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New York Is the Latest State to Consider a Data Center Pause

WIRED

Red and blue states alike have introduced legislation in recent weeks that would halt data center development, citing concerns from climate to high energy prices. An Amazon Web Services data center in Stone Ridge, Virginia.Photograph: Nathan Howard/Getty Images Two New York lawmakers on Friday announced that they are introducing a bill that would impose a three-year moratorium on data center development. The announcement makes New York at least the sixth state to introduce legislation putting a pause on data center development in the past few weeks--one of the latest signs of a growing and bipartisan backlash that is quickly finding traction in statehouses around the country. Data center moratoriums are "being tested as a model throughout states in this country," said state senator Liz Krueger, a Democrat, who presented the bill at a press conference Friday with its cosponsor, assembly member Anna Kelles, also a Democrat. "Democrats and Republicans are moving forward with exactly these kinds of moratoriums. New York should be in the front of the line to get this done."


A suite of allotaxonometric tools for the comparison of complex systems using rank-turbulence divergence

St-Onge, Jonathan, Fehr, Ashley M. A., Ward, Carter, Beauregard, Calla G., Arnold, Michael V., Rosenblatt, Samuel F., Cooley, Benjamin, Danforth, Christopher M., Dodds, Peter Sheridan

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Describing and comparing complex systems requires principled, theoretically grounded tools. Built around the phenomenon of type turbulence, allotaxonographs provide map-and-list visual comparisons of pairs of heavy-tailed distributions. Allotaxonographs are designed to accommodate a wide range of instruments including rank- and probability-turbulence divergences, Jenson-Shannon divergence, and generalized entropy divergences. Here, we describe a suite of programmatic tools for rendering allotaxonographs for rank-turbulence divergence in Matlab, Javascript, and Python, all of which have different use cases.


Transgender cult leader linked to border agent killing maintains innocence, asks for vegan food in jail

FOX News

Post Millennial senior editor Andy Ngo unpacks what led to the arrests of members of an apparent transgender vegan cult on'The Ingraham Angle.' The apparent head of a radical transgender cult linked to six killings, including a U.S. Border Patrol agent, told a Maryland judge last week, "I haven't done anything wrong" while pleading for access to vegan food behind bars. "I might starve to death if you cannot answer me," Jack Amadeus LaSota, 34, who goes by "Ziz," told Judge Erich Bean during a bail hearing in Allegany County District Court in Maryland on Feb. 18, according to audio obtained by the San Francisco Chronicle. "I need the jail to be ordered for me to have a vegan diet. It's more important than whatever this hearing is."


German national suspect identified in deadly shooting of US Border Patrol agent in Vermont

FOX News

A German national suspect on a legal visa allegedly killed a United States Border Agent during a traffic stop in Vermont near the Northern border, Fox News Digital has confirmed. "Our partners at the Department of Homeland Security confirmed the deceased subject is a German national in the U.S. on a current Visa," a spokesperson with FBI Albany said. Officials said on Monday, Jan. 20, 44-year-old U.S. Border Patrol Agent David "Chris" Maland was struck by gunfire during a traffic stop on Interstate 91 between Newport and Orleans, Vermont. In a statement, FBI Albany said that Maland was a U.S. Air Force veteran, saying: "We are heartbroken for our partners and share in their grief as they mourn the loss of their colleague." A Border Patrol Agent moves a robotic device next to Border Patrol vehicle on southbound Route 91 near Newport Vermont, where a U.S. Border Patrol Agent was shot dead, on Monday, January 20, 2025.


Border Patrol agent killed in Vermont identified

FOX News

The U.S. Border Patrol agent killed in a shootout with armed suspects Monday has been identified as 44-year-old David Maland, a Customs and Border Protection source told Fox News. The veteran agent died Monday after a traffic stop on Interstate 91 between Newport and Orleans, Vermont, around 3:15 p.m. Monday, about 20 miles south of the U.S.-Canada border, according to the Department of Homeland Security. "A Border Patrol agent assigned to the US Border Patrol's Swanton Sector was fatally shot in the line of duty," acting DHS Secretary Benjamine Huffman said in a statement. "Every single day, our Border Patrol agents put themselves in harm's way so that Americans and our homeland are safe and secure." Wide shot of the scene on southbound Route 91 near Newport, Vermont, where a U.S. Border Patrol Agent was shot dead, Monday, January 20, 2025.


Xenobots

#artificialintelligence

A groundbreaking feat recently occurred for artificial intelligence and robots alike when the first-ever reproduction was witnessed in robots called "Xenobots. Well, the term "Xenobot" isn't brand new but was reported in 2020 as the tiny "programmable" living things made of several thousand frog stem cells. Since then, Xenobots have been in the global headlines because of the evolutions shown by them. In 2020, scientists created the first-ever living, programmable robot by assembling frog cells. These pioneer Xenobots could move around in fluids, and scientists claimed they could be useful for monitoring radioactivity, pollutants, drugs, or diseases.


Living machines: the first bio robots with Artificial Intelligence were born - OI Canadian

#artificialintelligence

As if it were a graphic novel by Science fiction, the first birth of robots called xenobots in the United States, which were made with frog cells. The xenobots are bio robots millimeter that could be replicated from themselves. Researchers from the universities of Vermont, Tufts and Harvard noted that in 2020 the first of their kind were assembled from frog cells. These organisms were designed on a computer and assembled by hand; they can swim in a petri dish, find individual cells, and collect hundreds of them, the University of Vermont reported late last November. These robots that can have "children" they are shaped like Pac-man and it keeps these cells inside its "mouth", they are also capable of assembling "babies" that look and move in the same way as they do.


Team builds first living robots--that can reproduce

#artificialintelligence

Over billions of years, organisms have evolved many ways of replicating, from budding plants to sexual animals to invading viruses. Now scientists at the University of Vermont, Tufts University, and the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard University have discovered an entirely new form of biological reproduction--and applied their discovery to create the first-ever, self-replicating living robots. The same team that built the first living robots ("Xenobots," assembled from frog cells--reported in 2020) has discovered that these computer-designed and hand-assembled organisms can swim out into their tiny dish, find single cells, gather hundreds of them together, and assemble "baby" Xenobots inside their Pac-Man-shaped "mouth"--that, a few days later, become new Xenobots that look and move just like themselves. And then these new Xenobots can go out, find cells, and build copies of themselves. "With the right design--they will spontaneously self-replicate," says Joshua Bongard, Ph.D., a computer scientist and robotics expert at the University of Vermont who co-led the new research.


Renowned Vermont hot air balloon pilot falls to death after getting caught under basket: 'Creative genius'

FOX News

Fox News Flash top headlines are here. Check out what's clicking on Foxnews.com. A hot air balloon pilot died this week after he became trapped underneath the balloon's basket and fell to his death, the Vermont State Police said. Longtime pilot Brian Boland, 72, had left Post Mills Airport in Vermont with four passengers when the balloon started to descend rapidly and touched down in a field. The basket tipped and one of the passengers fell out but wasn't hurt, police said.


Facial recognition startup, Clearview AI, mounts defense in privacy suits

#artificialintelligence

By Kashmir Hill Floyd Abrams, one of the most prominent First Amendment lawyers in the country, has a new client: the facial recognition company Clearview AI. Litigation against the startup "has the potential of leading to a major decision about the interrelationship between privacy claims and First Amendment defenses in the 21st century," Abrams said in a phone interview. He said the underlying legal questions could one day reach the Supreme Court. Clearview AI has scraped billions of photos from the internet, including from platforms like LinkedIn and Instagram, and sells access to the resulting database to law enforcement agencies. When an officer uploads a photo or a video image containing a person's face, the app tries to match the likeness and provides other photos of that person that can be found online.