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In the US the future of federal rules to control AI is now up in the air following President Trump's return to the presidency. In 2023 Biden signed an executive order that aimed to boost the ...
Generative AI is a powerful tool for creativity and speech. Efforts to censor, regulate, and control it threaten America's tradition of open discourse. Life, Liberty, and the Right To Shitpost
The book is praised for "masterfully disassembles AI as an epistemological, social, and political paradigm, [17] and for his examination of how most of the data that is fed into "privatized AI infrastructure is “amputated” [18] from context or embodied experience and ultimately processed through crowdsourcing."
In a 2009 case, United States District Court judge Deborah A. Batts permanently prohibited publication in the United States of a book by Swedish writer Fredrik Colting, whose protagonist is a 76-year-old version of Holden Caulfield of J.D. Salinger's The Catcher in the Rye. Judge Batts explicitly rejected arguments of parody and criticism, stating,
The book was unable to get certification for publication thus making it banned in Vietnam [302] "Mourning Headband for Hue: An Account of the Battle for Hue, Vietnam 1968" Nha Ca: 1969 Nonfiction The book was banned for its criticism of the actions of the national liberation front and for acknowledging the 1968 massacre of 6000 civilians in Huế
America leads the world in AI–but we could fall behind on AI regulation by the end of 2023. ... AI, in any form, should not be used to commit illegal acts. It should not be used to compromise ...
There is debate as to, whether cartoon pornographies (example: comics, illustrations, anime) sexually depicting purely fictional minor characters or young-looking purely fictional adult characters, really lead to sexual crimes against minors, and whether legally regulating such cartoons is a violation of freedom of expression and creation.
Reid Hoffman, chairman and co-founder of LinkedIn Corp., second from left, and Jeffrey Weiner, chief executive officer of LinkedIn, center, applaud during the opening bell ceremony at the New York ...