Tuesday, September 01, 2020

I suspect the adaptation has already occurred.

https://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/north-america/2020-08-31/coming-revolution-intelligence-affairs

The Coming Revolution in Intelligence Affairs

How Artificial Intelligence and Autonomous Systems Will Transform Espionage

For all of human history, people have spied on one another. To find out what others are doing or planning to do, people have surveilled, monitored, and eavesdropped—using tools that constantly improved but never displaced their human masters. Artificial intelligence (AI) and autonomous systems are changing all of that. In the future, machines will spy on machines in order to know what other machines are doing or are planning to do. Intelligence work will still consist of stealing and protecting secrets, but how those secrets are collected, analyzed, and disseminated will be fundamentally different.





So do windows, or am I missing something?

https://theintercept.com/2020/08/31/blueleaks-amazon-ring-doorbell-cameras-police/

DOORBELL CAMERAS LIKE RING GIVE EARLY WARNING OF POLICE SEARCHES, FBI WARNED

THE RISE OF the internet-connected home security camera has generally been a boon to police, as owners of these devices can (and frequently do) share footage with cops at the touch of a button. But according to a leaked FBI bulletin, law enforcement has discovered an ironic downside to ubiquitous privatized surveillance: The cameras are alerting residents when police show up to conduct searches.

A November 2019 “technical analysis bulletin from the FBI provides an overview of “opportunities and challenges” for police from networked security systems like Amazon’s Ring and other “internet of things,” or IoT, devices. Marked unclassified but “law enforcement sensitive” and for official use only, the document was included as part of the BlueLeaks cache of material hacked from the websites of fusion centers and other law enforcement entities.





Update?

https://www.bespacific.com/the-freedom-of-information-act-a-legal-overview-updated/

The Freedom of Information Act – A Legal Overview Updated

CRS report via LC – The Freedom of Information Act (FOIA): A Legal Overview, Updated August 24, 2020





Interesting. I’ll have to take my time reading it through.

https://www.economicliberties.us/our-work/close-to-home-how-the-power-of-facebook-and-google-affects-local-communities/

Close to Home: How the Power of Facebook and Google Affects Local Communities

http://www.economicliberties.us/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/Working-Paper-Series-on-Corporate-Power_6.pdf





My students also write…

https://www.bespacific.com/really-basic-rules-for-writing-good-papers-in-law-school/

Really Basic Rules for Writing Good Papers in Law School

Allison Christians, Really Basic Rules for Writing Good Papers in Law School, 23 Green Bag 2d 181 (2020) – “This extremely brief guide is intended to help students write good papers in law school. It covers paper structure, substance, and style.”

And if you like to see papers with consistent headings and useful tables of contents: Allison Christians, Using Word Styles to Improve Writing (July 22, 2019)





For my students.

https://medium.com/towards-artificial-intelligence/be-the-outlier-how-to-ace-data-science-interviews-9ba0f66122bf

Be the Outlier — How to Ace Data Science Interviews

Most of us arrive at a point where we are confused about how to prepare and what are the skills required for job interviews. We come across many books/websites/articles having catchy titles like “500 Data Science Questions”,” Amazon Data Scientist Interview Preparation”, etc. Some of these have really good questions but what they lack is being a complete package and some miss out on the prevailing market trends.

I recently came across a book having another catchy title and after giving a sample read, I decided to buy it. It was published in August 2020.

Be the Outlier: How to Ace Data Science Interviews



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