Tainted liquor kills dozens in India's Assam state AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at February 22, 2019, 11:30 pm)

Scores of others sickened by hooch laced with methyl alcohol, days after a similar tragedy killed over 100 people.
A Philosopher Argues That an AI Can't Be an Artist Slashdotby msmash on ai at January 1, 1970, 1:00 am (cached at February 22, 2019, 11:05 pm)

Sean Dorrance Kelly, a philosophy professor at Harvard, writes for MIT Technology Review: Human creative achievement, because of the way it is socially embedded, will not succumb to advances in artificial intelligence. To say otherwise is to misunderstand both what human beings are and what our creativity amounts to. This claim is not absolute: it depends on the norms that we allow to govern our culture and our expectations of technology. Human beings have, in the past, attributed great power and genius even to lifeless totems. It is entirely possible that we will come to treat artificially intelligent machines as so vastly superior to us that we will naturally attribute creativity to them. Should that happen, it will not be because machines have outstripped us. It will be because we will have denigrated ourselves. [...] My argument is not that the creator's responsiveness to social necessity must be conscious for the work to meet the standards of genius. I am arguing instead that we must be able to interpret the work as responding that way. It would be a mistake to interpret a machine's composition as part of such a vision of the world. The argument for this is simple. Claims like Kurzweil's that machines can reach human-level intelligence assume that to have a human mind is just to have a human brain that follows some set of computational algorithms -- a view called computationalism. But though algorithms can have moral implications, they are not themselves moral agents. We can't count the monkey at a typewriter who accidentally types out Othello as a great creative playwright. If there is greatness in the product, it is only an accident. We may be able to see a machine's product as great, but if we know that the output is merely the result of some arbitrary act or algorithmic formalism, we cannot accept it as the expression of a vision for human good.

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Donald Trump calls India-Pakistan standoff 'very dangerous' AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at February 22, 2019, 11:00 pm)

US president's remarks come in the backdrop of rising tension between the nuclear-armed neighbours over Kashmir attack.
'Netflix Is the Most Intoxicating Portal To Planet Earth' Slashdotby msmash on movies at January 1, 1970, 1:00 am (cached at February 22, 2019, 10:35 pm)

Instead of trying to sell American ideas to a foreign audience, it's aiming to sell international ideas to a global audience. From an op-ed: In 2016, the company expanded to 190 countries, and last year, for the first time, a majority of its subscribers and most of its revenue came from outside the United States. To serve this audience, Netflix now commissions and licenses hundreds of shows meant to echo life in every one of its markets and, in some cases, to blend languages and sensibilities across its markets. In the process, Netflix has discovered something startling: Despite a supposed surge in nationalism across the globe, many people like to watch movies and TV shows from other countries. "What we're learning is that people have very diverse and eclectic tastes, and if you provide them with the world's stories, they will be really adventurous, and they will find something unexpected," Cindy Holland, Netflix's vice president for original content, told me. The strategy may sound familiar; Hollywood and Silicon Valley have long pursued expansion internationally. But Netflix's strategy is fundamentally different. Instead of trying to sell American ideas to a foreign audience, it's aiming to sell international ideas to a global audience. A list of Netflix's most watched and most culturally significant recent productions looks like a Model United Nations: Besides Ms. Kondo's show, there's the comedian Hannah Gadsby's "Nanette" from Australia; from Britain, "Sex Education" and "You"; "Elite" from Spain; "The Protector" from Turkey; and "Baby" from Italy. I'll admit there's something credulous and naive embedded in my narrative so far. Let me get this straight, you're thinking: A tech company wants to bring the world closer together? As social networks help foster misinformation and populist fervor across the globe, you're right to be skeptical. But there is a crucial difference between Netflix and other tech giants: Netflix makes money from subscriptions, not advertising.

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Sudan's Bashir declares year-long state of emergency AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at February 22, 2019, 10:30 pm)

Omar al-Bashir dissolves government and imposes state of emergency in wake of months of protests demanding his ouster.
Linus Torvalds on Why ARM Won't Win the Server Space Slashdotby msmash on cloud at January 1, 1970, 1:00 am (cached at February 22, 2019, 9:35 pm)

Linus Torvalds: I can pretty much guarantee that as long as everybody does cross-development, the platform won't be all that stable. Or successful. Some people think that "the cloud" means that the instruction set doesn't matter. Develop at home, deploy in the cloud. That's bullshit. If you develop on x86, then you're going to want to deploy on x86, because you'll be able to run what you test "at home" (and by "at home" I don't mean literally in your home, but in your work environment). Which means that you'll happily pay a bit more for x86 cloud hosting, simply because it matches what you can test on your own local setup, and the errors you get will translate better. This is true even if what you mostly do is something ostensibly cross-platform like just run perl scripts or whatever. Simply because you'll want to have as similar an environment as possible. Which in turn means that cloud providers will end up making more money from their x86 side, which means that they'll prioritize it, and any ARM offerings will be secondary and probably relegated to the mindless dregs (maybe front-end, maybe just static html, that kind of stuff). Guys, do you really not understand why x86 took over the server market? It wasn't just all price. It was literally this "develop at home" issue. Thousands of small companies ended up having random small internal workloads where it was easy to just get a random whitebox PC and run some silly small thing on it yourself. Then as the workload expanded, it became a "real server". And then once that thing expanded, suddenly it made a whole lot of sense to let somebody else manage the hardware and hosting, and the cloud took over. Do you really not understand? This isn't rocket science. This isn't some made up story. This is literally what happened, and what killed all the RISC vendors, and made x86 be the undisputed king of the hill of servers, to the point where everybody else is just a rounding error. Something that sounded entirely fictional a couple of decades ago. Without a development platform, ARM in the server space is never going to make it. Trying to sell a 64-bit "hyperscaling" model is idiotic, when you don't have customers and you don't have workloads because you never sold the small cheap box that got the whole market started in the first place.

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Palestinians pray in long-closed part of Al-Aqsa in Jerusalem AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at February 22, 2019, 9:30 pm)

The area near Al-Rahma gate was closed by Israeli court order in 2003, Palestinians entered and prayed there on Friday.
Russian court extends detention of suspected US spy AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at February 22, 2019, 9:30 pm)

Ex-US marine Paul Whelan, accused of spying, to remain in prison for at least three more months pending investigation.
Singer R Kelly charged with sexual abuse: US media AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at February 22, 2019, 9:30 pm)

The R&B star, subject of a recent documentary series titled 'Surviving R Kelly', has previously denied abuse allegations
Norwich's Fortnite Live Festival Was a Complete Disaster Slashdotby msmash on business at January 1, 1970, 1:00 am (cached at February 22, 2019, 9:05 pm)

An anonymous reader shares a report: A festival designed to recreate Fortnite on the outskirts of Norwich has, somewhat predictably, not lived up to expectations. Event organisers flogged 2500 tickets to kids and parents. Entry cost upwards of $15 and unlimited access wristbands a further $26. In return, families got what amounted to a few fairground attractions. Photos from the event show a climbing wall for three people, archery for four people, and four go-karts. An attraction dubbed a "cave experience" was a lorry trailer with tarpaulin over it. An indoors area where you could play actual Fortnite was probably the best thing there -- although it cost money to access and you had to queue to do so. So much for free-to-play. And all of that was if you could actually get into the event to start with. Hundreds of people were left queuing for hours due to staff shortages.

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Inside Elizabeth Holmes's Chilling Final Months at Theranos Slashdotby msmash on business at January 1, 1970, 1:00 am (cached at February 22, 2019, 8:35 pm)

In the final months of Theranos, before the blood testing start-up was debunked and its founders charged with fraud, then-CEO Elizabeth Holmes brought a puppy, who she insisted was a wolf to others, with a penchant for peeing into the mix, according to Vanity Fair, which has detailed the chaos that ensued in the waning days of the startup, once valued at $9 billion. The 35-year-old Stanford University dropout has also met with filmmakers who she hopes would make a documentary about her "real story," the outlet reported. She also "desperately wants to write a book." An excerpt from the story: Holmes brushed it off when the scientists protested that the dog hair could contaminate samples. But there was another problem with Balto (name of the dog), too. He wasn't potty-trained. Accustomed to the undomesticated life, Balto frequently urinated and defecated at will throughout Theranos headquarters. While Holmes held board meetings, Balto could be found in the corner of the room relieving himself while a frenzied assistant was left to clean up the mess. [...] By late 2017, however, Holmes had begun to slightly rein in the spending. She agreed to give up her private-jet travel (not a good look) and instead downgraded to first class on commercial airlines. But given that she was flying all over the world trying to obtain more funding for Theranos, she was spending tens of thousands of dollars a month on travel. Theranos was also still paying for her mansion in Los Altos, and her team of personal assistants and drivers, who would become regular dog walkers for Balto. But there were few places she had wasted so much money as the design and monthly cost of the company's main headquarters, which employees simply referred to as "1701," for its street address along Page Mill Road in Palo Alto. 1701, according to two former executives, cost $1 million a month to rent. Holmes had also spent $100,000 on a single conference table. Elsewhere in the building, Holmes had asked for another circular conference room that the former employees said "looked like the war room from Dr. Strangelove," replete with curved glass windows, and screens that would come out of the ceiling so everyone in the room could see a presentation without having to turn their heads.

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UN watchdog confirms Iran's compliance with 2015 nuclear deal AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at February 22, 2019, 8:30 pm)

UN's nuclear watchdog reaffirms Tehran's adherence to 2015 accord amid US-Europe tension over future of the pact.
Senegal election: Candidates hold public forum AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at February 22, 2019, 8:00 pm)

With no TV debate, the youth confront powerful politicians in public by asking them tough questions at public election forums.
House Democrats launch bid to stop Trump's border emergency AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at February 22, 2019, 8:00 pm)

Resolution sets up a fight that could result in President Donald Trump's first veto.
Sikhs provide sanctuary to Kashmiris caught in 'revenge' attacks AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at February 22, 2019, 8:00 pm)

Kashmiris targeted by right-wing mobs in India following the Pulwama attack say the Sikh community came to their rescue.