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'America Is Slow-Walking Into a Polymarket Disaster'

In an opinion piece for The Atlantic, senior editor Saahil Desai argues that media outlets are increasingly treating prediction markets like Polymarket and Kalshi as legitimate signals of reality. The risk, as Desai warns, is a future where news coverage amplifies manipulable betting odds and turns politics, geopolitics, and even tragedy into speculative gambling theater. Here's an excerpt from the report: [...] The problem is that prediction markets are ushering in a world in which news becomes as much about gambling as about the event itself. This kind of thing has already happened to sports, where the language of "parlays" and "covering the spread" has infiltrated every inch of commentary. ESPN partners with DraftKings to bring its odds to SportsCenter and Monday Night Football; CBS Sports has a betting vertical; FanDuel runs its own streaming network. But the stakes of Greenland's future are more consequential than the NFL playoffs.

The more that prediction markets are treated like news, especially heading into another election, the more every dip and swing in the odds may end up wildly misleading people about what might happen, or influencing what happens in the real world. Yet it's unclear whether these sites are meaningful predictors of anything. After the Golden Globes, Polymarket CEO Shayne Coplan excitedly posted that his site had correctly predicted 26 of 28 winners, which seems impressive -- but Hollywood awards shows are generally predictable. One recent study found that Polymarket's forecasts in the weeks before the 2024 election were not much better than chance.

These markets are also manipulable. In 2012, one bettor on the now-defunct prediction market Intrade placed a series of huge wagers on Mitt Romney in the two weeks preceding the election, generating a betting line indicative of a tight race. The bettor did not seem motivated by financial gain, according to two researchers who examined the trades. "More plausibly, this trader could have been attempting to manipulate beliefs about the odds of victory in an attempt to boost fundraising, campaign morale, and turnout," they wrote. The trader lost at least $4 million but might have shaped media attention of the race for less than the price of a prime-time ad, they concluded. [...]

The irony of prediction markets is that they are supposed to be a more trustworthy way of gleaning the future than internet clickbait and half-baked punditry, but they risk shredding whatever shared trust we still have left. The suspiciously well-timed bets that one Polymarket user placed right before the capture of Nicolas Maduro may have been just a stroke of phenomenal luck that netted a roughly $400,000 payout. Or maybe someone with inside information was looking for easy money. [...] As Tarek Mansour, Kalshi's CEO, has said, his long-term goal is to "financialize everything and create a tradable asset out of any difference in opinion." (Kalshi means "everything" in Arabic.) What could go wrong? As one viral post on X recently put it, "Got a buddy who is praying for world war 3 so he can win $390 on Polymarket." It's a joke. I think.

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FBI's Washington Post Investigation Shows How Your Printer Can Snitch On You

alternative_right quotes a report from The Intercept: Federal prosecutors on January 9 charged Aurelio Luis Perez-Lugones, an IT specialist for an unnamed government contractor, with "the offense of unlawful retention of national defense information," according to an FBI affidavit (PDF). The case attracted national attention after federal agents investigating Perez-Lugones searched the home of a Washington Post reporter. But overlooked so far in the media coverage is the fact that a surprising surveillance tool pointed investigators toward Perez-Lugones: an office printer with a photographic memory. News of the investigation broke when the Washington Post reported that investigators seized the work laptop, personal laptop, phone, and smartwatch of journalist Hannah Natanson, who has covered the Trump administration's impact on the federal government and recently wrote about developing more than 1,000 government sources. A Justice Department official told the Post that Perez-Lugones had been messaging Natanson to discuss classified information. The affidavit does not allege that Perez-Lugones disseminated national defense information, only that he unlawfully retained it.

The affidavit provides insight into how Perez-Lugones allegedly attempted to exfiltrate information from a Secure Compartmented Information Facility, or SCIF, and the unexpected way his employer took notice. According to the FBI, Perez-Lugones printed a classified intelligence report, albeit in a roundabout fashion. It's standard for workplace printers to log certain information, such as the names of files they print and the users who printed them. In an apparent attempt to avoid detection, Perez-Lugones, according to the affidavit, took screenshots of classified materials, cropped the screenshots, and pasted them into a Microsoft Word document. By using screenshots instead of text, there would be no record of a classified report printed from the specific workstation. (Depending on the employer's chosen data loss prevention monitoring software, access logs might show a specific user had opened the file and perhaps even tracked whether they took screenshots).

Perez-Lugones allegedly gave the file an innocuous name, "Microsoft Word - Document1," that might not stand out if printer logs were later audited. In this case, however, the affidavit reveals that Perez-Lugones's employer could see not only the typical metadata stored by printers, such as file names, file sizes, and time of printing, but it could also view the actual contents of the printed materials -- in this case, prosecutors say, the screenshots themselves. As the affidavit points out, "Perez-Lugones' employer can retrieve records of print activity on classified systems, including copies of printed documents." [...] Aside from attempting to surreptitiously print a document, Perez-Lugones, investigators say, was also seen allegedly opening a classified document and taking notes, looking "back and forth between the screen corresponding the classified system and the notepad, all the while writing on the notepad." The affidavit doesn't state how this observation was made, but it strongly suggests a video surveillance system was also in play.



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Apple Reportedly Replacing Siri Interface With Actual Chatbot Experience For iOS 27

According to Bloomberg's Mark Gurman, Apple is reportedly planning a major Siri overhaul in iOS 27 and macOS 27 where the current assistant interface will be replaced with a deeply integrated, ChatGPT-style chatbot experience. "Users will be able to summon the new service the same way they open Siri now, by speaking the 'Siri' command or holding down the side button on their iPhone or iPad," says Gurman. "More significantly, Siri will be integrated into all of the company's core apps, including ones for mail, music, podcasts, TV, Xcode programming software and photos. That will allow users to do much more with just their voice." 9to5Mac reports: The unannounced Siri overhaul will reportedly be revealed at WWDC in June as the flagship feature for iOS 27 and macOS 27. Its release is expected in September when Apple typically ships major software updates. While Apple plans to release an improved version of Siri and Apple Intelligence this spring, that version will use the existing Siri interface. The big difference is that Google's Gemini models will power the intelligence. With the bigger update planned for iOS 27, the iOS 26 upgrade to Siri and Apple Intelligence sounds more like the first step to a long overdue modernization.

Gurman reports that the major Siri overhaul will "allow users to search the web for information, create content, generate images, summarize information and analyze uploaded files" while using "personal data to complete tasks, being able to more easily locate specific files, songs, calendar events and text messages." People are already familiar with conversational interactions with AI, and Bloomberg says the bigger update to Siri will be support both text and voice. Siri already uses these input methods, but there's no real continuity between sessions.

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Shinjuku, January 2020

mikeleonardvisualarts has added a photo to the pool:

Shinjuku, January 2020

Tassel on the temple bell rope

lioil has added a photo to the pool:

Tassel on the temple bell rope

Gokurakuji, Kamakura, Japan

Shinjuku, January 2020

mikeleonardvisualarts posted a photo:

Shinjuku, January 2020

Chuck Close, self portrait

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Chuck Close, self portrait

Nelson Mandela

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Nelson Mandela

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Studie: Parkinson vaker bij mannen, hoogopgeleiden en in noorden

UTRECHT (ANP) - Het risico op het krijgen van de ziekte van Parkinson is groter onder mannen, hoogopgeleiden en mensen die in het noorden van Nederland wonen. Dat komt onder andere naar voren uit onderzoek van de Universiteit Utrecht en het Radboudumc naar de spreiding van de ongeneeslijke hersenaandoening.

De onderzoekers keken naar data tussen 2017 en 2022 en maakten aan de hand daarvan een kaart waarop te zien is waar Parkinson het vaakst voorkomt. Zo valt op dat de ziekte vaker voorkomt in Friesland en Groningen dan bijvoorbeeld in Zeeland. Maar waardoor dat komt, is niet helder.

Mannen krijgen vaker Parkinson dan vrouwen, zien de onderzoekers. Mogelijke verklaringen daarvoor zijn dat mannen via hun werk vaker worden blootgesteld aan schadelijke stoffen en dat vrouwelijke hormonen de hersenen deels beschermen. Ook mensen met een hogere sociaaleconomische positie krijgen vaker Parkinson. Volgens de onderzoekers kan het zijn dat leefstijl, zoals het rookgedrag, hierbij een rol speelt, want mensen die niet roken hebben een hoger risico op Parkinson.


Australië begonnen met dag van rouw voor slachtoffers Bondi Beach

SYDNEY (ANP/RTR) - Australië is donderdag begonnen met een nationale dag van rouw voor de slachtoffers van de schietpartij op Bondi Beach. In het hele land hangen de vlaggen halfstok voorafgaand aan een herdenkingsceremonie bij het iconische Opera House in Sydney.

Op 14 december openden twee schutters het vuur tijdens een chanoeka-viering. Daarbij kwamen 15 mensen om het leven. Het was de ergste massaschietpartij in Australië in decennia. "Vandaag is een kans voor ons om de 15 levens te herdenken en respect te betuigen", zei premier Anthony Albanese tegen verslaggevers.

Om iets na 19.00 uur lokale tijd wordt er een minuut stilte gehouden. "Dit is een gelegenheid om die minuut te nemen om echt na te denken over wat er is gebeurd en respect te betuigen, en ik nodig alle Australiërs uit om deel te nemen aan het in acht nemen van die minuut stilte", zei Albanese.