'm a mix of those two wonderful countries. >> how did you end up in conditioned? >> any father was a -- a math mathematician who got a t the universi
glad well according to your wikipedia page you began were career at conservative american spectator interned at the national journalism center which is conservative and also worked at the washington post, and currently a new yorker that's quite a list of -- of publications, isn't it? >> yeah. if i traveled all over the ideological spectrum that's correct. yes. >> where have we landed? >> somewhere in the middle i think. i'm the not someone -- i'm not terribly interested in...
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Jan 2, 2025
01/25
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KNTV
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oh, no, now it's on wikipedia. okay. now it's going down a rabbit hole. i hate to see that.we go. oh, incognito mode. [ audience ohs ] oh, no, no, no. i don't know if i want to see -- oh, no. all right, stop, stop, stop. [ laughter ] take it off, take it off. i'm not sure what -- [ cheers and applause ] it's got some kinks. >> steve: spicy. >> jimmy: got some kinks to work out. yeah. well, guys, it's once again that time of year. this saturday is santacon. [ cheers and applause ] here in new york city, 30,000 people will dress up as santa and pack the streets for an all-day bar crawl. [ light laughter ] it's one of the few days a year new yorkers get so drunk that times square elmo seems sober. [ laughter ] you know? yep, santacon is this weekend and the transit authority has again announced that it will be banning alcohol from all commuter trains into new york city. here now to discuss is a a 12-time santacon participant, eddie blaylott. eddie? [ cheers and applause ] ♪ you know dasher and prancer flashdancer dick nixon ♪ [ laughter ] >> jimmy: hi, eddie. it looks like you
oh, no, now it's on wikipedia. okay. now it's going down a rabbit hole. i hate to see that.we go. oh, incognito mode. [ audience ohs ] oh, no, no, no. i don't know if i want to see -- oh, no. all right, stop, stop, stop. [ laughter ] take it off, take it off. i'm not sure what -- [ cheers and applause ] it's got some kinks. >> steve: spicy. >> jimmy: got some kinks to work out. yeah. well, guys, it's once again that time of year. this saturday is santacon. [ cheers and applause ]...
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Jan 14, 2025
01/25
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COM
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i read your wikipedia page. >> [laughs] >> jon: [laughs] >> remind me to edit it later on.ne, what the banks -- it's only the american banks but what they decided to do is to -- >> jon: i didn't know there were other banks. go ahead. >> focus on financing. but in terms of, canada, what we need to do is make sure that we are addressing these issues, doing our bit, making our companies more competitive. you know what is going to happen in united states, five years from now, you will care about it again. you will have an election, you will care about it again. we better be in our position where we have done our bed at that point. we have done it in a way that canadians are not paying the price. >> jon: how do you do that? that is the rub. how do you make proactive measures on future disasters feasible in a political moment today? every time i have seen a gas tax or a carbon tax floated, it is not politically feasible. >> so the vast majority of our emissions in canada come from our industry. in fact, almost 30% of our emissions from canada come from the production and shipment
i read your wikipedia page. >> [laughs] >> jon: [laughs] >> remind me to edit it later on.ne, what the banks -- it's only the american banks but what they decided to do is to -- >> jon: i didn't know there were other banks. go ahead. >> focus on financing. but in terms of, canada, what we need to do is make sure that we are addressing these issues, doing our bit, making our companies more competitive. you know what is going to happen in united states, five years...
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Jan 8, 2025
01/25
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KTVU
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he points to wikipedia as an example, where he says, enough people have come together to ensure information is largely accurate and says, broadly speaking, the system seems to work on wall street today, stocks slumped on new concerns about inflation. >> a stronger than expected jobs report is leading to speculation that the federal reserve will pause cutting interest rates. the dow was down by 178 points today. the nasdaq sank by 375 points, and the s&p 500 was off by 66 points. shares of santa clara chipmaker nvidia fell over 6% today. amazon, tesla, apple and microsoft were also lower. the new jobs numbers showed job creation in november hit the highest levels since may. data from the bureau of labor statistics found more than 8 million open positions, and the number of people quitting declined to 3.1 million. openings increased in professional and business services, finance, insurance and private educational services. >> the first person in the u.s. dies from bird flu, but health officials still are not concerned about it spreading to the public. i'm brian dennis in w pete g. writes, "my
he points to wikipedia as an example, where he says, enough people have come together to ensure information is largely accurate and says, broadly speaking, the system seems to work on wall street today, stocks slumped on new concerns about inflation. >> a stronger than expected jobs report is leading to speculation that the federal reserve will pause cutting interest rates. the dow was down by 178 points today. the nasdaq sank by 375 points, and the s&p 500 was off by 66 points....
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Jan 8, 2025
01/25
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KTVU
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he points to wikipedia as an example, where people have come together to ensure that information is largely accurate. >> on wall street, stocks slumped on new concerns about inflation. a stronger than expected jobs report is leading to speculation that the federal reserve will pause cutting interest rates. the dow was down 178 points. the nasdaq sank 375 points and the s&p 500 was off 66 points. shares of santa clara chipmaker nvidia fell over 6%. amazon, tesla, apple and microsoft were also lower. the new jobs numbers showed job creation in november hit the highest level since may. data from the bureau of labor statistics found that more than 8 million open positions exist, and the number of people quitting declined to 3.1 million. openings increased in professional and business services, finance, insurance, and private educational services. >> well, it's january 7th and we are just talking about a dry weather stretch. and of course, this wind, which is producing extreme fire danger down in southern california. take a look at the maps. and you notice up in northern california, it has been
he points to wikipedia as an example, where people have come together to ensure that information is largely accurate. >> on wall street, stocks slumped on new concerns about inflation. a stronger than expected jobs report is leading to speculation that the federal reserve will pause cutting interest rates. the dow was down 178 points. the nasdaq sank 375 points and the s&p 500 was off 66 points. shares of santa clara chipmaker nvidia fell over 6%. amazon, tesla, apple and microsoft...
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Jan 16, 2025
01/25
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KGO
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i went on wikipedia almost immediately after. >> jimmy: nicole byer, everybody. [ cheers and applauseere, nicole. we'll be back with maggie rose. a team can help you plan for your dreams. so your dream car, and vacation home, may be closer than you think. ready to meet the dream team? you can with wells fargo. (vo) with fargo, your virtual assistant from wells fargo, you can pick up the tab, even when you forget your wallet. (kaz) i got this. (ben) fargo, send kaz $145 dollars with zelle. (kaz) smooth. (vo) learn more at wellsfargo.com/getfargo. >> jimmy: thanks to tim allen and nicole byer. apologies to matt damon. we did run out of time for him, we feel terrible about it. but first, her grammy-nominated album is called, "no one gets out alive." here with the title track, maggie rose! [ cheers and applause ] ♪ ♪ buy the house visit rome wear the dress that stops the show don't you ♪ ♪ know no one gets out alive call the boy ask the girl have no regrets when you ♪ ♪ leave this world cause you know no one gets out alive so stay a while here ♪ ♪ on the swing let's pretend we'll always b
i went on wikipedia almost immediately after. >> jimmy: nicole byer, everybody. [ cheers and applauseere, nicole. we'll be back with maggie rose. a team can help you plan for your dreams. so your dream car, and vacation home, may be closer than you think. ready to meet the dream team? you can with wells fargo. (vo) with fargo, your virtual assistant from wells fargo, you can pick up the tab, even when you forget your wallet. (kaz) i got this. (ben) fargo, send kaz $145 dollars with zelle....
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Jan 15, 2025
01/25
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KRON
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wikipedia, the free internet based encyclopedia debuted in 2001 and in 2024.ohn won an emmy award for his television special elton john farewell from dodger stadium. weather forecast. a live look at walnut creek noticed a little haze out there. there is. >> moderate air quality out there. if you're not sensitive group, temperatures finally warming up here to the 40's. that is we've been in the 30's in places like santa rosa in livermore all morning long. now we're in the 40's and seeing some 50's now. >> the winds are light and we have strong winds the start of the week. now we're seeing littleton and here we are breezy a bit in the hills, but not an issue today. but southern california, a different story. these are the daytime highs. so we started off with some frosty temperatures. now we're going to see some nice mild temperatures in the 60's. plenty of sunshine and that pattern should persist then and once again, more air quality in the moderate category. so if you're sensitive to that, just keep that in mind. high pressure is in control and that lack of su
wikipedia, the free internet based encyclopedia debuted in 2001 and in 2024.ohn won an emmy award for his television special elton john farewell from dodger stadium. weather forecast. a live look at walnut creek noticed a little haze out there. there is. >> moderate air quality out there. if you're not sensitive group, temperatures finally warming up here to the 40's. that is we've been in the 30's in places like santa rosa in livermore all morning long. now we're in the 40's and seeing...
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Jan 11, 2025
01/25
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KNTV
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right now wikipedia is like, "how did we become the responsible one?n, come on." [ laughter ] i'll admit it's not a bad idea for instagram. i mean, it's tough when someone posts a photo of their cute new baby and the message pops up saying, "correction, this baby is uggo." [ laughter ] and you go -- well, guys, the country is still dealing with freezing temperatures as millions of americans are getting slammed by an arctic blast. yeah, it's brutal out there. although according to facebook, it's 85 and sunny. [ laughter ] [ cheers and applause ] i like that. yes, temperatures across the country are in single digits. it's so cold donald trump and elon musk spent the day spooning each other. [ laughter ] that's right. [ cheers and applause ] it is so cold -- >> steve: how cold is it? >> jimmy: it's so cold this morning president biden had chains put on the tennis balls of his walker. [ laughter ] should chain 'em up, yeah. some political news, following justin trudeau's announcement that he is resigning as canadian prime minister, president-elect trump wa
right now wikipedia is like, "how did we become the responsible one?n, come on." [ laughter ] i'll admit it's not a bad idea for instagram. i mean, it's tough when someone posts a photo of their cute new baby and the message pops up saying, "correction, this baby is uggo." [ laughter ] and you go -- well, guys, the country is still dealing with freezing temperatures as millions of americans are getting slammed by an arctic blast. yeah, it's brutal out there. although...
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Jan 13, 2025
01/25
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CSPAN2
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but at the very top of the wikipedia page they had a disclaimer that this was not to be confused withhe parent rights movement which was described as a civil rights movement primarily interested in human rights affecting related to family law including child custody. i'm not sure if there's a real distinction, maybe there is that we will be talking about both. i'm really thrilled to be joined by a terrific panel. each panelist will spend a few minutes talking about their work and reflecting on this particular space. we will then have a moderated discussion with time for questions at the end. for those who are tuned in online, my understand is that our instructions as to how you get into those i've got an ipad here. so first, will estrada, a senior counsel for the home school legal defense association. he also served as the first president of parental rights.org and the parental rights foundation. chris gottlieb is a contractor of nyu law family defense clinic and is an assistant professor of clinical law. tom rawlings has a long career in juno juvenile justice, d protection and capaci
but at the very top of the wikipedia page they had a disclaimer that this was not to be confused withhe parent rights movement which was described as a civil rights movement primarily interested in human rights affecting related to family law including child custody. i'm not sure if there's a real distinction, maybe there is that we will be talking about both. i'm really thrilled to be joined by a terrific panel. each panelist will spend a few minutes talking about their work and reflecting on...
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Jan 3, 2025
01/25
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KDTV
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eva: ahora dije que cumplo 21 y en wikipedia dice otro nÚmero. cumplo 35 aÑos.riticando. le criticaban mucho el cuerpo. parece que eso era algo que se querÍa hacer. sin embargo, ella no quiere que nadie sepa. la gente le ha preguntado directamente si se habÍa operado. karla: estaba viendo la foto aquÍ. sÍ se nota. no se puso mucho. taÑa: es que ella no tenÍa la verdad, pero se ve muy bien. karla: ella es hermosa. taÑa: se puede ver muy segura. eso si dijeron que hasta escondieron a las enfermeras en el quirÓfano porque no querÍan que nadie supiera que era ella, pero sabe que la informaciÓn vuela. aquÍ estÁ estrenando cirugÍa. karla: es preciosa. se ve muy linda. taÑa: otra que tambiÉn estÁ en boca de todos es esta actriz que saben que se hizo famosa en la novelas. criticÓ a nosotros los mexicanos. nos llamÓ "naco". en mÉxico hubo un concierto en aÑo nuevo. le dijo que ella compartiÓ este mensaje que medio polÉmico. dijo que esa banda que esa mÚsica era horrenda. dijo que se habÍa llenado y prendido, pero la verdad que dice que nosotros Éramos como nacos en la ci
eva: ahora dije que cumplo 21 y en wikipedia dice otro nÚmero. cumplo 35 aÑos.riticando. le criticaban mucho el cuerpo. parece que eso era algo que se querÍa hacer. sin embargo, ella no quiere que nadie sepa. la gente le ha preguntado directamente si se habÍa operado. karla: estaba viendo la foto aquÍ. sÍ se nota. no se puso mucho. taÑa: es que ella no tenÍa la verdad, pero se ve muy bien. karla: ella es hermosa. taÑa: se puede ver muy segura. eso si dijeron que hasta escondieron a las...
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Jan 27, 2025
01/25
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CNBC
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and he links to a wikipedia page, which i'll read to everybody if you'd like. in economics, the jevons paradox, sometimes referred to as the jevons effect, occurs when technological progress increases the efficiency with which a resource is used, reducing the amount of necessary necessary for any one use. but the falling cost of use induces increased demand, enough that resources used is increased rather than reduced. >> could be. but does he still need to spend $80 billion to get to the same place? could he spend $50 billion and still get the same out of it? if you again, if you can find ways to do this more cheaply, if the architecture structure is such that you can actually get more efficient with all of these things, maybe it doesn't have to spend the $80 billion. >> i think he may still need to, just because of the abundance of how much processing power. i mean, look, the guys who are i mean, this deep seated, for the most part, people are now running on their own laptops and doing all sorts of things. so their their computers are not overwhelmed. but if y
and he links to a wikipedia page, which i'll read to everybody if you'd like. in economics, the jevons paradox, sometimes referred to as the jevons effect, occurs when technological progress increases the efficiency with which a resource is used, reducing the amount of necessary necessary for any one use. but the falling cost of use induces increased demand, enough that resources used is increased rather than reduced. >> could be. but does he still need to spend $80 billion to get to the...
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Jan 28, 2025
01/25
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CNBC
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the thing that gave us wikipedia, marc andreessen's developing of the mosaic web browser, was that alla sudden you busted out of these small platforms, right? which was aol and compuserve, and you actually had an open internet that was fundamentally in its interactions, noncommercial, in the space you occupied. we've not now gone back to a universe in which we're all operating commercial spaces all the time. right? so the platform in every instance has a goal, which is to maximize your the use of your attention. it does not actually have to be that way. i mean, there are. >> noncommercial i wanted to go with this. when you say it doesn't have to be that way. >> well, because we had an open internet before, there are still platforms that are relatively open. there are still protocols that are relatively open. podcast is a great example. >> clunky, and it's harder to get to some of this. >> exactly. and that's the sort of trade off. right. but podcasts are a great example, right? podcasts operate on an open protocol. they operate off the back of rss, which was developed years ago, that l
the thing that gave us wikipedia, marc andreessen's developing of the mosaic web browser, was that alla sudden you busted out of these small platforms, right? which was aol and compuserve, and you actually had an open internet that was fundamentally in its interactions, noncommercial, in the space you occupied. we've not now gone back to a universe in which we're all operating commercial spaces all the time. right? so the platform in every instance has a goal, which is to maximize your the use...
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Jan 27, 2025
01/25
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MSNBCW
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the noncommercial internet is what gave us wikipedia. it's what gave us the open web. boom. right now, our entire lives online are lived in commercial spaces. it's like living in a mall. you need to have public, noncommercial spaces in the internet. and the third, and this is where this is going to go, is regulation. i really, truly believe that we're going to start to see attempts to regulate whether that's capping screen time, whether that's age limits, whether that's other ways of saying that there's some public interest here in limiting or structuring people's relationship to this attentional vortex. >> chinese authorities would agree with you. >> yeah. >> the chinese authorities. >> want their kids don't see what our kids. >> see one time. >> one of the things that's key, right, about the tiktok ban and the intermediate scrutiny the court applied, is that the thing they said was because the ban was total and not content specific. it didn't trigger strict scrutiny. right. the highest level of review for first amendment infringement. and i do think there's the conte
the noncommercial internet is what gave us wikipedia. it's what gave us the open web. boom. right now, our entire lives online are lived in commercial spaces. it's like living in a mall. you need to have public, noncommercial spaces in the internet. and the third, and this is where this is going to go, is regulation. i really, truly believe that we're going to start to see attempts to regulate whether that's capping screen time, whether that's age limits, whether that's other ways of saying...
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Jan 19, 2025
01/25
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GBN
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view of uk free speech from the us, taking the government to court , and government to court, and wikipediaias and comedians answering some crazy culture developments from a live studio audience. but first the news. >> josh, thank you and good evening. the top stories the. keir starmer says the release of three hostages from hamas captivity, including british citizen emily de—man, is wonderful news after months of agony for them and their families. foreign secretary david lammy has also welcomed their release. he said our thoughts are also with those still waiting to be reunited with their loved ones. earlier today, the red cross said that all three released hostages were in good health. emily's mother has thanked everyone who never stopped fighting for her throughout this horrendous ordeal. she says her daughter is finally home and a photograph has since been posted on x of the two of them together. since her release, there were chaotic scenes in gaza city as the three female hostages were released after more than 470 days in captivity, along with 28 year old emily's. released today are tw
view of uk free speech from the us, taking the government to court , and government to court, and wikipediaias and comedians answering some crazy culture developments from a live studio audience. but first the news. >> josh, thank you and good evening. the top stories the. keir starmer says the release of three hostages from hamas captivity, including british citizen emily de—man, is wonderful news after months of agony for them and their families. foreign secretary david lammy has also...
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Jan 20, 2025
01/25
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GBN
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is telling us about the free speech union's latest battles with the department for education and wikipediaias. and of course, myself. and my fantastic panel will be answering questions from our wonderful studio audience. my comedian guest this evening are jonathan kogan and steve and alan. welcome. hello, josh. how are you doing? >> touching. see you. love to see you guys. how you doing? thank you. >> and our audience here. thank you. yes. so a big, big week. obviously we just saw in the news that the three of the hostages are alive and have been returned to their families. i don't know, the vibe i get from the jewish community is just around the world is just immense relief. right? it's just everybody's. the last few days, we've just been waiting with bated breath. yes. >> yeah, absolutely. and, you know, hopefully we'll see many more returned alive and well. hopefully. >> exactly. now, steve, obviously you're not jewish. you don't care about this. you're going to be open with tiktok. why are we talking about this? yeah, i know, crazy. sorry about that. but you had a good week. oh yeah i'
is telling us about the free speech union's latest battles with the department for education and wikipediaias. and of course, myself. and my fantastic panel will be answering questions from our wonderful studio audience. my comedian guest this evening are jonathan kogan and steve and alan. welcome. hello, josh. how are you doing? >> touching. see you. love to see you guys. how you doing? thank you. >> and our audience here. thank you. yes. so a big, big week. obviously we just saw...