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Post by GhostofEd on Jun 15, 2018 12:36:42 GMT
Hi Ed..She can try to keep it but if I'm not mistaken The IRS might have a say by placing a value on it..putting taxes due (plus interest)and forcing a sale..even if Nasa dropped whatever claim..For sure He didnt that kid any favors..if it is the real thing to begin with..there are people who still believe..let me stop.. Yes there is some doubt if it's real. Could be from one of the earth sites used for rehearsals! If real, I wonder if she could change her story and say it was gifted by an alien and find some loophole in the IRS requirements. I don't know if they specify any exemptions based on nationality of the giver. I doubt the IRS will accept that because it will be used as proof of ET's and serve as disclosure. Can't have a government agency acknowledge something like that so they'll deny and get the money they deserve. A win win.
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Post by Deleted on Jun 15, 2018 15:03:45 GMT
Hi Ed..She can try to keep it but if I'm not mistaken The IRS might have a say by placing a value on it..putting taxes due (plus interest)and forcing a sale..even if Nasa dropped whatever claim..For sure He didnt that kid any favors..if it is the real thing to begin with..there are people who still believe..let me stop.. Yes there is some doubt if it's real. Could be from one of the earth sites used for rehearsals! If real, I wonder if she could change her story and say it was gifted by an alien and find some loophole in the IRS requirements. I don't know if they specify any exemptions based on nationality of the giver. I doubt the IRS will accept that because it will be used as proof of ET's and serve as disclosure. Can't have a government agency acknowledge something like that so they'll deny and get the money they deserve. A win win. I swear..Yeah They get Theirs..Thats why they are getting impatient waiting for for all those databases from NSA Amazon Ebay etc to come really together and follow every penny....With an AI thinks its God behind them....will give new meaning to Give Ceaser whats Ceasers God whats his ..they get it all!
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Post by GhostofEd on Jun 15, 2018 17:05:47 GMT
Famed Stanford Prison Experiment was a fraud, scientist saysBy Tamar Lapin
June 14, 2018 | 4:22pm
One of the most famous–and controversial– psychology studies ever conducted is a fraud, a scientist claims in a new report.
Not only was the Stanford Prison Experiment a sham, but it’s mastermind, Stanford psychology professor Philip Zimbardo, pushed participants towards the results he wanted, Dr. Ben Blum claims in a report published on Medium last week.
The 1971 experiment pitted young male volunteers against each other – with some assigned to act as guards and the others as inmates in a mock prison. As the experiment began, the fake guards immediately took to their roles, instituting authoritarian measures and torturing the inmates, who passively took the abuse.
Read more about this possible fake experiment here (condensed version): LINK
and here (source for condensed version): LINK2
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Post by Deleted on Jun 15, 2018 18:56:00 GMT
Great Catch--..wow..Stanford.LMH..it became like..Gospel in the Shrink community..I remember those films we saw in class based on that..wonder how many textbooks they will have to redo? Jillions I bet..I remember teachers paying decent $$ donning certain head gear that distorted vision..and the esp tests..wasn't shabby money for being a guinea pig in fake experiments that went nowhere. Then I went in subbasement area where I saw what was done to the rats and chimps..It forever changed my mind about going into a Med or becoming psyc major..--That was Rutgers--But I Digress--
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Post by WingsofCrystal on Jun 15, 2018 19:22:50 GMT
Published on Jun 14, 2018
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Crystal
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Post by Deleted on Jun 16, 2018 3:30:54 GMT
Hey what you mean you're away crystal.. You know I'm a worry wort..
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Post by purr on Jun 16, 2018 9:57:24 GMT
Published on Jun 14, 2018
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Crystal This is so cool! Thanks Crystal, enjoyed tremendously. Judging by spontaneous oohs 'n ahh's & applause from a presumably tech oriented audience at this demo so did folks watching this ringside seat. And this was the "what we can do now" version, clearly we've seen nuttin yet (of the AI level of future generation robots, this is bound to present ethical and safety challenges!), and what strikes me is Boston Dynamic's miniaturisation and lightening trend. Robots are made better and smaller. The strong emotion I feel (and most people watching) to me indicate these could indeed be made into superb medical care robots. Medical and Psychological assistance to the elderly, special needs kids etc. I can imagine having helpers like these could make life with challenges less lonely, happier. Potential misuse too. I think companies like this will have military suitors and compete for lucrative contracts to make amazing, terrifying weapons. The doglike 'Spot' robot with modifications (just make it go real quiet like, and give it teeth(!), a taser/gun, some armor what have'ya) could make a hell of a soldier's companion on the battlefield. Or make it go it alone, tasked to autonomously identify and kill the enemy, linked to AI, and we're heading towards a Terminator scenario. Good stuff! purr
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Post by Deleted on Jun 16, 2018 10:36:03 GMT
AI's Version of Time Travel ..
Creepy-AI-predict-moves-advance-lead-level-Big-Brother-surveillance
The creepy AI that can predict the future: Machine that anticipates your movements several minutes in advance could pave the way for next-level Big Brother surveillance Algorithm was able to accurately predict actions minutes before they happened Researchers trained the AI with four hours of cooking videos Dr Jürgen Gall wants to be able to anticipate things 'hours before they happen' An intelligent machine capable of anticipating your next move minutes in advance sounds like the stuff of nightmares – but is now a reality. Researchers have taught an AI to recognise patterns in people’s actions, allowing it to accurately predict the next move in a sequence minutes in advance. The software, which was built by a team at the University of Bonn in Germany, was taught to anticipate actions by watching hours of cooking videos. Dr Jürgen Gall believes the intelligent software will eventually be able to prophesize your actions ‘hours before they happen’. If the team manages to fine-tune the algorithm to be able to anticipate actions that far in advance, it's possible to imagine a slew of real-world application, from home automation gadgets, to Big Brother-esque surveillance. To teach the AI to accurately predict actions before they take place, Dr Jürgen Gall and his team focused on cooking videos. Using pre-recorded videos of people preparing a meal, the researchers were able to teach the machine to recognise each action being performed on-screen, including cutting tomatoes, adding salt and flipping a pancake. In total, some 40 videos were used to teach the AI.
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Post by thelmadonna on Jun 16, 2018 11:02:31 GMT
AI's Version of Time Travel ..
Creepy-AI-predict-moves-advance-lead-level-Big-Brother-surveillance
The creepy AI that can predict the future: Machine that anticipates your movements several minutes in advance could pave the way for next-level Big Brother surveillance Algorithm was able to accurately predict actions minutes before they happened Researchers trained the AI with four hours of cooking videos Dr Jürgen Gall wants to be able to anticipate things 'hours before they happen' An intelligent machine capable of anticipating your next move minutes in advance sounds like the stuff of nightmares – but is now a reality. Researchers have taught an AI to recognise patterns in people’s actions, allowing it to accurately predict the next move in a sequence minutes in advance. The software, which was built by a team at the University of Bonn in Germany, was taught to anticipate actions by watching hours of cooking videos. Dr Jürgen Gall believes the intelligent software will eventually be able to prophesize your actions ‘hours before they happen’. If the team manages to fine-tune the algorithm to be able to anticipate actions that far in advance, it's possible to imagine a slew of real-world application, from home automation gadgets, to Big Brother-esque surveillance. To teach the AI to accurately predict actions before they take place, Dr Jürgen Gall and his team focused on cooking videos. Using pre-recorded videos of people preparing a meal, the researchers were able to teach the machine to recognise each action being performed on-screen, including cutting tomatoes, adding salt and flipping a pancake. In total, some 40 videos were used to teach the AI.
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Post by thelmadonna on Jun 16, 2018 11:07:46 GMT
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Post by purr on Jun 16, 2018 11:16:40 GMT
AI's Version of Time Travel ..
Creepy-AI-predict-moves-advance-lead-level-Big-Brother-surveillance
The creepy AI that can predict the future: Machine that anticipates your movements several minutes in advance could pave the way for next-level Big Brother surveillance Algorithm was able to accurately predict actions minutes before they happened Researchers trained the AI with four hours of cooking videos Dr Jürgen Gall wants to be able to anticipate things 'hours before they happen' An intelligent machine capable of anticipating your next move minutes in advance sounds like the stuff of nightmares – but is now a reality. Researchers have taught an AI to recognise patterns in people’s actions, allowing it to accurately predict the next move in a sequence minutes in advance. The software, which was built by a team at the University of Bonn in Germany, was taught to anticipate actions by watching hours of cooking videos. Dr Jürgen Gall believes the intelligent software will eventually be able to prophesize your actions ‘hours before they happen’. If the team manages to fine-tune the algorithm to be able to anticipate actions that far in advance, it's possible to imagine a slew of real-world application, from home automation gadgets, to Big Brother-esque surveillance. To teach the AI to accurately predict actions before they take place, Dr Jürgen Gall and his team focused on cooking videos. Using pre-recorded videos of people preparing a meal, the researchers were able to teach the machine to recognise each action being performed on-screen, including cutting tomatoes, adding salt and flipping a pancake. In total, some 40 videos were used to teach the AI. Can there be a more innocuous choice than predicting what a cook will do (guessing: cooking?). Kat, such 'logarithms' I am aware of already existing in the tradition and training of martial arts. This development constitutes no more or less than creating programming teaching a machine to effectively track / detain / defeat / injure / kill human beings... And self improve on the go. Scary part: this thing will outthink'ya by predicting your next move(s)!
purr
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Post by Deleted on Jun 16, 2018 11:17:18 GMT
I'll fix that Thelma That happens when you do a copy of the general page that has all the images or a copy off search bar. Best to click on image and go to site..
Things moving fast Johnny! Breakthrough data storage innovation: One DNA molecule can store tons of data for 1M years
boingboing.net/2018/04/25/the-case-for-storing-digital-d.htmlAugust 18th, 2015 at 3:56 PM Genetic information stored in DNA molecules makes life on Earth possible, but what if humans could use the same kind of technology to store their own data? Apparently, scientists have figured out how to save massive quantities of information in a single molecule of DNA, which will store the data safely for up to 1 million years. DON’T MISS: OnePlus 2 review: There can be only one The Swiss Federal Institute of Technology has “fossilized” DNA by encapsulating it in glass, The Independent reports, to prolong the life of DNA that would store data. The scientists also came up with a mathematical algorithm that lets them decipher data written in DNA code. The scientists are using the way DNA is built to store information. DNA is based on sequences of four chemical building blocks, referred to as A, C, T, and G, which are used to code information. “A little after the discovery of the double helix architecture of DNA, people figured out that the coding language of nature is very similar to the binary language we use in computers,” Dr. Robert Grass said. “On a hard drive, we use zeros and ones to represent data, and in DNA we have four nucleotides, A, C, T and G.” Scientists used a machine to synthesize DNA molecules, and they were heated to 71C for a week, or the equivalent of being stored at 50C for 2,000 years. An ounce of DNA can fit on a penny, the news site writes, storing 300,000 terabytes of memory that can survive for up to 1 million years. Comparatively, an external hard drive with a capacity of a few terabytes can only last for up to 50 years. The problem with this discovery is that there’s no affordable way of turning it into a commercial product just yet. Furthermore, reading information from a DNA drive isn’t user-friendly. You could read the entire thing, but you can’t pinpoint the location of individual data blocks stored in DNA. That’s the next challenge for the Swiss team. “Right now, we can only read everything that’s in the drop. But I can’t point to a specific place within the drop and read only one file,” Grass said.
this from 2015
DNA: Beyond storing genetic data By Modern Healthcare | August 11, 2017 In what sounds like a bit of science fiction, scientists have found a way to store information in our DNA and alter our cells to carry out computing functions in the body. Welcome to the burgeoning field of synthetic biology.
Scientists have successfully encoded a short film (GIF) into the DNA of a living cell and recovered it later. This experiment could pave the way for engineered cells that record and store data.
The bit of film chosen for the experiment was an example of a pioneering technology of its day: Eadweard Muybridge's 1870s stop-motion photographs that were a precursor to movies. The photos demonstrated that all four of a horse's hooves were off the ground simultaneously, if momentarily, while galloping.
The implications for DNA technology are many. Harvard neuroscientist and lead author on the study Seth Shipman imagines a genetically engineered mouse whose cells could track the results of a treatment, a bacteria that could record life in an extreme environment, or record pollution in a stream as potential uses for the technology. Others have suggested more sci-fi and apocalyptic applications, like storing data in human cells to be passed on to future generations or preserving data in case of a nuclear apocalypse in radiation-resistant bacteria.
In a separate experiment, scientists demonstrated how living cells can be induced to carry out computations in the manner of tiny robots, incorporating RNA logic gates into living bacteria.
The basic principle of this research, using RNA-based devices to regulate protein production, could be applied to virtually any RNA input and usher in a new generation of accurate, low-cost diagnostics for a broad range of diseases.
Both studies were published recently in Nature.
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Post by WingsofCrystal on Jun 16, 2018 11:58:41 GMT
Good morning lovely UFOCasebookers
Crystal
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Post by WingsofCrystal on Jun 16, 2018 12:01:52 GMT
Published on Jun 14, 2018
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Crystal This is so cool! Thanks Crystal, enjoyed tremendously. Judging by spontaneous oohs 'n ahh's & applause from a presumably tech oriented audience at this demo so did folks watching this ringside seat. And this was the "what we can do now" version, clearly we've seen nuttin yet (of the AI level of future generation robots, this is bound to present ethical and safety challenges!), and what strikes me is Boston Dynamic's miniaturisation and lightening trend. Robots are made better and smaller. The strong emotion I feel (and most people watching) to me indicate these could indeed be made into superb medical care robots. Medical and Psychological assistance to the elderly, special needs kids etc. I can imagine having helpers like these could make life with challenges less lonely, happier. Potential misuse too. I think companies like this will have military suitors and compete for lucrative contracts to make amazing, terrifying weapons. The doglike 'Spot' robot with modifications (just make it go real quiet like, and give it teeth(!), a taser/gun, some armor what have'ya) could make a hell of a soldier's companion on the battlefield. Or make it go it alone, tasked to autonomously identify and kill the enemy, linked to AI, and we're heading towards a Terminator scenario. Good stuff! purr
Good morning Purr
Glad you liked it. It does make you wonder what is coming down the line with this tech. And not in a good way either.
Crystal
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Post by Deleted on Jun 16, 2018 12:22:02 GMT
Yayyy!..You frightened me on twitter Crystal....and by the way that was most awesome nature scene..I've seen! Today's object lesson in identifying CIA mind control and its deleterious affect on vulnerable groups..
It's funny..but it's true!
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