henley
What to Do About Fake Drake Songs
On April 3, 2001, Alanis Morissette and Don Henley appeared before Congress in a bid to save the music industry. Henley, the drummer and a lead vocalist for the Eagles, was dressed in a pin-striped suit. Morissette, the Grammy Award-winning singer of "You Oughta Know," wore a red top and a purple ring. Also present was Hilary Rosen, the president and C.E.O. of the Recording Industry Association of America (R.I.A.A.); Shawn Fanning, the co-founder of Napster; Ken Berry, the president and C.E.O. of EMI Recorded Music; and Dianne Feinstein, the then sixty-seven-year-old senator from California. The Senate Judiciary Committee had called the hearing because online file sharing was understood to be threatening the viability of the entire music industry, and of the future of art in America. As the sole musicians to testify, Morissette and Henley might have chosen to echo the chorus of their record-industry colleagues, bemoaning piracy and praising the R.I.A.A.'s moves to stop it.
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University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill: Grant will expand University Libraries' use of machine learning to identify historically racist laws
Since 2019, experts at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill's University Libraries have investigated the use of machine learning to identify racist laws from North Carolina's past. Now a grant of $400,000 from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation will allow them to extend that work to two more states. The grant will also fund research and teaching fellowships for scholars interested in using the project's outputs and techniques. On the Books: Jim Crow and Algorithms of Resistance began with a question from a North Carolina social studies teacher: Was there a comprehensive list of all the Jim Crow laws that had ever been passed in the state? Finding little beyond scholar and activist Pauli Murray's 1951 book "States' laws on race and color," a team of librarians, technologists and data experts set out to fill the gap.
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Rise of the Machines: Are We Entering 'Dangerous Territory' with Machines That Replace God?
High-tech and artificial intelligence are fast becoming a big part of our daily lives. Author Wallace Henley says if we are not careful, American society could easily enter into "dangerous territory," a less human world that forgets the preeminence of God. "We have these machines emerging and people are beginning to worship those machines," Henley explained. "There's actually an A.I. church now and there's another technology specialist who said if this thing can go a billion times faster than the human brain, this machine, than the only thing that we can call it is God." Listen to today's podcast and subscribe: Henley is a Christian Post exclusive columnist, author of the book, Who Will Rule the Coming'Gods'?
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- Information Technology > Artificial Intelligence > Robots (0.35)
Will artificial intelligence achieve "godlike" power? Wallace B. Henry asks, "Who Will Rule the Coming 'Gods'?" - Denison Forum
You don't have to own a robot vacuum or a digital assistant like Alexa or Siri to use artificial intelligence. In fact, AI has become part of our everyday lives in ways we don't even notice, let alone control. When you check your news feed on Facebook or search the internet on Google, you're interacting with AI. It offers great benefits, like robots assisting during surgery, but also gives rise to troubling moral questions. Henley, the author or coauthor of more than twenty books, brings an impressive background to this weighty topic.
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Artificial intelligence replacing God, ramifications for the Church is 'concerning': Wallace Henley
As technology continues to advance at a rapid pace, it threatens to eclipse society's reverence and worship of God -- a looming reality that has severe ramifications for the Church, theologian and bestselling author Wallace Henley has warned. "We are all made for transcendence, God's overarching glory," Henley told The Christian Post. "As Solomon said in Ecclesiastes, God has put eternity in our hearts. St. Augustine said, 'The human heart was made by God for God and only God can fill it.' And if we don't fill it with God, we fill it with whatever else we can find … that's what all idolatry is about. The idolatry of the future is going to be the worship of these machines, which has already started, either tongue-in-cheek or some people literally and very seriously worshiping the works of their hands."
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Are El Niño events becoming more common? Coral reef study reveals 'unprecedented' activity
Scientists have extracted a 400-year record of El Niño events using coral reef cores drilled from the Pacific Ocean, revealing crucial new insight on how these weather patterns have changed. And, the data so far suggest something'unusual' has been happening in recent decades. According to the new research, El Niño events appear to be cropping up more frequently in the central Pacific than they have in past centuries, and while eastern El Niños may be getting stronger. El Niño is caused by a shift in the distribution of warm water in the Pacific Ocean around the equator. Usually the wind blows strongly from east to west, due to the rotation of the Earth, causing water to pile up in the western part of the Pacific.
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Surviving AI in the workplace will require engagement, passion – DXC Blogs
Artificial intelligence (AI), robots, automation, deep-learning machines -- these and similar technologies already have replaced human workers across a number of industries, including retail, financial, manufacturing, transportation, and construction. Not surprisingly, this has prompted concerns about machines taking jobs from people as enterprises seek to increase operational efficiency, lower costs, and reduce their dependence on humans, unreliable and unpredictable as we are. And we haven't even started talking about disengaged! The truth is that most enterprise employees are just punching a clock, literally or metaphorically. "The majority of employees (51%) are not engaged and haven't been for quite some time," Gallup concludes. "These employees are indifferent and neither like nor dislike their job.
The Uber-Waymo Self-Driving Car Lawsuit Gets a New Star, and Takes a Wild Turn
When Waymo, the autonomous car company once known as Google's self-driving car outfit, announced it was suing Uber for trade secret theft in February, the action seemed to center on a single person: Anthony Levandowski. According to Waymo, the former Google engineer downloaded 14,000 secret documents from its system and used the contents to launch his own self-driving truck startup, Otto, in January 2016. By August, Uber had acquired Otto for an alleged $680 million, and Waymo says the ridehailing giant was in on the theft from the start. Well forget Levandowski and say hello to the litigation's newest and most unlikely star: former Uber intelligence employee Richard Jacobs. Last weekend, the US Attorney's Office pulled the very unusual move of forwarding a piece of evidence to Judge William Alsup, who is overseeing the lawsuit in the Northern District Court of California.
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