




Why, Copilot?! I don’t know why it misspells words, at times. That one was my favorite until I saw the weird looking ‘m’!





Why, Copilot?! I don’t know why it misspells words, at times. That one was my favorite until I saw the weird looking ‘m’!
I’ve been using Microsoft Copilot to make thumbnails for my Apple Music playlists.






It wouldn’t make me a picture of a cat reading The Communist Manifesto! 😾



I asked it in the wrong way, apparently.


Here’s what it said when I asked for a cat with the hammer and sickle.

I tried with Microsoft’s Copilot, instead. I also asked it to make me a picture of a cat reading Das Kapital. They’re spelled wrong, though! I suppose that it’s cat-speak?! 🤷🏼♀️






Here’s the Communist cats that they made for me. I like the pixelated one the best. It has my resting bitch face! 😹




Well, this was a bit of a surprise. Over the past couple of weeks I wrote about how Senator Josh Hawley was planning to try to hotline his terrible No Section 230 Immunity for AI Act. As we have explained multiple times, the bill is so poorly drafted that it would make a mess of the entire internet. After rumors of two attempted hotlines (effectively trying to sneak the bill through if no Senator objects) planned for last week, and then a rumor of a Tuesday night attempt, Hawley finally took to the floor Wednesday morning to make the push. If C-SPAN’s clunky embed feature works, you can watch it here:
The Day Ted Cruz Stopped A Bad Internet Bill
Related:
US tightens rules on AI chip sales to China in blow to Nvidia
Nvidia chief executive Jensen Huang told the Financial Times earlier this year that the 2022 controls had left the Silicon Valley company with its “hands tied behind our back” by barring sales of its most advanced chips to China. He has said further restrictions could seriously harm US chipmakers by eating into their ability to finance investment.
Related:
China ups export curbs on key EV battery component, safeguarding graphite amid US tensions

Big Tech is rushing ahead of any legal framework for artificial intelligence, or AI, in the quest for big profits, while pushing for self-regulation instead of the constraints imposed by the rule of law.
DOD Developing AI Weapons? Beware the Frankenstein Chatbots
China has banned some sales of Micron products after launching a probe into the American memory chip giant for cybersecurity risks in early April.
China bans Micron chips in key infrastructure over ‘national security’ risks
Video via Pamphlets
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