The OnlyFans Economy of American AI
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IT/기술 · "AMERICAN" · 총 89건
필터 보기현재 지수
50.3
0 = 부정 우세
50 = 중립
100 = 긍정 우세
최근 7일 기준 87,754건을 분석한 결과, 뉴스 심리지수는 50.3(균형)입니다. 긍정 4,407건(5.0%)·중립 81,295건(92.6%)·부정 2,052건(2.3%)이며, 중립 비중이 뚜렷하게 높습니다. 성향 지수는 종합 14.9(중도 균형)입니다.
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A top White House artificial intelligence policy adviser on Saturday said he will leave his position at the end of June, marking the exit of a leading figure helping craft policies for frontier technologies. “This journey has been the privilege of a lifetime,” the adviser, Sriram Krishnan, posted on social media platform X. Krishnan did not give a reason for leaving, but wrote in the post he intends to help “tackle some of the large challenges facing America” related to AI. Krishnan has been involved in the Trump administration’s efforts to create a national framework for regulating developments in AI. His departure comes as the president looks at the possibility of the US government acquiring stakes in AI firms. “There’s something very interesting about it, where it almost becomes a partnership with the American public,” Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One on Friday, adding that he planned to meet with AI executives as soon as next week. Trump’s embrace of AI has at times been complicated by security concerns about the technology within his own administration. Fears over AI’s unknowns in national security contributed to a months-long standoff between the Trump administration and AI firm Anthropic. The Pentagon blacklisted Anthropic earlier this year after the tech company refused to allow the US military to use its models for domestic surveillance and fully autonomous weapons systems. After a White House meeting with the CEO of Anthropic, which is preparing to go public, tensions have appeared to thaw. The White House in a Tuesday executive order directed federal agencies to ask leading AI developers to voluntarily submit their most capable models for government cybersecurity tests before releasing them to the public. Some populists in the president’s orbit warn that AI presents a political risk, as proposals to build data centres to power these companies have stirred intense backlash. In his State of the Union speech in February, Trump said he told big tech companies to build their own power plants. Tech CEOs later agreed to tackle new electricity generation and efficiency measures.
WASHINGTON: The Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), the largest Muslim civil rights and advocacy organisation in the United States, has filed a federal lawsuit against one of America’s largest public school systems, alleging that four Muslim students were unlawfully disciplined because of their religion and ethnic background. The lawsuit accuses Fairfax County Public Schools (FCPS), a school district serving nearly 180,000 students in the suburbs of Washington, DC, of discriminating against students at the prestigious Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology, one of the nation’s top-ranked public schools. Filed in federal court in Alexandria, Virginia, the suit claims that school officials violated the students’ constitutional rights and federal civil rights laws by suspending them over a social media video while allowing similar conduct by other student groups to go unpunished. The case stems from a video posted in October 2025 by members of the school’s Muslim Student Association (MSA), a student organisation representing Muslim pupils. According to the complaint, the students were participating in a viral social media trend used by clubs and organisations nationwide to promote events and attract members. In the video, students ask classmates whether they intend to attend an MSA meeting. When the answer is “no”, other students jokingly appear and carry them away in what the lawsuit describes as a comedic skit. The plaintiffs argue the video contained no threats, weapons or references to any real-world conflict. CAIR contends that similar videos had been produced by other student groups, including some depicting mock violence and weapons, without disciplinary action. The organisation argues that school officials acted only after outside activists and social media commentators accused the Muslim students of glorifying Hamas and reenacting the Oct 7, 2023 attacks in Israel. According to the complaint, school officials adopted those characterisations, suspended the students, labelled their conduct antisemitic and placed disciplinary records in their files. One plaintiff was also prohibited from wearing a sweatshirt depicting the map of Palestine, the lawsuit alleges. The students are identified in court records by pseudonyms to protect their privacy. “The MSA behaved innocently and no differently than other student groups on campus,” CAIR attorney Catherine Keck said while announcing the lawsuit. “Yet Fairfax County singled them out, robbed them of academic and professional opportunities, and encouraged the community to target and harass them.” The complaint alleges that the suspensions had lasting consequences. The students claim they suffered reputational damage, lost educational opportunities, were subjected to online harassment and threats, and in some cases faced setbacks in college admissions and internship applications. CAIR’s legal team argues that the disciplinary action violated the students’ rights under the First Amendment, which protects free speech, the Fourteenth Amendment’s Equal Protection Clause, and Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which prohibits discrimination in federally funded educational institutions. School officials have previously defended their response, saying the videos depicted mock kidnappings and violence that were inappropriate in a school setting. At the time of the controversy, FCPS said such content was especially troubling because it could be perceived as traumatic by members of the Jewish community amid ongoing tensions related to Israel’s war on Gaza. Jewish community organisations also criticised the videos when they surfaced last year, arguing that imagery resembling hostage-taking was particularly insensitive given the continued impact of the October 7 attacks and the hostage crisis that followed. The lawsuit, however, argues that the school’s actions were driven not by concerns about student safety but by stereotypes associating Muslim and Arab students with violence. “The reason FCPS and TJHSST punished these students and not other students in similar videos is because they believe that Muslims and Arabs pose a threat where others do not,” CAIR attorney Ahmad Kaki said. The school district has not yet filed a detailed response to the complaint. The case is likely to turn on whether the plaintiffs can demonstrate that similarly situated non-Muslim student groups engaged in comparable conduct but were treated differently. If the court finds evidence of selective enforcement based on religion or ethnicity, the lawsuit could become one of the most closely watched school civil-rights cases arising from post-October 7 tensions in American public schools. The complaint seeks damages, expungement of the students’ disciplinary records, declaratory relief and court orders preventing similar actions in the future.
Sriram Krishnan described his government service as "the privilege of a lifetime"
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Americans do not want AI-enabled surveillance; we need new legal guardrails to protect us.
Entenda embate entre governo dos EUA e Claude, rival do ChatGPT A empresa de IA Anthropic propôs uma pausa global no desenvolvimento de sistemas de IA cada vez mais potentes, diante de sinais de que os modelos mais recentes poderiam escapar do controle humano. Desenvolvedora dos modelos de IA do Claude, a empresa, sediada em San Francisco (EUA), destacou em um relatório que a desaceleração mundial no desenvolvimento da IA de ponta poderia ser "uma boa ideia", mas alertou que, se apenas uma empresa diminuir o ritmo, ela pode simplesmente ser ultrapassada pela concorrência. 🗒️Tem alguma sugestão de reportagem? Envie para o g1 "Acreditamos que seria bom para o mundo ter a opção de reduzir ou pausar temporariamente o desenvolvimento da IA, para permitir que as estruturas sociais e a pesquisa de alinhamento sigam o ritmo do avanço da tecnologia", manifestou a Anthropic. Uma pausa real significaria grandes empresas de IA em vários países, principalmente China e Estados Unidos, concordando em parar ao mesmo tempo, sob regras que todos pudessem verificar, ressaltou a Anthropic. IA Claude Unsplash/Aerps "Sem um mecanismo de coordenação global, empresas e governos terão que tomar decisões difíceis sobre segurança enquanto enfrentam pressões competitivas e geopolíticas." A proposta enfrenta uma batalha difícil em Washington e no Vale do Silício. Funcionários americanos e executivos de grandes empresas de tecnologia argumentam que desacelerar o desenvolvimento da IA poderia dar à China uma vantagem significativa. O presidente Donald Trump, no entanto, assinou nesta semana um decreto que permitirá ao governo fazer avaliações preliminares dos modelos de IA mais poderosos de empresas americanas antes do seu lançamento. A Anthropic indicou que espera reunir nos próximos meses funcionários do governo, cientistas, grupos de defesa e empresas concorrentes para definir como esse sistema funcionaria. O chamado à coordenação surge no momento em que dados internos mostram que a IA acelera de forma dramática seu próprio desenvolvimento, destacou a Anthropic. A empresa alertou que essa aceleração criaria um ciclo de retroalimentação que poderia levar ao que pesquisadores chamam de "melhora recursiva de si mesma", o que se refere à ideia de que um sistema de IA poderia ser capaz de ensinar a si próprio a se tornar mais inteligente. A Anthropic negou que esse ponto seja inevitável, mas ressaltou que "as evidências sugerem que o papel humano está diminuindo em cada etapa do processo de desenvolvimento da IA". LEIA TAMBÉM: Site rastreia jatos de super-ricos para 'prever o apocalipse' Instagram Plus começa a ser liberado no Brasil; veja preço e recursos exclusivos WhatsApp lança filtros e figurinhas para a Copa do Mundo; veja como usar Instagram Plus é liberado no Brasil; veja preço e benefícios Instants:como funciona o novo recurso do Instagram
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Another ally questions reliance on American AI