It was a faint purple tint in the north sky from my back yard, but it could have been light pollution.
In any case, we are experiencing a major solar storm, so any ham radio operators are probably frustrated right now.
The Further Adventures of Matthew Saroff,
Itinerant Engineer
It was a faint purple tint in the north sky from my back yard, but it could have been light pollution.
In any case, we are experiencing a major solar storm, so any ham radio operators are probably frustrated right now.
It appears that the systems mandated by the US government to allow our state security apparatus to easily spy on people were hacked by the Chinese state security apparatus to spy on people.
Security experts have been saying that mandatory government back doors are a bad idea, because other people can use them as well.
QED
Chinese government hackers penetrated the networks of several large US-based Internet service providers and may have gained access to systems used for court-authorized wiretaps of communications networks, The Wall Street Journal reported Saturday. "People familiar with the matter" told the WSJ that hackers breached the networks of companies including Verizon, AT&T, and Lumen (also known as CenturyLink).
"A cyberattack tied to the Chinese government penetrated the networks of a swath of US broadband providers, potentially accessing information from systems the federal government uses for court-authorized network wiretapping requests," the WSJ wrote. "For months or longer, the hackers might have held access to network infrastructure used to cooperate with lawful US requests for communications data, according to people familiar with the matter."
These "attackers also had access to other tranches of more generic Internet traffic," according to the WSJ's sources. The attack is being attributed to a Chinese hacking group called Salt Typhoon.
The Washington Post reported on the hacking campaign yesterday, describing it as "an audacious espionage operation likely aimed in part at discovering the Chinese targets of American surveillance." The Post report attributed the information to US government officials and said an investigation by the FBI, other intelligence agencies, and the Department of Homeland Security "is in its early stages."
The Post report said there are indications that China's Ministry of State Security is involved in the attacks.
Considering the possibilities, from Daesh to the Sinaloa Cartel to whatever is left of al Qaeda, the Chinese are probably the least worrisome group to penetrate these systems.
This is why mandatory back doors are a bad idea.
Initial unemployment claims are up 33,000 to 258,000, with a significant portion of the boost coming from the carnage wrought by Hurricane Helene. Continuing claims, which are tallied from a week before, rose by to 42K 1.861 million.
Between Helene and Milton, the jobs numbers are going to suck for a while.
We also had the consumer inflation data coming out today, and inflation fell slightly to 2.4% year over year.
In terms of macroeconomics, I have no clue as to what this means.
In terms of climatology and atmospheric science, it's rather clearer: If we do not get a handle on greenhouse gas emissions, we are completely f%$#ed.
It turns out that the connected television manufacturers are spying on their customers in a way that would give J. Edgar Hoover a hard on.
This is not an acceptable state of events:
The companies behind the streaming industry, including smart TV and streaming stick manufacturers and streaming service providers, have developed a "surveillance system" that has "long undermined privacy and consumer protection," according to a report from the Center for Digital Democracy (CDD) published today and sent to the Federal Trade Commission (FTC). Unprecedented tracking techniques aimed at pleasing advertisers have resulted in connected TVs (CTVs) being a "privacy nightmare," according to Jeffrey Chester, report co-author and CDD executive director, resulting in calls for stronger regulation.
The 48-page report, How TV Watches Us: Commercial Surveillance in the Streaming Era [PDF], cites Ars Technica, other news publications, trade publications, blog posts, and statements from big players in streaming—from Amazon to NBCUniversal and Tubi, to LG, Samsung, and Vizio. It provides a detailed overview of the various ways that streaming services and streaming hardware target viewers in newfound ways that the CDD argues pose severe privacy risks. The nonprofit composed the report as part of efforts to encourage regulation. Today, the CDD sent letters to the FTC [PDF], Federal Communications Commission (FCC), California attorney general [PDF], and California Privacy Protection Agency (CPPA) [PDF], regarding its concerns.
"Not only does CTV operate in ways that are unfair to consumers, it is also putting them and their families at risk as it gathers and uses sensitive data about health, children, race, and political interests,” Chester said in a statement.………
The report notes "misleading" privacy policies that have minimal information on data collection and tracking methods and the use of marketing tactics like cookie-less IDs and identity graphs that make promises of not collecting or sharing personal information "meaningless."
"As a consequence, buying a smart TV set in today’s connected television marketplace is akin to bringing a digital Trojan Horse into one’s home," it says.
You left off the DoJ.
Seriously, we need to see executives frog-marched out ………
Huh ……… I'm saying that a lot today, aren't I?
We now have another example of Boeing retaliating against whistleblowers.
Half the reason that they have a strike now is that the rank and file employees want to make good aircraft, and management doesn't:
Late last year, Boeing employee Craig Garriott says a 4-ton satellite inside an El Segundo plant fell after engineers failed to properly secure a clamp.
No one was injured by the collapse of the $1 billion-plus satellite that happened over a weekend, but it could have been fatal if workers were present, Garriott claims.
The incident highlighted a raft of safety violations that were ignored by management, according to a whistleblower lawsuit that was recently transferred to federal court in Los Angeles.
In the lawsuit, the veteran Boeing employee alleges that his employer retaliated against him for speaking out about problems he saw at Boeing and Millennium Space Systems, a Boeing defense contractor that makes small satellites.
………
The lawsuits come as the Arlington, Va.-based aerospace giant’s new chief executive, Kelly Ortberg, grapples with a strike by its machinists union and ongoing controversies over its manufacturing and safety practices — including how it treats employee whistleblowers who have alleged quality control and other problems.
In June, outgoing CEO Dave Calhoun admitted at a Senate hearing that whistleblowers have faced retaliation — saying “I know it happens” — with Boeing promising to take steps to fix the problem.
Saying, "I know it happens," without following up with, "They have all been fired," is a tell that current Boeing management will never take steps to fix the problem.
Once again, we need to hold managers who did this, and managers who looked the other way, criminally liable for this behavior.
As I note occasionally, they need to be frog-marched out of their offices in handcuffs.
Ecch (Twitter) has agreed to follow Brazilian law and Brazilian court rulings in order to keep operating in Brazil.
I'm sure that Snoflake Elon is stewing over that one.
Software body shop Cognizant has been found liable for discriminating against non H1-B employees.
This is not discrimination against white people, it's that they saved money using H1-B employees, because they knew that if they were fired, they could be deported.
It's against the law, but within the spirit of the program, which is all about using employee precarity to suppress wages:
Cognizant Technology Solutions Corp. engaged in a pattern of discriminatory conduct toward non-Indian workers and should pay punitive damages to compensate employees who suffered harm, a US jury found.
The verdict came after the IT firm failed to persuade a Los Angeles federal judge last month to toss a 2017 job bias class-action lawsuit when a previous trial ended with a deadlocked jury.
………
Bloomberg News reported in July that the Teaneck, New Jersey-based company was among a handful of outsourcing firms exploiting loopholes in the H1-B visa lottery system. The company defended its practices, saying it’s fully compliant with US laws on the visa process. Cognizant also said that in recent years it has increased its US hiring and reduced its dependence on the H1-B program.
The technical legal term for Cognizant's defense is, "Bullsh%$." It's all about paying the employees less.
………
The Los Angeles case began after three employees who identify as “Caucasian” claimed in a lawsuit that Cognizant made a practice of giving preference to South Asians in employment decisions. The plaintiffs alleged they were terminated after being “benched” with no work for five weeks and then replaced by “visa-ready” workers from India set to be deployed to US projects and assignments.
Cognizant had the highest number of H-1B visas of any US employer from 2013 to 2019, according to Citizenship and Immigration Services.
Again, this not about white or brown or black, it's about green. Cognizant wants to pay below market wages.
You could do that with a bidding process, where the people who have real unmet skills needs will outbid those who have a need for skills on the cheap.
The fix is fairly simple, raise the cost of getting an H1-B high enough that it is no longer a lower cost option.
Also, frog-march these rat-f%$#s out of their offices in handcuffs.
I have been saying for some time that Boeing can no longer make planes.
Based on the revelations from previously undiscovered communications between Boeing and Ethiopian Airlines, it's now clear that they just did not care.
In late 2018, Ethiopian Airlines’ chief pilot sent an urgent message to Boeing, the manufacturer of the 737 Max airliner.
Barely a month earlier, a 737 Max operated by Lion Air of Indonesia had plunged into the sea, killing everyone on board. The cause appeared to be a problem with the plane’s flight control system.
The Ethiopian carrier also flew the 737 Max, and the chief pilot wanted more information from Boeing about the emergency procedures to follow if the same problem that doomed the Lion Air flight should recur. At the time, Boeing was providing detailed briefings to pilots in the United States who were asking the same types of questions about how to respond.
But Boeing chose not to answer the Ethiopian pilot’s questions beyond referring him to a public document it had already issued after the Lion Air crash. Boeing said in its response that it was prohibited from giving additional information because it was providing technical support to Indonesian authorities investigating that crash.………
Three months after the request by Ethiopian Airlines, one of its 737 Max’s nose-dived into the ground after takeoff from Addis Ababa, Ethiopia’s capital, killing all 157 people on board. The main cause was found to be the same flawed flight control system responsible for the Lion Air flight crash, a failure that presented the Ethiopian Airlines pilots with the very same kinds of life-or-death decisions about how to respond that the chief pilot had asked about months earlier.
Or maybe they just don't care about Black pilots:
………
After the Lion Air crash, Boeing executives sought out U.S. pilots to brief them on topics that were not discussed with the Ethiopian pilots, including long-term strategies for improving flight safety, a recording of the briefing shows.
………
The company’s representatives highlighted efforts to address and clarify what they called misunderstandings related to MCAS. They pushed for training that would extend beyond routine checklists, focusing instead on equipping pilots with a thorough understanding of system behaviors and potential failures.
………
Despite the constraints Boeing described in the response to the Ethiopian chief pilot, Boeing officials discussed numerous details of the Lion Air crash.
………
The Ethiopian report, released in December 2022, found that if Boeing had provided more information to the carrier’s pilots about how to respond in the event of a software malfunction, they might have been able to regain control of the aircraft.
“The investigation found the questions raised by the airline to be safety critical, and if Boeing had answered the questions raised by the training department either directly or indirectly,” the report said, the outcome might have been different.
The Ethiopian investigators also had access to the emails between the chief pilot and Boeing and included them in their report. But Boeing’s unwillingness to provide the airline with more detailed guidance went largely unnoticed at the time.………
The emails — which were not made available to congressional investigators in the United States and only came to the attention of some families of those killed in the crash last year — are now part of an effort by the families to block the plea deal.
The families argue that the agreement does not do enough to hold Boeing and its executives responsible for the crashes or to address what they see as deep-rooted problems in Boeing culture and operations that are leaving air travelers at risk.
There are not many problems that one can arrest one's way out of, but this is one of them.
Frog march every executive in the authority over the MCAS debacle out of their offices in handcuffs.\
That will make the useless MBA types think twice about f%$#ing the company to get this year's stock options.
Trump Gets Unhinged, Even for Him, Over Kamala Harris ‘60 Minutes’ Interview—The Daily Beast
It's that interior clause, "Even for Him," that makes this headline.
If Trump is so upset over this, he could give the interview that the news magazine program has requested.
Donald Trump—who agreed to an interview with the CBS newsmagazine show 60 Minutes before backing out—has gone on the warpath at Kamala Harris for her performance on the show.
“The Interview on 60 Minutes with Comrade Kamala Harris is considered by many of those who reviewed it, the WORST Interview they have ever seen,” he wrote, in a Tuesday morning post on Truth Social. “She literally had no idea what she was talking about, and it was an embarrassment to our Country that a Major Party Candidate would be so completely inept.”
If the interview were as bad as he claims, and he implies a Razorfish level of fail, he would be happy, not irate.
………
Trump seemingly wants no part of that level of scrutiny. The Republican nominee for president accepted an invitation to a similar sitdown interview on the storied program, but his campaign later “decided not to participate,” a CBS spokesperson told CNN.
I've not seen the interview, but it appears that it touched a nerve.
So, the New York Times has finally noticed that Donald Trump is bat-sh%$ insane.
Even then, they do their level best to fob this observation on a 3rd party, specifically a computer program that counts words, because they are cowardly pissants.
Being a cowardly pissant is antithetical to journalism, but they are all nepo-babies there, so it does not matter:
The New York Times has finally weighed in on the subject of Donald Trump’s mental unfitness. On Sunday, Peter Baker and Dylan Freedman described Trump’s obvious problems at great length.Of course they are. For some reason, other media outlets see the New York Times imprimatur as authorization to cover this story. I'm not sure why, because that f%$#ing paper is a sh%$-show, but it is what it is.
It marked a red-letter day for journalism.
The New York Times is by far the most influential news organization in the media ecosphere. By publishing this story, it has created a permission structure for others to more directly address the issue of Trump’s mental fitness.
So let’s go! Start your engines! As I wrote, perhaps a bit prematurely a few weeks ago, Trump’s mental capacity is now topic one.
………
As Michael Tomasky wrote in The New Republic on Monday, Baker and Freedman’s piece “could stand as the single most important piece of journalism in this election” – particularly if “the Times keeps finding ways to raise this question, and … other mainstream outlets follow.”
I don't expect them to run this non-stop though, because when he was President, Trump gave the NYT a one on one interview, so they lack the motivation of narcissistic butt-hurt.
BTW, here are the weasel words:
………
The heart of the story was a statistical analysis:According to a computer analysis by The New York Times, Mr. Trump’s rally speeches now last an average of 82 minutes, compared with 45 minutes in 2016. Proportionately, he uses 13 percent more all-or-nothing terms like “always” and “never” than he did eight years ago, which some experts consider a sign of advancing age.
Similarly, he uses 32 percent more negative words than positive words now, compared with 21 percent in 2016, which can be another indicator of cognitive change. And he uses swearwords 69 percent more often than he did when he first ran, a trend that could reflect what experts call disinhibition. (A study by Stat, a health care news outlet, produced similar findings.)
You know, considering the allegations of tumult in his campaign, a real journalist could do more than say, "We have a computer program that counts words," but that is actual work.
………
Another giant problem with the article was that it failed to use the word “lie” even once. And it failed to connect the dots between Trump’s “rambling” and how his constant lies are not random – they come straight from the authoritarian playbook, consistently intended to divide the nation and terrify voters into electing a strongman. (See Ruth Ben-Ghiat.)
It’s also worth noting that Baker snuck an astonishing revelation into his 19th paragraph:Some of Mr. Trump’s cabinet secretaries had a running debate over whether the president was “crazy-crazy,” as one of them put it in an interview after leaving office, or merely someone who promoted “crazy ideas.” There were multiple conversations about whether the 25th Amendment disability clause should be invoked to remove him from office, although the idea never went far.How long has Baker been sitting on this quote? And while there have been vague reports in the past about such conversations within the cabinet, they’ve been in the context of the Jan. 6 insurrection, not his mental health. That strikes me as newsworthy.
He sat on it until he was certain that he could not get a book deal out of this, like many other NYT staffers (looking at you nepo-baby Maggie Haberman) and Bob Woodward did.
I don't expect much to come of this. The Times spent years writing about Biden's alleged cognitive decline, and there is less than a month to the election, but we should see more coverage from places like the Washington Post, LA times, Boston Globe, Chicago Sun Times, etc.
I knew that the Crystal Palice was constructed quickly and cheaply for the 1851 London exposition, but I did not know that this was largely because it was the first building constructed with standardized threads on its nuts and bolts.
Whitworth had already written his book on common threads in use, but I thought that standardized threads did not come into general use until decades later:
London's Great Exhibition of 1851 attracted some 6 million people eager to experience more than 14,000 exhibitors showcasing 19th-century marvels of technology and engineering. The event took place in the Crystal Palace, a 990,000-square-foot building of cast iron and plate glass originally located in Hyde Park. And it was built in an incredible 190 days. According to a recent paper published in the International Journal for the History of Engineering and Technology, one of the secrets was the use of a standardized screw thread, first proposed 10 years before its construction, although the thread did not officially become the British standard until 1905.
“During the Victorian era there was incredible innovation from workshops right across Britain that was helping to change the world," said co-author John Gardner of Anglia Ruskin University (ARU). "In fact, progress was happening at such a rate that certain breakthroughs were perhaps never properly realized at the time, as was the case here with the Crystal Palace. Standardization in engineering is essential and commonplace in the 21st century, but its role in the construction of the Crystal Palace was a major development."
………
Paxton's design called for what was essentially a giant conservatory consisting of a multidimensional grid of 24-foot modules. The design elements included 3,300 supporting columns with four flange faces, drilled so they could be bolted to connecting and base pieces. (The hollow columns did double duty as drainage pipes for rainwater.) The design also called for diagonal bracing (aka cross bracing) for additional stability.
The cross braces were bolted, which could have been a major headache, since screws were traditionally made by skilled craftsmen, such that no two were exactly alike and it was nearly impossible to replace lost or broken screws. Paxton's design called for 30,000 nuts and bolts; screws with a consistent thread form would have streamlined the construction process considerably. James Whitworth had proposed a common standard thread in an 1841 paper, based on his analysis of an extensive collection of screw bolts from the main British producers. And thanks to the invention of Henry Maudslay's screw-cutting lathe around 1798, the technology needed to create standard screws already existed.
………
Gardner and Kiss had their answer: The Crystal Palace was constructed with a standardized screw thread. "Often technical objects such as nuts and bolts seem distant from the human, based in theories and standards that are set from above," the authors concluded. "However, the Whitworth screw thread is in fact an organic form with human practice at its center. It is a form that has influenced all standard thread forms since."
International Journal for the History of Engineering and Technology, 2024. DOI: 10.1080/17581206.2024.2391984 (About DOIs).
Yeah, I love this sort of stuff.
I'm not getting a Tesla. I'm keeping my 1978 Trabant.I’m sorry, this is the funniest single photo of the entire election cycle. pic.twitter.com/w6PuJlPPmW
— Sonny Bunch (@SonnyBunch) October 6, 2024
Donald Trump is the sane looking one. (WTF?)tfw you have acquired another idiot son https://t.co/E3tTVBBCXb pic.twitter.com/sBS2Eu29n9
— Alex Shephard (@alex_shephard) October 6, 2024
The Apartheid Era Emerald Heir Pedo Guy™ spoke at a Trump rally in Butler, Pennsylvania.
Not a good look, but it was made even worse by him jumping around like a chihuahua on meth.
People memed the sh%$ out of this.
What can I say about this but, somewhere in America there is a village looking for their idiot who has wandered off.
"I'm not making this up, you know."
There was a meet the candidates forum for candidates running for the state legislature in district 6 in Idaho, and when one of the audience members asked about discrimination in the state, the incumbent state senator Dan Forman, a Republican (Of course), said that there was none in the state.
I guess that he's never experienced any discrimination, because he's white,
Christian, and a bigot
When Trish Carter-Goodheart called him out on this, noting that just because
he never felt discriminated against it does not mean that there is no
discrimination, and that she had experienced discrimination and bigotry many
times in her life and in Idaho.
His response was to tell her to go back from where she came from.
Needless to say, Ms. Carter-Goodhear, a member of the Nez Perce, whose ancestors were in North America when Mr. Forman's ancestors were running naked through the woods of Europe painting their bodies blue, was unimpressed.
A bipartisan forum in a small Latah County community took a turn when Republican Senate incumbent Dan Foreman stormed out of the event, following a racist outburst directed at a Native American candidate.
On Tuesday, local Democrat and Republican representatives organized a “Meet your candidates” forum in the northern Idaho town of Kendrick. Three contenders from each party vying for District 6 legislative seats - one senate and two house representatives positions - answered questions submitted by audience members.
When asked if discrimination existed in Idaho, conservative Sen. Dan Foreman said no.
In a statement released Wednesday, Democratic candidate for House Seat A and member of the Nez Perce tribe Trish Carter-Goodheart said she pushed back on that idea when it was her turn to speak, pointing to her own experience and the history of white supremacy groups in Northern Idaho.
“[J]ust because someone hasn’t personally experienced discrimination, doesn’t mean it’s not happening. Racism and discrimination are real issues here in Idaho, as anyone familiar with our state’s history knows,” the statement read. “I highlighted our weak hate crime laws and mentioned the presence of the Aryan Nations in northern Idaho as undeniable evidence of this reality.”
Foreman stood up and angrily interjected, using an expletive to criticize what he cast as the liberal bent of the response, according to the release and people present at the forum.
Carter-Goodheart said he then told her she should go back to where she came from, and heatedly stormed off. One event organizer and two other panelists confirmed Carter-Goodheart’s account, adding Foreman appeared very agitated.
(Emphasis Mine)
This sort of sh%$ is why I could never be a political humorist. This is
beyond my capacity for mockery.
I am referring, of course to Hurricane Milton, which went from a Category 1 Hurricane to Category 5 in less than a 24 hours, and now has sustained winds of over 180 mph and a pressure in the eye of less than 900 millibar.
It's dropped slightly since peak, but they are looking at a 12-15 foot storm surge in the Tampa area.
Sunday morning, it was just a tropical storm.
Don't worry though, Florida is protected from woke types who have been warning about anthropogenic climate change. You can thank Ron DeSantis for that.
Another note, even at its worst, Milton will not be the most deadly weather event in the United States.
It might not even be in the top 10.
Typically, the most deadly weather events are heat waves, where you can see thousands of deaths.
Yes, Marjorie Taylor Greene is asserting that the government created the hurricane with our super-duper weather control machine.
I just wanted to know that I just got off the phone with ZOG, and there were no Jewish Space Lasers involved in this storm.
I've heard reports that the Israeli Air Force used sonic booms during a live speech by Hassan Nazrallah to triangulate his position.
Former Las Vegas Councilwoman and former Nevada candidate for Governor Linda Fiore has been convicted of fraud after getting caught using money for a slain officer's memorial for herself.
I don't mean some of the money, I mean all of the money:
Former Las Vegas City Councilwoman Michele Fiore was convicted of federal fraud charges Thursday after she used donations intended for a fallen police officer’s memorial for her personal gain, marking a downfall for the firebrand conservative who nearly became Nevada’s treasurer two years ago.
A Las Vegas jury convicted Fiore, 54, of six counts of wire fraud and one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud. Each count carries a maximum sentence of 20 years imprisonment. She will be sentenced Jan. 6 and had little reaction as Judge Jennifer Dorsey read the verdict.………
The verdict culminated a trial that included testimony from dozens of witnesses, including Gov. Joe Lombardo, FBI agents, local business owners and Fiore’s daughter. Fiore declined to testify.
The case centered on the construction of a statue honoring Alyn Beck, a Las Vegas police officer killed in the line of duty in 2014. Federal prosecutors accused Fiore — across six months in 2019 and 2020 while serving as a councilwoman — of soliciting donations to her PAC and nonprofit for the construction of the statue but using the money for personal use, including her rent, plastic surgery and another daughter’s wedding.………
A real estate group, Olympia Companies, originally agreed to pay for half of the statue but ultimately footed the entire bill, according to testimony from Chris Armstrong, a company executive. The statue’s sculptor also testified that Fiore never gave money for the memorial.
Several witnesses testified that Fiore had pledged to use their donations to fund the statue, but that they were never contacted about the money no longer being needed, and that they were not fully reimbursed. Others who testified about giving money to Fiore for the statue included Tommy White, the secretary-treasurer of Laborers Local 872, attorney Peter Palivos and former Henderson Mayor Robert Groesbeck.
It wasn't that she took some of the money, she took it all.
Serious MAGAt, BTW. Among other things, she released a cheese cakey gun fondling calendar a few years back.
Seriously. If you are gonna be corrupt, don't take it all. That's some third world sh%$.
As you may be aware,UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer was forced to sack his chief of staff Sue Gray following multiple missteps, including her and the PM taking gifts of high fashion clothing worth thousands of pounds.
The final straw was when someone at 10 Downings Street leaked the fact that she was paid more than he was. (Link for the quote in the title here)
Sue Gray has resigned from her position as Keir Starmer’s chief of staff after finding herself at the centre of a political storm since Labour came into power.
Gray will be replaced by Morgan McSweeney, who masterminded Starmer’s succession from Jeremy Corbyn, and with whom she is said to have found herself at odds in government.
………
Gray would take on a new government role as the prime minister’s envoy for the regions and nations, No 10 announced, as Starmer shook up his entire top-team after facing intense pressure to put an end to the hostile briefings that had at times overshadowed his first 100 days.
Envoy for the regions and nations means sacked.
This is what happens when you have a government with no moral center. Everything becomes palace intrigue, which does not work. (Though it does make for amusing episodes of Yes, Minister and The Thick of It)
This is the logical extension of Blairism.
When you believe in nothing, all that is left is the quest for power, and unlike the contemptible Tony Blair, Keir Starmer cannot fake sincerity as well.
It's why his popularity has fallen 45% in only a few weeks.
Well, that and leaving senior citizens to freeze in the winter.
It's time to acknowledge that Sam Altman is a fraud (snollygoster?) who is running a con that has allowed him to raise billions of dollars.
Large language model "Artificial Intelligence" in general, and OpenAI in particular have nothing of value to deliver at their current state, and likely will never have anything to deliver, because they are bullsh%$ generators that have no understanding at all:
OpenAI announced this week that it has raised $6.6 billion in new funding and that the company is now valued at $157 billion overall. This is quite a feat for an organization that reportedly burns through $7 billion a year—far more cash than it brings in—but it makes sense when you realize that OpenAI’s primary product isn’t technology. It’s stories.
Case in point: Last week, CEO Sam Altman published an online manifesto titled “The Intelligence Age.” In it, he declares that the AI revolution is on the verge of unleashing boundless prosperity and radically improving human life. “We’ll soon be able to work with AI that helps us accomplish much more than we ever could without AI,” he writes. Altman expects that his technology will fix the climate, help humankind establish space colonies, and discover all of physics. He predicts that we may have an all-powerful superintelligence “in a few thousand days.” All we have to do is feed his technology enough energy, enough data, and enough chips.
Maybe someday Altman’s ideas about AI will prove out, but for now, his approach is textbook Silicon Valley mythmaking. In these narratives, humankind is forever on the cusp of a technological breakthrough that will transform society for the better. The hard technical problems have basically been solved—all that’s left now are the details, which will surely be worked out through market competition and old-fashioned entrepreneurship. Spend billions now; make trillions later! This was the story of the dot-com boom in the 1990s, and of nanotechnology in the 2000s. It was the story of cryptocurrency and robotics in the 2010s. The technologies never quite work out like the Altmans of the world promise, but the stories keep regulators and regular people sidelined while the entrepreneurs, engineers, and investors build empires. (The Atlantic recently entered a corporate partnership with OpenAI.)
As an aside here, the fact that The Atlantic has partnered with OpenAI is not a surprise. Enthusiastic support of bad ideas is core branding for them.
Despite the rhetoric, Altman’s products currently feel less like a glimpse of the future and more like the mundane, buggy present. ChatGPT and DALL-E were cutting-edge technology in 2022. People tried the chatbot and image generator for the first time and were astonished. Altman and his ilk spent the following year speaking in stage whispers about the awesome technological force that had just been unleashed upon the world. Prominent AI figures were among the thousands of people who signed an open letter in March 2023 to urge a six-month pause in the development of large language models ( LLMs) so that humanity would have time to address the social consequences of the impending revolution. Those six months came and went. OpenAI and its competitors have released other models since then, and although tech wonks have dug into their purported advancements, for most people, the technology appears to have plateaued. GPT-4 now looks less like the precursor to an all-powerful superintelligence and more like … well, any other chatbot.
I call it a slightly improved ELIZA program, but basically it's the same thing.
Short version: A parrot has speech, but it does not have language, and LLMs are much the same.
………
In Altman’s rendering, this moment in time is just a waypoint, “the doorstep of the next leap in prosperity.” He still argues that the deep-learning technique that powers ChatGPT will effectively be able to solve any problem, at any scale, so long as it has enough energy, enough computational power, and enough data. Many computer scientists are skeptical of this claim, maintaining that multiple significant scientific breakthroughs stand between us and artificial general intelligence. But Altman projects confidence that his company has it all well in hand, that science fiction will soon become reality. He may need $7 trillion or so to realize his ultimate vision—not to mention unproven fusion-energy technology—but that’s peanuts when compared with all the advances he is promising.
There’s just one tiny problem, though: Altman is no physicist. He is a serial entrepreneur, and quite clearly a talented one. He is one of Silicon Valley’s most revered talent scouts. If you look at Altman’s breakthrough successes, they all pretty much revolve around connecting early start-ups with piles of investor cash, not any particular technical innovation.
Actually, if you look at Altman's career, he's not even a particularly good rainmaker. He created a failed social network (Loopt) whose "Special Sauce" was that it would spy on you even more intensely than Facebook, he was fired from YCombinator for not showing up to work and personally trading in companies that they backed, etc.
He's just a bunco artist.
As I have noted the carbon credit market is a particularly criminogenic activity, and we have another example of this, with the CEO of a major carbon credit developer being charged with a massive years long carbon credit fraud.
Hoocoodanode?On 2 October 2024, the US Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York announced criminal charges against Ken Newcombe, ex-CEO of carbon credit project developer, C-Quest Capital LLC. Newcombe was indicted on wire fraud, commodities fraud, and securities fraud. If found guilty, he faces up to 20 years in prison.
In February 2024, Newcombe resigned as CEO of C-Quest Capital, the company he set up in 2008. C-Quest is incorporated in the tax and secrecy haven of Delaware.
Newcombe was a major promoter of carbon trading, having worked at the World Bank, Climate Change Capital, and Goldman Sachs, before launching C-Quest Capital.
He was a member of Verra’s board [The non profit responsible for setting the Verified Carbon Standard for carbon offsets] from 2007 to December 2023.
………
The charges are against Newcombe and Tridip Goswami, former head of C-Quest’s carbon and sustainable accounting team. Jason Steele, C-Quest’s ex-chief operating officer pleaded guilty and is cooperating with the US authorities.
The indictment accuses Newcombe and Goswami of carrying out a fraud from 2021 to 2023 that resulted in their company CQC Impact Investors LLC “fraudulently obtaining carbon credits worth tens of millions of dollars”.
They are accused of “fraudulently altering data to show that CQC’s cookstoves achieved increased fuel savings and by manipulating the data-collection process to make it appear that more of CQC’s stoves were operational than was actually the case”. CQC allegedly received millions more carbon credits than it otherwise would have done because of this fraud.
Newcombe is also accused of using the fraudulently obtained carbon credits to deceive an investor into agreeing to invest up to US$250 million in CQC. The deal also included the investor buying some of Newcombe’s shares for more than US$16 million.
As an FYI, this technology is nothing new. It's called a, "Rocket Stove", and it is generally more efficient than conventional wood stoves.
Of course, their business model was to use this to generate carbon credits, and there it would be difficult, if not impossible, to get honest numbers for this, so they lied.
The carbon credit markets encourage fraud, whether it is something like this, or as is the casse of organizations like the Nature Conservancy, reselling forests that had already been set aside for preservation.
This is why I favor a carbon tax over cap and trade.
I described Microsoft's plan to be the exclusive purchaser of the output from that plant as jumping the shark.
But it just got even worse, because the owner of the plant, Constellation Energy, is seeking government subsidies to restart energy production.
So now, it's not just Microsoft throwing money at the most notorious nuclear plant in the United States to power its misbegotten efforts in artificial intelligence, they want the taxpayers to subsidize this.
The owner of the shuttered Three Mile Island nuclear plant is pursuing a $1.6 billion federal loan guarantee to help finance its plan to restart the Pennsylvania facility and sell the electricity to Microsoft to power data centers, according to details of the application shared with The Washington Post.
The taxpayer-backed loan could give Microsoft and Three Mile Island owner Constellation Energy a major boost in their unprecedented bid to steer all the power from a U.S. nuclear plant to a single company.
Microsoft, which declined to comment on the bid for a loan guarantee, is among the large tech companies scouring the nation for zero-emissions power as they seek to build data centers. It is among the leaders in the global competition to dominate the field of artificial intelligence, which consumes enormous amounts of electricity.
………
The restart plan has already generated controversy as energy experts debate the merits of providing separate federal subsidies for the project, in the form of tax credits. Constellation’s pursuit of the $1.6 billion federal loan guarantee, which has not been previously disclosed, is likely to intensify that debate.
………
A loan guarantee would allow Constellation to shift much of the risk of reopening Three Mile Island to taxpayers. The federal government, in this case, would pledge to cover up to $1.6 billion if there is a default. The guarantees are typically used by developers to lower the cost of project financing, as lenders are willing to offer more favorable terms when there is federal backing.
And if Microsoft changes its mind in the years that it will take to reactivate the plant? The taxpayers will be on the hook.
Taxpayers would be on the hook if difficulties or delays occur during the refurbishment of the plant, which are almost certain.
F%$# no.
The cybersecurity firm IronNet, founded by former senior US intelligence officials, has shut down with a general odor of corruption.
Sounds to me like they thought that they could use their professional connections to sell nothing to the government.
The future was once dazzling for IronNet.That former director would be General Keith Alexander.
Founded by a former director of the National Security Agency and stacked with elite members of the U.S. intelligence establishment, IronNet promised it was going to revolutionize the way governments and corporations combat cyberattacks.
Its pitch — combining the prowess of ex-government hackers with cutting-edge software – was initially a hit. Shortly after going public in 2021, the company’s value shot past $3 billion.
I cannot imagine that their special sauce was anything beyond the potential to hire government employees after their retire.
I'm sure that Alexander made a lot of money after the IPO.
………
IronNet’s rise and fall also raises questions about the judgment of its well-credentialed leaders, a who’s who of the national security establishment. National security experts, former employees and analysts told The Associated Press that the firm collapsed, in part, because it engaged in questionable business practices, produced subpar products and services, and entered into associations that could have left the firm vulnerable to meddling by the Kremlin.
Last September the never-profitable company announced it was shutting down and firing its employees after running out of money, providing yet another example of a tech firm that faltered after failing to deliver on overhyped promises.
The firm’s crash has left behind a trail of bitter investors and former employees who remain angry at the company and believe it misled them about its financial health.
“I’m honestly ashamed that I was ever an executive at that company,” said Mark Berly, a former IronNet vice president. He said the company’s top leaders cultivated a culture of deceit “just like Theranos,” the once highly touted blood-testing firm that became a symbol of corporate fraud.
Remember how I noted that generals are in bed with defense contractors because of an implicit promise of a comfortable sinecure on retirement.
This is just a particularly egregious example of this.
………
IronNet’s founder and former CEO Keith Alexander is a West Point graduate who retired as a four-star Army general and was once one of the most powerful figures in U.S. intelligence. He oversaw an unprecedented expansion of the NSA’s digital spying around the world when he led the U.S.’s largest intelligence agency for nearly a decade.
Alexander, who retired from the government in 2014, remains a prominent voice on cybersecurity and intelligence matters and sits on the board of the tech giant Amazon. Alexander did not respond to requests for comment.
IronNet’s board has included Mike McConnell, a former director of both the NSA and national intelligence; Jack Keane, a retired four-star general and Army vice chief of staff, and Mike Rogers, the former Republican chairman of the House Intelligence Committee who is running for the U.S. Senate in Michigan. One of IronNet’s first presidents and co-founders was Matt Olsen, who left the company in 2018 and leads the Justice Department’s National Security Division.Alexander’s reputation and the company’s all-star lineup ensured IronNet stood out in a competitive market as it sought contracts in the finance and energy sectors, as well as with the U.S. government and others in Asia and the Middle East.
Translation to that last paragraph: They were the selling personal and professional connections of senior executives and board members, not any unique knowledge of cybersecurity threats or cybersecurity strategies.
………
Top officials were prohibited from unloading their stock for several months, but Alexander was allowed to sell a small amount of his shares. He made about $5 million in early stock sales and bought a Florida mansion worth the same amount.
Well, that beats working for a living.
………
It did not take long for IronNet’s promises to slam into a tough reality as it failed to land large deals and meet revenue projections. Its products simply didn’t live up to the hype, according to former employees, experts and analysts.
Stiennon, the cybersecurity investing expert, said IronNet’s ideas about gathering threat data from multiple clients were not unique and the company’s biggest draw was Alexander’s “aura” as a former NSA director.
The AP interviewed several former IronNet employees who said the company hired well-qualified technicians to design products that showed promise, but executives did not invest the time or resources to fully develop the technology.
Of course they didn't. This was about insider access, not technology.
Attempting to outflank right-to-repair legislation, John Deere made promises to ease repair of their tractors and other agricultural equipment.
This is not a surprise. Extracting maximum money to the detriment of their customers is a core business strategy for Deere:
US Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) has sent a letter to John May, CEO of agricultural equipment maker Deere & Company, questioning whether John Deere is living up to the promises it made to support people's right to repair.
And if it's not fulfilling those promises, it may be failing in its obligations under America's Clean Air Act, she added.
In January 2023, following years of legal challenges from farmers wanting to simply fix their own farm equipment outside authorized dealerships, John Deere signed a memorandum of understanding with the American Farm Bureau Federation (AFBF).
The agreement [PDF] calls for the manufacturing giant to provide farmers and independent repair shops with the tools, software, and documentation necessary to fix broken Deere-made agricultural machines, such as tractors and harvesters. In exchange, the AFBF agreed "to refrain from introducing, promoting, or supporting federal or state 'Right to Repair' legislation" that goes beyond what's promised in the MOU.
Essentially, Deere promised to play nice and help people fix their machines, by providing the tools and support needed, and the federation would back off from pushing for tough laws enshrining the right to repair.But according to Senator Warren's missive [PDF], dated Wednesday, John Deere has not lived up to those commitments, and the MOU looks like a gambit to sabotage strong right-to-repair legislation, which is being adopted in various states and has the support of the Biden administration.
John Deere has been promising to play nice for some time, and they never keep their promises.
Stop negotiating, and fire up the lawsuits, lobbying for right to repair laws, and institute administrative actions to make their business plan untenable.
Trusting the company is a losing proposition.
In the journal Nature Medicine, a paper is showing that,"SARS-CoV-2-specific plasma cells are not durably established in the bone marrow long-lived compartment after mRNA vaccination.
Translated into English, it means that immunity to the disease falls off of a cliff after 3 months.
Abstract
Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) mRNA vaccines are effective at protecting from severe disease, but the protective antibodies wane rapidly even though SARS-CoV-2-specific plasma cells can be found in the bone marrow (BM). Here, to explore this paradox, we enrolled 19 healthy adults at 2.5–33 months after receipt of a SARS-CoV-2 mRNA vaccine and measured influenza-, tetanus- or SARS-CoV-2-specific antibody-secreting cells (ASCs) in long-lived plasma cell (LLPC) and non-LLPC subsets within the BM. Only influenza- and tetanus-specific ASCs were readily detected in the LLPCs, whereas SARS-CoV-2 specificities were mostly absent. The ratios of non-LLPC:LLPC for influenza, tetanus and SARS-CoV-2 were 0.61, 0.44 and 29.07, respectively. In five patients with known PCR-proven history of recent infection and vaccination, SARS-CoV-2-specific ASCs were mostly absent from the LLPCs. We show similar results with measurement for secreted antibodies from BM ASC culture supernatant. While serum IgG titers specific for influenza and tetanus correlated with IgG LLPCs, serum IgG levels for SARS-CoV-2, which waned within 3–6 months after vaccination, were associated with IgG non-LLPCs. In all, our studies suggest that rapid waning of SARS-CoV-2-specific serum antibodies could be accounted for by the absence of BM LLPCs after these mRNA vaccines.
The study does not do a comparison between mRNA and other vaccines, so it is unclear whether this is an artifact of the Covid virus or of the mRNA vaccines, but I'm due for a booster, and I am getting Novavax, and I recommend that you do to.
Remember though, I am an engineer, not a doctor, dammit*, so my advice is simply based on my very flawed gut, and nothing else.
Any shot is better than no shot.
*I love it when I get to go all Dr. McCoy!
California has banned legacy admission at all colleges and universities in the state, including private institutions.
This is a good thing. Legacy admissions as defined in this law get us people like Jared Kushner:
It will soon be illegal for public and private universities in California to consider an applicant’s relationship to alumni or donors when deciding whether to admit them.
Gov. Gavin Newsom on Monday signed a ban on the practice known as legacy admissions, a change that will affect prestigious institutions including Stanford University and the University of Southern California.
California’s law, which will take effect Sept. 1, 2025, is the nation’s fifth legacy admissions ban, but only the second that will apply to private colleges.………
Like other states, California won’t financially penalize violators, but it will post the names of violators on the state Department of Justice’s website.
California will also add to data reporting requirements that it implemented in 2022, when private colleges had to start sharing the percentage of admitted students who were related to donors and alumni. Schools that run afoul of the new law will also have to report more granular demographic information about their incoming classes to the state, including the race and income of enrolled students as well as their participation in athletics.
Technically, this would unlawful, not illegal. If it were illegal, there would be a possibility of fines and arrests.
When some District Attorney arrest school administrators because they engaged in a criminal conspiracy for doing this, I'll believe that people are serious about enforcing this.
Actually, I'll believe this when we see mass arrests at Stanford University.
Following an improved offer on wages, the International Longshoremen’s Association has agreed to suspend its strike until January while further negotiations continue.
Basically, I think that the United States Maritime Alliance expected Biden to invoke Taft-Hartley to force the longshoremen back to work, and Bidens strident refusal to do so, basically f%$# no, forced them back to the bargaining table:
The International Longshoremen’s Association agreed on Thursday to suspend a strike that closed down major ports on the East and Gulf Coasts. The move followed an improved wage offer from port employers.As an FYI, that's about a 10.1% a year increase per year when you figure in compounding.
The strike, which the dockworkers’ union began on Tuesday, threatened to weigh on the economy five weeks before national elections. Employers, represented by the United States Maritime Alliance, have offered to increase wages by 62 percent over the course of a new six-year contract, according to a person familiar with negotiations who did not want to be identified because the talks were continuing. That increase is lower than what the union had initially asked for, but much higher than the alliance’s earlier offer.
In a statement, the union said that it had reached “a tentative agreement on wages” and that its 45,000 members would go back to work, with the current contract extended until Jan. 15. The union said it was returning to the bargaining table “to negotiate all other outstanding issues.” The alliance issued a similar statement.
The agreement came after the White House pressed both sides to reach a deal to end the strike, the union’s first full-scale walkout since 1977. The wage increase is a clear victory for the I.L.A. and its combative president, Harold J. Daggett, a 78-year-old, third-generation dockworker who has led the union since 2011.………
A 62 percent increase would raise the top longshoremen’s wage to just over $63 per hour at the end of a new six-year contract, from today’s $39 per hour. And at $63 an hour, the wages of East and Gulf Coast longshoremen would slightly exceed those that will be earned by West Coast longshoremen, who belong to a different union, at the end of their contract in 2027.
In the resumed talks, the issue of how much automation can occur at the ports could divide the sides. The union has also been pressing for improved retirement benefits.
Another potential sticking point is the pay of longshoremen who are just starting out and don’t earn the top wage rate. Mr. Daggett’s son, Dennis A. Daggett, a senior official at the I.L.A., said in an interview on Tuesday on a picket line in Bayonne, N.J., that the union wanted to get higher wages for less experienced members.
This is a good thing, though I would have preferred that the union suspend the strike for a shorter period. If Trump wins, they will have to conclude negotiations with the certainty of a Taft-Hartley back to work order on January 21.
It is a real stem winder, with the non-farm payroll jumping by 254,000, much higher than the consensus forecast of 150,000, and the unemployment rate fell by 0.1% to 5.1%.
Additionally the jobs games in July and August were revised up, and wages were up 4% year over year vs a 2.5% increase in the consumer price index.
It's good news, unless the Federal reserve chooses to make it bad news.
Wages picked up slightly last month, according to the Labor Department. Average hourly earnings rose 4% from a year earlier, the strongest increase since May. That was well above the pace of inflation, which is positive news for price-pinched consumers. The consumer-price index was up 2.5% in August from a year earlier.
………
Inflationary pressures have eased markedly over the past two years, and the Fed’s focus has shifted more to hiring than price increases. That means the jobs market will play an outsize role in Fed officials’ decisions on the path of interest rates.
Conventional wisdom holds that cooling inflation comes hand-in-hand with a sharp slowdown in the labor market. However, over the past couple of years, U.S. employers have muscled through high interest rates with continued hiring, and inflation has fallen significantly. That combination, if sustained, would amount to a big win for the Fed.
The wage increases are because workers have become more militant, and, because of Covid deaths and long Covid disability, there are fewer workers to take the jobs.
A lot of this may be in response to the Federal Reserve cutting interest rates and implying that further rates are coming down the pipe.
Senator Marco Rubio is claiming that the numbers are fake which is a lie, but we are talking about Marco Rubio, so lying is a mandatory feature.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
The Jack Smith filing has been released in redacted form to the public.
There is a lot to go over, but the short version is that the President has no role in elections, and as such attempts to subvert the election are not an official act.
Also, the filing appears to show that Trump knew that he had lost which eliminates even that potential loophole.
Also, I think that it inevitable that former VP Mike Pence will be a witness in the trial.
When the special counsel, Jack Smith, charged former President Donald J. Trump last year with plotting to overturn the 2020 election, the federal indictment filed in Washington had only one defendant: Mr. Trump himself, who stood accused of working with a small team of conspirators.
But in a court filing unsealed on Wednesday, Mr. Smith drew on the actions of a much larger group to tell the tale of how Mr. Trump lost the race but sought to stay in the White House.
He populated his brief with a sprawling cast of characters — lawyers, longtime Trump aides, campaign operatives, even some of the rioters who stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021 — who all played a supporting role either for or against Mr. Trump’s attempts to cling to power.
Most of them were not named in the 165-page filing, and were referred to only by numeric monikers, though many of their identities could be divined from details in the brief. And the sheer scope of the crew was evidenced by the fact that the anonymized references started with Person 1 and went all the way to Person 71.
………
Among those characters was Eric Herschmann, a lawyer who had met Mr. Trump through his childhood friend, Jared Kushner, the former president’s son-in-law.
Identified as Person 9 in the brief, Mr. Herschmann started working in the White House as an assistant to the president in August 2020. During the chaotic weeks after Mr. Trump had been defeated, Mr. Herschmann offered what Mr. Smith described as “the unvarnished truth” about the “claims of fraud” that Mr. Trump and his allies were advancing.
………As the brief says, Mr. Herschmann — whose name appears unredacted but slightly misspelled at one point in the document — was aware that two outside consulting firms had looked at and debunked most of the claims. At one point, he warned Mr. Trump that if he brought them into court “they would get slaughtered” because they were “all bullshit.”
………
The brief asserts that Mr. Trump had a conversation with Mr. Bannon a little less than 15 minutes before he called Mr. Pence on Jan. 1.
During that call, Mr. Trump is said in the brief to have told Mr. Pence that if he did not go through with the plans, hundreds of thousands of people were “gonna hate your guts” and were “gonna think you’re stupid.”
First, it's clear, giving Trump's history of stochastic terrorism, that this is an explicit threat.
Second, it makes clear how Pence has to testify.
………
If Mr. Smith’s filing was in many ways a trial brief, setting forth the most detailed picture yet of how Mr. Trump had sought to disrupt the lawful transfer of power, it also had a much more narrow legal purpose: It was sent to the judge in the case, Tanya S. Chutkan, to help her determine how much of the indictment can survive the Supreme Court’s landmark ruling granting Mr. Trump a broad form of immunity for many official acts he took in office.
Which reminds me, we need to start getting serious about reforming the deeply corrupt Supreme Court.
That's the sentence given to former Mesa County Clerk Tina Peters for election tampering.
It probably won't mean more than 3 years behind bars, but it's a good start:
Tina Peters, a former county election official in Colorado, was sentenced Thursday to nine years behind bars after being found guilty of charges connected to efforts to copy election data from her office as Donald Trump and his allies spread false claims that the 2020 election was stolen and searched for evidence to prove it.
Judge Matthew Barrett, who presided over the sentencing, also ordered Peters, the former Mesa County clerk, to pay thousands of dollars in fines.
Peters, who had asked for probation, emphasized earlier in Thursday’s sentencing that maintaining her innocence was not a form of disrespect of the law, saying, “I’m not a criminal, and I don’t deserve to go to a prison where other people committed heinous crimes.”
But in his sentencing decision, Barrett said Peters used her privilege “to obtain power, a following and fame.”
“You are no hero, you abused your position, and you’re a charlatan who used and is still using your prior position in office to peddle a snake oil that’s been proven to be a snake oil time and time again,” the judge remarked before handing down the sentence.
That is one seriously pissed off judge.
………
In August, a Colorado jury found Peters guilty on seven of 10 charges, including several counts of attempting to influence a public servant and conspiracy to commit criminal impersonation.
Prosecutors charged Peters in 2022 and accused her of helping to secretly copy Dominion Voting Systems hard drives by sneaking Conan Hayes, a former professional surfer and purported computer expert, into secure areas of her office in 2021 using someone else’s security badge. Within months, data from her office appeared online and was featured at a symposium held by Mike Lindell, the MyPillow chief executive who continues to trumpet false claims about elections and seeks to end the use of machines that count ballots.
This sort of sh%$ needs to be slapped down hard.
Not because it reduced confidence in the election, but because what she did could have been, and might very well have been, an attempt to change the vote totals.
When the Republicans make accusations of election fraud, they are projecting.
Unemployment and layoffs
Economic indicatorsInitial unemployment claims rose by 6,000 by 250,000 last week, with continuing claims falling by 1,000 to 1.826 million.
So not a big change, and the Purchasing Manager Index seems to be generally positive.
So it looks like for the next month or so, we won't see any big moves in the economy:
The number of Americans filing new applications for unemployment benefits increased marginally last week, but the devastation unleashed by Hurricane Helene in the U.S. Southeast and strikes at Boeing and ports could distort the labor market picture in the near-term.
The report from the Labor Department on Thursday showed the labor market gliding at the end of the third quarter, a state of affairs that could allow the Federal Reserve to be in no rush to deliver large interest rate cuts. The economy also ended the third quarter on solid footing, with another report showing services sector activity rose to the highest level in just over 1-1/2 years in September amid strong growth in new orders.
"For the moment, the labor market looks steady as a rock and the economy appears to have missed falling headlong over the cliff into the depths of recession," said Christopher Rupkey, chief economist at FWDBONDS. "Fed officials are unlikely to hurry ahead with aggressive interest rate cuts unless the labor market deteriorates further."Initial claims for state unemployment benefits increased by 6,000 last week to a seasonally adjusted 225,000 for the week ended Sept. 28. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast 220,000 claims for the latest week.
—
The economy appears to have retained most of its strength from the second quarter. The Institute for Supply Management said in a separate report on Thursday that its non-manufacturing purchasing managers index (PMI) jumped to 54.9 last month, the highest level since February 2023, from 51.5 in August.
A PMI reading above 50 indicates growth in the services sector, which accounts for more than two-thirds of the economy. While services sector employers are holding back on hiring, workers are also scarce in some industries. The ISM noted that responses from businesses in the survey last month included "employees leaving, and it's tough to find new ones."
I'm not sure what this all means, and trying to make predictions about the economy is a path to madness.
And not the good kind of madness. I mean the kind of madness that makes you gibber, Tekeli Li!"
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
I think that this is more horror than it is comedy.
H/t Boing Boing
The National Labor Relations Board has ruled that Amazon has illegally refused to bargain with its drivers’ union.
We really need to start prosecuting these rat-f%$#s criminally.
If Jeff Bezos or Andy Jassy spent a few years cooling their heels in Club Fed, or even a few days waiting for bail to be adjudicated, there would be a lot less law breaking.
Whink of it as "Broken Windows Policing" for white people:
The National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) has filed charges against Amazon, alleging that the e-commerce giant has illegally refused to bargain with a union representing drivers who are frustrated by what they claim are low wages and dangerous working conditions.
Back in August, drivers celebrated what they considered a major win when the NLRB found that Amazon was a joint employer of sub-contracted drivers, cheering "We are Amazon workers!" At that time, Amazon seemed to be downplaying the designation, telling Ars that the union was trying to "misrepresent" a merit determination that the NLRB confirmed was only "the first step in the NLRB’s General Counsel litigating the allegations after investigating an unfair labor practice charge."
But this week, the NLRB took the next step, signing charges soon after Amazon began facing intensifying worker backlash, not just from drivers but also from disgruntled office and fulfillment workers. According to Reuters, the NLRB accused Amazon of "a series of illegal tactics to discourage union activities" organized by drivers in a Palmdale, California, facility.
Amazon has found itself in increasingly hot water ever since the Palmdale drivers joined the International Brotherhood of Teamsters union in 2021. The NLRB's complaint called out Amazon for terminating its contract with the unionized drivers without ever engaging in bargaining.
Amazon and its executives knew what they were doing, and they made extensive plans to do so.
That's a felony, and is also covered by the RICO statutes, and it's a felony.
Frog march them out of their offices in handcuffs.
The heart transplant program at Newark Beth Israel Medical Center had a problem, the one year survival rate of their program was well below the national average.
Rather than addressing the issues that led to poor performance, they adopted an interesting tactic, they kept patients on life support until the year had passed, boosting their statistics.
This is a classic example of Goodheart's Law, "When a measure becomes a target, it ceases to be a good measure."
This is also highly unethical, and likely constitutes criminal fraud:
In 2018, Darryl Young was hoping for a new lease on life when he received a heart transplant at a New Jersey hospital after years of congestive heart failure. But he suffered brain damage during the procedure and never woke up.You know, if we treated crooked doctors and crooked stock brokers with even half of the severity and ferocity that our criminal justice system treats black graffiti artists, these folks would be held without bail awaiting trial.
The following year, a ProPublica investigation revealed that Young’s case was part of a pattern of heart transplants that had gone awry at Newark Beth Israel Medical Center in 2018. The spate of bad outcomes had pushed the center’s percentage of patients still alive one year after surgery — a key benchmark — below the national average. Medical staff were under pressure to boost that metric. ProPublica published audio recordings from meetings in which staff discussed the need to keep Young alive for a year, because they feared another hit to the program’s survival rate would attract scrutiny from regulators. On the recordings, the transplant program’s director, Dr. Mark Zucker, cautioned his team against offering Young’s family the option of switching from aggressive care to comfort care, in which no lifesaving efforts would be made. He acknowledged these actions were “very unethical.”
ProPublica’s revelations horrified Young’s sister Andrea Young, who said she was never given the full picture of her brother’s condition, as did the findings of a subsequent federal regulator’s probe that determined that the hospital was putting patients in “immediate jeopardy.” Last month, she filed a medical malpractice lawsuit against the hospital and members of her brother’s medical team.
………
The 2019 CMS investigation determined that Newark Beth Israel’s program placed patients in “immediate jeopardy,” the most serious level of violation, and required the hospital to implement corrective plans. Newark Beth Israel did not agree with all of the regulator’s findings and in a statement at the time said that the CMS team lacked the “evidence, expertise and experience” to assess and diagnose patient outcomes.
The same could be said for the doctors and managers at Newark Beth Israel Medical Center.
Jail the doctors and the administrators, and shut down their transplant program.
Simple as that.
Remember when Disney said that a years old agreement for a trial membership in Disney+?
Well now Uber is forcing a couple to arbitration because their daughter clicked on a popup for Uber eats.
It turns out that the marketing devision of the Sirius Cybernetic Corporation will be be the SECOND group of mindless jerks up against the wall when the revolution comes:
A New Jersey couple seriously injured when their Uber driver ran a red light and collided with another car has lost a bid to take legal action against the company in court.
John McGinty and Georgia McGinty argue Uber is enforcing an arbitration agreement after their daughter clicked “agree” when presented with updated terms and conditions while ordering food via her mom’s Uber Eats account.
Uber says that Georgia McGinty’s account on its app received a “full-screen pop-up” on several occasions, which required the user to accept updated terms of use before accessing its service.
It comes amid heightened scrutiny around the terms of leading tech platforms. This summer Disney faced a backlash after its attorneys initially argued the terms and conditions a widower agreed to on the Disney+ streaming service protected the company from a wrongful death lawsuit he brought over his wife’s death after eating at a Disney World restaurant.
Last month, a New Jersey court of appeals sided with Uber against the McGintys, allowing the ride-hailing and delivery company to enforce an arbitration agreement requiring the couple to arbitrate their personal injury claims, rather than litigating them in court.………
The couple added that they were “horrified” that a large corporation like Uber could “avoid being sued in a court of law by injured consumers because of contractual language buried in a dozen-page-long user agreement concerning services unrelated to the one that caused the consumers’ injuries.”
To quote Elvis Costello, " I used to be disgusted and now I try to be amused."
I am not all surprised by this, but I am still disgusted.
Congress needs to repeal the Federal Arbitration Act.
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A member of the Democratic wing of the Democratic party, and a fan of Bernie who thinks Neoliberal (DLC/New Dem) trickle down conomics sucks.Mechanical Engineer with a background in defense, electronics packaging, medical & food equipment, transportation, and manufacturing.
In my spare time (Hah!), I am the developer of the Firefox addon, bbCode for Web Extensions (bbCodeWebEx).
I have two cats, a black cat, and a gray and white long hair cat, who keep me on my toes. (Because he keeps attacking my feet)
I am a Jew and a Zionist, who is married to a woman with exquisitely bad taste in men, and I have two remarkable children with her.
It's a posting ground for my more-or-less annual personal newsletter, 40 Years in the Desert.(PDF's available at link)
I find that if I wait until year's end I miss stuff from earlier in the year.
40 Years is put out the old fashioned way, it's printed out on ledger sized paper with 4 pages and mailed to people, total circulation of about 100.
I'm just not the holiday card kind of guy. A warning, if you comment here, I may use it in my paper publication.
You will get credit, and if I can get your postal adress, you will get at least the issue where you are quoted (probably a lot more, I rarely trim my list).
If someone actually wants to pay for an issue...I don't know, I guess a buck, but you can get the PDF's free.
I intend to post at least a couple of times a week,