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Ed Webb

British Art Robots | Beyond The Beyond - 0 views

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    If only for his love of robots, Bruce's blog is a must-read.
Ed Webb

Warren Ellis » The Loneliness Of The Long-Distance WIRED UK Columnist - 0 views

  • SF was never really about prediction. It was about extrapolation from the present condition, usually (in the classical traditional) to observe and comment upon the present condition. Which isn’t the same thing. "Prediction" is sf’s side effect.
Ed Webb

Near Future Laboratory » Blog Archive » I Quote: …. - 0 views

  • Warren
    • Ed Webb
       
      Warren Ellis, author of Transmetropolitan (also check out his Freakangels - Google will get you there, or warrenellis.com)
  • The Caryatids
    • Ed Webb
       
      Bruce Sterling's most recently published novel, quite dystopian.
  • Neuromancer
    • Ed Webb
       
      William Gibson's first published novel, mostly reckoned to be the first cyberpunk novel, although that's not undisputed, and there were short stories before that, some of which we've read.
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  • ((via @russelldavies from his post here.))
    • Ed Webb
       
      Russell Davies is the main force behind the recent revival of Doctor Who, as well as its spin-off Torchwood.
  • Advertising is probably the worst kind of SciFi in this regard. No integrity. No expectations that what is being presented has any relationship to possibility. Maybe SciFi as it was has switched places with advertising: Warren Ellis says SciFi does extrapolation. Advertising-as-SciFi does..what? Dishonest predicting?
Ed Webb

AI Tweets "Little Beetles Is An Arthropod," and Other Facts About The World, As It Lear... - 0 views

  • By saying that NELL has "adopted" the human behaviour of tweeting you are misleading the reader. It is more likely that the software was specifically progremmed to do so and therefore has "adopted" no "human behavior". FAIL.
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    sloppy journalism
Ed Webb

Babies treat 'social robots' as sentient beings | KurzweilAI - 1 views

  • UW researchers hypothesized that babies would be more likely to view the robot as a psychological being if they saw other friendly human beings socially interacting with it. “Babies look to us for guidance in how to interpret things, and if we treat something as a psychological agent, they will, too,” Meltzoff said. “Even more remarkably, they will learn from it, because social interaction unlocks the key to early learning.”
  • “The study suggests that if you want to build a companion robot, it is not sufficient to make it look human,” said Rao. “The robot must also be able to interact socially with humans, an interesting challenge for robotics.”
Ed Webb

AFP: Beijing officials trained in social media: report - 2 views

  • Chinese web users frequently refer to the "50 cent army", rumoured to be a group of freelance propagandists who post pro-Communist Party entries on blogs and websites, posing as ordinary members of the public.
Ed Webb

Video: Japanese Fembot Learns to Sing By Mimicking Pop Stars | Popular Science - 0 views

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    via Bryan Alexander's Twitter feed
Ed Webb

Is Singapore utopia? - 4 views

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    Discuss. I'm sure Jabiz would be interested!
Ed Webb

TheJUMP v2.1 - Glimpses | TheJUMP - 0 views

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    Inspiration. And possibly a venue for your work.
Ed Webb

4channers Hunt Down Detroit Couple Taunting Dying Girl While Reddit Donates to the Vict... - 0 views

  • I love how fast the internet acts on shit like this.This article was posted at 2:30 today. The husband apologized by 6:30. lol
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    Mutual coercion, or simply coercion? Who polices taste? Do we applaud the actions of 4channers and other lulz-seeking internet vigilantes?
Ed Webb

From Helmand to Merseyside: Unmanned drones and the militarisation of UK policing | ope... - 0 views

  • the intensifying cross-overs between the use of drones to deploy lethal force in the war zones of Asia and the Middle East, and their introduction within western airspace, need to be stressed. The European Defence Agency, for example, a body funded by the UK and other European governments,  is lobbying hard to support the widespread diffusion of drones within UK and EU policing and security as a  means to bolster the existing strengths of European security corporations like BAE systems, EADS and Thales within  booming global markets for armed and military drones. The global market for drones is by far the most dynamic sector in the global airline industry. The current annual market of $2.7 billion is predicted to reach $8.3 billion by 2020 and $55 billion is likely to be spent on drones in the next decade. A specific concern of the EU is that European defense and security corporations are failing to stake claims within booming global drone markets whilst US and Israeli companies clean up.
  • what scholars of surveillance term ‘function-creep’ is likely to be a key feature of drone deployments
  •  it is startling that the main concern so far in public policy debates about the introduction of military-standard surveillance drones into routine police practice in Western countries has surrounded the (very real) dangers of collision with other aircraft.
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  • the widespread introduction of almost silent, pilotless drones with military-standard imaging equipment raises major new questions about the way in which the UK as a ‘surveillance society’. Is the civilian deployment of such drones a justified and proportionate response to civilian policing needs or a thinly-veiled attempt by security corporations to build new and highly profitable markets? Once deployed, what ethical and regulatory guidelines need to be in place to govern drone deployment and the ‘targeting’ of drone sensors? Above all, are transparent regulatory systems in place to prevent law enforcement agencies from abusing radical extensions in their powers to vertically and covertly spy on all aspects of civilian life 24 hours a day?
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