michelle obama
Obama increasingly worried about Trump beating Biden, report says: 'Incalculable damage'
Fox News host Greg Gutfeld gives his take on Democrats' fears about former President Trump winning the 2024 election on'Gutfeld!' Former President Obama is becoming increasingly anxious about the closeness of the 2024 presidential election and fears former President Trump could take back the White House, according to a report. Former Attorney General Eric Holder, one of Obama's closest confidants, told USA Today that if Trump were to win the Republican nomination and beat President Biden this November, there could be "incalculable damage" brought upon the country. Holder confirmed Obama "absolutely" holds the same views when asked by the publication. "I think that's what motivates him. I think that's what will continue to motivate him," Holder responded.
Michelle Obama says she is 'terrified about what could possibly happen' in 2024 election
Former First Lady Michelle Obama claims the looming 2024 presidential election keeps her up at night, and warned, "We cannot take this democracy for granted." Obama appeared on an episode of Jay Shetty's "On Purpose" podcast, which was released on Monday. While the podcast is ostensibly about mental health, the conversation became explicitly political when she was asked about concerns that occupy her mind. "What is the thing that keeps you up at night now, or what is your biggest fear now, after having overcome so many?" the podcast host asked. "It has less to do with me personally and more to do with the world that we're in," Obama said.
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Michelle Obama's voting initiative partners with dating app that made 'No Voting No Vucking' video
Fox News Flash top headlines are here. Check out what's clicking on Foxnews.com. Editor's note: This story contains graphic language. Former first lady Michelle Obama's voting initiative is partnering with a dating app that made a video titled "No Voting No Vucking." The voting initiative, When We All Vote announced that it would be working with the BLK dating app on Oct. 4 and doing "voter registration activations" with the company.
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Two minutes NLP -- Quick Intro to Knowledge Base Question Answering
Knowledge base question answering (KBQA) aims to answer a natural language question over a knowledge base (KB) as its knowledge source. A knowledge base (KB) is a structured database that contains a collection of facts in the form subject, relation, object, where each fact can have properties attached called qualifiers. For example, the sentence "Barack Obama got married to Michelle Obama on 3 October 1992 at Trinity United Church" can be represented by the tuple Barack Obama, Spouse, Michelle Obama, with the qualifiers start time 3 October 1992 and place of marriage Trinity United Church . Popular knowledge bases are DBpedia and WikiData. Early works on KBQA focused on simple question answering, where there's only a single fact involved.
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Clinton, Holder under fire for political incivility comments
This is a rush transcript from "The Five," October 11, 2018. This copy may not be in its final form and may be updated. It's 5 o'clock in New York City, and this is "The Five." It's the event everybody is talking about, Kanye West's America first sit down with President Trump at the White House. KANYE WEST, ARTIST: You know they try to scare me to not wear this hat, my old friends. But this hat it gives me power, in a way. WATTERS: We're going to have more of Kanye in the West Wing ahead. But first, Democrats, Hillary Clinton, and Eric Holder are under fire for their recent comments attacking Republicans. HILLARY CLINTON, FORMER DEMOCRATIC PRESIDENTIAL NOMINEE: You cannot be civil with a political party that wants to destroy what you stand for, what you care about. ERIC HOLDER, FORMER U.S. ATTORNEY GENERAL: Michelle would say, you know, when they go low, we go high. When they go low, we kick them. PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP: Better be careful what he's wishing for, that I can tell you. He better be careful what he's wishing for. UNINDENTIFIED MALE: What do you mean? TRUMP: That's a disgusting statement for him to make. For him to make a statement like that is a very dangerous statement. You know, they talk about us. WATTERS: And Congressman Steve Scalise, who was shot by a deranged left-wing gunman, is calling out the left's mob mentality. Writing, quote, if they want change, they need to convince people with their ideas and actually win elections rather than call for violent resistance, harassment, and mob rule. Meanwhile, Holder is predictably backtracking. Tweeting, quote, OK, stop the fake outrage. In fact, when I was A.G., violent crime in the U.S. was historically low. I'm saying Republicans are undermining our democracy and Democrats need to be tough, proud, and stand up for the values we believe in.
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Here Come the Fake Videos, Too
Artificial intelligence video tools make it relatively easy to put one person's face on another person's body with few traces of manipulation. I tried it on myself. The scene opened on a room with a red sofa, a potted plant and the kind of bland modern art you'd see on a therapist's wall. In the room was Michelle Obama, or someone who looked exactly like her. Wearing a low-cut top with a black bra visible underneath, she writhed lustily for the camera and flashed her unmistakable smile.
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Michelle Obama says she uses social media 'like a grown-up' in apparent Trump reference
Michelle Obama took an apparent swipe at Donald Trump's social media habits, saying she uses social media "like a grown-up". "How many kids do you know that the first thing that comes off the top of their head is the first thing they should express? It's like, 'Take a minute. Talk to your crew before you put that [out there] and then spell check and check the grammar,'" the former First Lady said during a panel in New York, according to People. While Ms Obama did not mention the President by name, Mr Trump is known for stream-of-consciousness bursts of tweets that periodically contain grammatical and spelling errors.
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Moth to the flame: Microsoft has another AI chat bot, called Captionbot
You'd think that after its last AI chat bot fiasco, Microsoft would've learned its lesson -- or at least waited a bit longer before introducing another monster to the world. Luckily for us, history has a tendency to repeat itself, and the company's latest creation is a sometimes hilarious entity known as Captionbot. The premise is simple -- recognize the contents of a photo, and come up with an appropriate caption. But alas, while the concept may be straightforward, the execution isn't always so cut and dry. And social media has been quick to point out all of Captionbot's faux pas.
Hilarious results as Microsoft's latest AI CaptionBot tries to describe pictures from 'the dress' (which it thinks is either a suitcase or a cat in a tie) to Michelle Obama (identified as a cell phone)
Microsoft wants to join the rest of the software giants in the AI game, but it just keeps striking out. Weeks ago the firm's lovable teen chatbot turned into a Hitler supporting racists and this week its CaptionBot isn't living up to its potential. CaptionBot, which analyzes pictures in order to formulate captions, has been spot on with some results, but horridly wrong for others – it thought the First Lady Michelle Obama was a cell phone. Weeks ago the firm's lovable teen chatbot turned into a Hitler supporting racists and this week its CaptionBot isn't living up to its name. This technology combines three different services to process images and write descriptive captions – and sometimes includes an appropriate emoji.
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