If you’re gonna be a restless soul
Then you’re gonna be so so tired
If you’re gonna give up on this fight
Then I’m gonna call you a liar

#dc comics#dc#dick grayson#batman#bruce wayne#batfam#dc universe#tim drake#dc fanart



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If you’re gonna be a restless soul
Then you’re gonna be so so tired
If you’re gonna give up on this fight
Then I’m gonna call you a liar
Predicting Future Crimes: The Role of the PCL-R in Risk Assessment
Written by Prashansa Tripathi ------------------ #forensicscience #forensicpsychology #forensicfield #forensicinvestigation #crime #psychology #pcl-r #crimesceneinvetigation #forensicmedicine #knowledge #blog #forensicarticle #forensicnotes #psychiatry
Continue reading Predicting Future Crimes: The Role of the PCL-R in Risk Assessment
Frank, I'm sorry for all of the times I've been rude to you. You're cool.
Don't worry about it – I think I "rudely" respond to every ask that comes in here, and it's just how tumblr is when it's not a nice day. It's like I'm really good at assuming everyone is out to get me, so I try to get into the habit of responding to everything in case a mutant AI kills me and rewrites it as an insult.
In any case, it's no problem – I love both the insults and the praise.
Tories are planning to start arresting protesters if the police fantasize that they might at some point do anything disruptive, or if a different protest on a different day had people also arrested for future crimes the police imagine could theoretically happen.
Previous things already deemed disruptive under current law include: Making noise, staying silent, candle light vigils for people police murdered, blank signs.
The fact is that we are all contributing to our own digital pollution. Just as in the twentieth century people thought nothing of pouring industrial waste into a river or tossing garbage onto the street, so too do we fail to comprehend the long-term consequences of our digital actions today. The current state of affairs stems from our fundamental misunderstanding of the bargain we have made for so-called free online services.
— Future Crimes: Everything Is Connected, Everyone Is Vulnerable and What We Can Do About It (Marc Goodman)
8/19/2020 -
Started my computer ethic course today and it inspired me to read ‘Future Crimes’ by Marc Goodman. The first story is a guy whos phone and MacBook get wiped clean from a teenage hacker and then he stole his twitter handle. Fun read so far!
Quote from book: “ That also means the antivirus software you are running on your own computer is likely only catching 5% of the emerging threats targeting your machine. If your own bodies immune system had a batting average like that, you would be dead in a matter of hours.”
I CANNOT RECOMMEND THIS BOOK MORE!!! Honestly such a good read if you’re even vaguely interested in tech! Im a first year law student and I honestly don’t want to to put it down! Get it quick you honestly will not regret it!
The Internet has lost its innocence. Our interconnected world is becoming an increasingly more dangerous place, and the more we incorporate assailable technologies into our lives, the more vulnerable we become. The next Industrial Revolution, the information revolution, is well under way, with massive yet unrealized implications for our personal and global security. Yet as daunting as the threats to individuals, organizations, and even our critical infrastructures seem today, there is a proverbial technological train leaving the station, one that is rapidly and exponentially picking up speed. There are signs of it everywhere, if one knows where to look.
Just over the horizon are newly emerging technologies, including robotics, artificial intelligence, genetics, synthetic biology, nanotechnology, 3-D manufacturing, brain science, and virtual reality, that will have major impacts on our world and pose a panoply of security threats that will make today's common cyber crime seem like child's play. These innovations will play essential roles in our daily lives in just a few years, yet no in-depth, broad-based study has been completed to help us understand the unintended attendant risks they pose.
The depth and extent of this transformation and its concomitant risks have gone unnoticed by most, yet before we know it, our global society will connect as many as one trillion devices to the Internet – devices that will permeate every aspect of our lives. These persistent connections will bind us to both man and machine, across the planet, for good and for ill, and will be woven into the entire realm of our exponentially expanding common sentience. As a result, technology will no longer be just about machines; it will become the story of life itself. Those who know how these underlying technologies work will be increasingly well positioned to exploit them to their advantage and, as we have seen, to the detriment of the common man. The cornucopia of technology that we are accepting into our lives, with little or no self-reflection or thoughtful examination, may very well come back and bite us. These risks portend the new normal – a future for which we are wholly unprepared.
— Future Crimes: Everything Is Connected, Everyone Is Vulnerable and What We Can Do About It (Marc Goodman)