Friday 10th May 2024
  • How to Stop Worrying About What Other People Think of You - Harvard Business Review (No paywall)

    If you want to be your best and perform at a high level, fear of people’s opinions may be holding you back. Our fear of other people’s opinions, or FOPO, has become an irrational and unproductive obsession in the modern world, and its negative effects reach far beyond performance. If you start paying less and less attention to what makes you you—your talents, beliefs, and values—and start conforming to what others may or may not think, you’ll harm your potential. If you really want to conquer FOPO, you’ll need to cultivate more self-awareness. Most of us go through life with a general sense of who we are, and, in a lot of circumstances, that’s enough. We get by. But if you want to be your best while being less fearful of people’s opinions, you need to develop a stronger and deeper sense of who you are. You can start by developing a personal philosophy—a word or phrase that expresses your basic beliefs and values. This philosophy isn’t a platitude or slogan; rather, it’s a compass, guiding your actions, thoughts, and decisions.

    Continued here

  • Does the Universe expand by stretching or creating space?

    It’s been almost 100 years since humanity first reached a revolutionary conclusion about the nature of our Universe: space itself cannot and does not remain static, but rather evolves with the passage of time. One of the most unsettling predictions of Einstein’s general relativity is that any Universe — so long as it’s uniformly (or almost uniformly) filled with one or more species of matter, radiation, or energy — cannot remain the same over time. Instead, it must either expand or contract, something initially derived independently by three separate people: Alexander Friedmann (1922), Georges Lemaitre (1927), and Howard Robertson (1929), and was later generalized by Arthur Walker (1936).

    Right at around the same time, starting in 1923, observations began to show that the spirals and ellipticals in our sky were actually galaxies: “island universes” that were well outside of our own Milky Way. With new, more powerful measurements, we could determine that the farther away a galaxy was from us, the greater the arriving light in our instruments was redshifted, or observed at longer wavelengths, compared to the light that was initially emitted. It was as though the very act of journeying through space altered the wavelength of that traveling light.

    Continued here

  • 4 "love-based" approaches to allyship after the DE&I backlash

    In recent years, many organizations have realized that the journey towards real allyship and lasting societal change is not as simple as hosting one employee celebration and posting about it on social media. It’s a long and complex path, requiring a concerted and sustained effort from the entire company in a way that underpins their culture and values. 

    Many leaders are still committed to this journey but tackling the fatigue in our teams — the “ally-weariness” as I call it — has been made even harder as organizations navigate the growing backlash against DE&I. Movement against progressive policies has seen a rollback of legislation around affirmative action in the US, and many roles within DE&I are being cut as resources are quietly reassigned elsewhere. Vocal pushback on social media has also made business leaders more cautious, afraid to rock the boat and become the next target of negative online attention. 

    Continued here

  • Rum punch, music, and "election cake": How to vote like it's 1799

    I kicked Election Day off by making myself a large glass of rum punch from Martha Washington’s recipe (orange juice, lemon juice, cloves, cinnamon, etc.). I did this because, for one thing, day drinking was the norm in the 1790s. Booze was especially common during election season. Voting was much more festive then — at least for the privileged few who were allowed to vote. 

    When George Washington ran for the Virginia legislature in 1758, he provided voters with 28 gallons of rum, 50 gallons of rum punch, 34 gallons of wine, 46 gallons of beer, and 2 gallons of hard cider. He won the election with more than 300 well-lubricated votes.

    Continued here

  • Art critic Jerry Saltz: A "Francis Bacon of AI art" will emerge, but today's work falls flat

    Art produced by or with the help of artificial intelligence is more popular than ever, from the record-breaking $432,000 auction of Obvious collective’s Portrait of Edmond Belamy to the overwhelming success of Refik Anadol’s “Unsupervised” exhibit at the MoMA. But one art-world figure decidedly not on board is Jerry Saltz, the seasoned resident art critic of Vulture magazine. Saltz has made no secret of his distaste for AI art, the artists who make it, and the people who flock in line to see or, God forbid, buy it. His scathing reviews have upset many in the tech world, and, in the case of Anadol’s “Unsupervised,” sparked heated back-and-forths on X.

    “This kind of work, if it were the scale of a regular painting, would be ridiculous,” Saltz tells Big Think. “You’d just laugh at it. It does not have scale so much as it’s big and takes up room. It keeps crowds interested for whole minutes at a time. It gets crowds in.”

    Continued here

  • The algorithmic ocean: How AI Is revolutionizing marine conservation

    Dyhia Belhabib’s journey to becoming a marine scientist began with war funerals on TV. Her hometown, on the pine-forested slopes of the Atlas Mountains in northern Algeria, lies only 60 miles from the Mediterranean Sea. But a trip to the beach was dangerous. A bitter civil war raged across the mountains as she was growing up in the 1990s; the conflict was particularly brutal for Belhabib’s people, the Berbers, one of the Indigenous peoples of North Africa. As she puts it: “We didn’t go to the ocean much, because you could get killed on the way there.”

    The ocean surfaced in her life in another way, on state-run television. When an important person was assassinated or a massacre occurred, broadcasters would interrupt regular programming to show a sober documentary. They frequently chose a Jacques Cousteau film, judged sufficiently dignified and neutral to commemorate the deaths. Whenever she saw the ocean on television, Belhabib would wonder who had died. “My generation thinks of tragedies when we see the ocean,” she says. “I didn’t grow to love it in my youth.”

    Continued here

  • TikTok Says it Will Start Labeling AI-Generated Content

    "AI enables incredible creative opportunities, but can confuse or mislead viewers if they don't know content was AI-generated," the company said in a prepared statement Thursday. "Labeling helps make that context clear--which is why we label AIGC made with TikTok AI effects, and have required creators to label realistic AIGC for over a year."

    The move is part of an overall effort by those in the technology industry to provide more safeguards for AI usage. In February Meta announced that it was working with industry partners on technical standards that will make it easier to identify images and eventually video and audio generated by artificial intelligence tools. The efforts would include


    Continued here

  • New Mexico's Top Prosecutor Blames Meta for Online Predators

    The arrests are the result of a monthslong undercover operation in which the suspects connected with decoy accounts that were set up by the state Department of Justice. The investigation began in December around the time the state filed a civil lawsuit against the social media giant, claiming Meta was failing to take basic precautionary measures to ensure children were safe on its platforms.

    New Mexico Attorney General Raúl Torrez said during a news conference Wednesday that the suspects communicated and exchanged explicit sexual content through Facebook's messenger app and were clear in expressing a sexual interest in children.


    Continued here

  • Met Gala Deepfakes of Katy Perry and Rihanna Went Viral. Why It's a Warning for Businesses

    This week's Met Gala was a star-studded event. But amidst the glamour, a different kind of spectacle unfolded online: AI-generated images of Katy Perry, Rihanna, and Lady Gaga went viral on social media, and were so realistic they tricked Perry's own mother into believing she had attended. Perry responded, "lol mom the AI got you too, BEWARE!" These images, which have already been viewed millions of times, have reignited concerns over the increasing prevalence and sophistication of deepfakes.

    According to a recent report from Mastercard, 37 percent of businesses have experienced targeting through deepfake voice fraud, while 29 percent have encountered deepfake videos. Industry leaders are also speaking out about the risks that deepfakes pose: Warren Buffett recently revealed that a deepfake video of him was convincing enough that he could imagine it duping him into wiring money overseas. Earlier this week, OpenAI founder Sam Altman pointed to the sophistication of deepfakes as more of a concern than AI-driven election misinformation.


    Continued here

  • Fewer Workers Expect to Retire Past 62, Reaching a New Low

    In the years before the pandemic, Americans said the likelihood of them working full time past age 62 averaged 54.6 percent. But in the four years since, there's been a "persistent decline," dropping to an average of 49.4 percent, according to a new analysis from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, based on data from the triannual Labor Market Survey. In March 2024, the average likelihood reached a new series low of 45.8 percent.

    This new data seems to contrast with the growing older workforce evident in today's labor market. The share of Americans still working at 65 or older nearly doubled in the 35 years leading up to 2023, according to a report from the Pew Research Center. In fact, after leaving the workforce during the pandemic, many retirees ended up returning to work.


    Continued here