📢 Join us in one week for a live webinar on Tuesday, June 24 hosted by the Government Publications Section!
We'll explore how the California State Library is using web archiving to preserve state government websites—supporting transparency, public access, and research. 📚💻
"Jewish Genealogy: Discover Your Family History" is the name of an online course taught by experts from the Jewish Genealogical Society of Greater Boston. The course, for which the tuition fee is $250, takes place on Zoom from Jan. 7 to March 18, 2026, on eight Wednesday evenings. For more details and to register, go to https://www.jgsgb.org/course/
It’s Saturday, which means: time for a linkdump post! I’m back from my book-tour across the US, Canada and the UK, finishing up in Berlin — and I’m jetlagged in the backyard hammock, waiting for my laundry to come out of the machine and plowing through a long backlog of interesting links. Let’s goooooooo!
It’s Pride month, and Pat Robertson kicked it off with a bang by…kicking off. What better way to start Pride than with a piece of fanfic by @wilwheaton about Robertson’s arrival in Hell?
https://wilwheaton.net/2023/06/the-wait/
Once you’ve had your fill of schadenfreude, get your Pride/Trekkie (or, if you prefer, Trekker) gear on with Wil’s Acting Ensign Pride collection:
https://shopstands.com/collections/wil-wheaton
Seguing smoothly into science fiction by way of Trek, let’s turn to Ted Chiang, a titan of the field, who is also a wicked-sharp critic of AI hype. Ted’s been at this since at least 2017, when he identified tech CEOs’ fears of AI as a form of transference of their fear of corporations, which are, after all, autonomous artificial life-forms that are rapidly devouring the human race:
And now, in the Financial Times, Ted sits down for lunch with Madhumita Murgia to talk about the linguistic game we play when we describe a statistical inference tool as “artificial intelligence,” given that it is neither “artificial,” nor “intelligent”:
Start with whether machines “learn”: “machine learning” is just adjusting weights in a statistical model. When you teach a child something, you’re not adjusting weights! “Machine learning” is a useful metaphor for thinking about a subset of applied stats, but it’s also a trap, tricking us into unconsciously anthropomorphizing an intelligence behind plausible sentence generators. We talk about AI models “hallucinating” — another linguistic trap — but the real “AI hallucination” is when we wet human people hallucinate a dry, electronic intelligence behind the plausible sentences.
Calling it AI, saying that it learns or hallucinates or knows or understands — these are hallucinatory traps for wet squishy humans. Even the fact that chatbots use the pronoun “I” is a slippery slope into imagining an intelligence on the other side of the keyboard.
What should we call this discipline, if not “AI”? Ted says, “applied statistics.”
Applied statistics can automate a lot of work away, but what it’s best at is automating the bullshit jobs that David Graeber (rest in power) described in his brilliant 2018 book:
An academic friend tells me that they use LLMs to write recommendation letters for grad students, and that grad students use LLMs to take minutes on department meetings. Presumably, someone else is using LLMs to ingest and summarize these recommendation letters and departmental meetings. LLMs can inflate a few bullet points into several florid paragraphs, and deflate them back into bullet points, with significant semantic losses on the way.
Is there a non-bullshit use for these? Maybe. I have spent a lot of my activist career as an anti-bullshit actor. For example, I was among the first public interest delegates to WIPO, the most industry captured UN specialized agency, which has the same relationship to terrible copyright proposals that Mordor has to evil — a kind of infinite wellspring of bad ideas.
These ideas emerge out of an extremely bullshit process. The Standing Committee on Copyright and Related Rights meets periodically in Geneva for a highly stylized, multi-day session in which national delegates rise and deliver cryptic, stilted remarks about various proposed clauses to awful treaties like the Broadcast Treaty.
These remarks are recorded by the Secretariat, who then offers each delegation the opportunity to redact or alter the official record of their remarks. Then, six months later, the Secretariat publishes this revisionist version of the session, which would be impossibly dull and cryptic even without all the revisions. This is the Shield of Boringness (h/t Dana Claire) in action.
One day at one of these meetings, Wendy Seltzer had a brilliant idea: let’s make our own transcript. There was no public internet at WIPO back then, so we set up an ad-hoc network off one of our laptops (thankfully, they’d just installed electrical outlets at some of the NGO delegation seats), then used Etherpad to create a shared document. We traded off transcribing the remarks with correcting typos and then annotating the text with plain-language descriptions of what was really going on.
Then we published: twice a day, at the lunch and dinner breaks, unplugging the Ethernet cables from one of the shared PCs in the mezzanine and uploading our transcripts. These hit the nerd sites of the day, like Slashdot, and created realtime pressure on national delegations that had caved to industry demands at the expense of their populations. They started to get urgent calls from their capitols demanding explanations — andthe delegates who’d taken brave stands for the public interest were praised (for the first time ever!) by their bosses in distant ministries.
It worked so well that other NGOs started sending delegates to these meetings, and I started schlepping a wifi access point and a power strip to the meetings, so that several of us could collaborate on even more detailed realtime transcripts and annotations. We also collaborated on coordinated remarks, because each NGO was typically only allowed to speak for 1–2 minutes at then end of a 1–3 day meeting, so we drafted a unified set of comments that we delivered as a serial when the chair called on us.
These unofficial transcripts became the de facto record of the WIPO meetings. I used to run into national delegates who’d been rotated in after a ministerial change in their home countries, who thanked me for our work and said it was the only way they could follow (and thus participate in) the proceedings.
We were setting the agenda, in other words. It was pretty cool, and it made the WIPO establishment furious. The secretariat — a veteran of the US Trade Rep’s office who made her bones cramming brutal, human-rights-abusing trade terms on the textile workers of south Asia — threatened to expel us.
All that to say: we could have done even more if we’d had a reliable automated transcription tool. The valuable part of the work was the annotations, not the transcription, and we were always shorthanded, and automated transcription would have freed up a set of hands — and a mind — to make sense of the delegates’ remarks and explain them to others.
On the subject of tech regulation and AI: if you’re not reading Sayash Kapoor and Arvind Narayanan’s AI Snake Oil newsletter, allow me to gently suggest that you consider it:
https://aisnakeoil.substack.com/
The latest edition is “Licensing is neither feasible nor effective for addressing AI risks,” and it does exactly what it says on the tin:
The issue here is Sam Altman — CEO of OpenAI, a company that is not “open” and whose products are neither “artificial” nor “intelligent” — demanding that Congress create an international licensing regime for products that compete with his own ChatGPT, which loses a large amount of money on every query and can only be profitable if it has no competition to get in the way of jacking up prices once other businesses are thoroughly dependent on its services.
As Kapoor and Narayanan explain, the licensing regime that Altman demands would:
Produce a dangerous monoculture in which every app would have a shared set of vulnerabilities that could be exploited by bad actors;
Homogenize the products of “AI” tools — e.g. every resume-sorting bot would have the same blind-spots and irrational exuberances;
Give a small number of firms control over the Overton window, letting their products define which ideas and sentiments get sorted to the top of your inbox or social media feeds;
Centralize control over opinion-formation, with licensed companies controlling how complex ideas are summarized (“those aren’t bald spots, they’re solar panels for sex machines!”);
Lead to regulatory capture: when an industry is dominated by a handful of large firms, it’s much easier for them to converge on a set of lobbying priorities, and their cozy oligopoly lets them extract sufficient profits that there’s plenty of cash to spend on making those lobbying priorities into policy reality.
Kapoor and Narayanan favor “development and evaluation of state-of-the-art models by a diverse group of academics, companies, and NGOs” and promise future work on risk assessment and guardrail development.
A key element of any AI policy framework is data acquisition, processing and utilization. The Ada Lovelace Institute’s giant “Rethinking data and rebalancing digital power” report is a banger on this subject, covering interoperability, privacy, equity, information security and more, with superb contributions from Ian Brown and Jathan Sadowski:
The privacy debate changed forever a decade ago, when Edward Snowden handed a group of journalists a trove of NSA documents detailing a massive, lawless global surveillance campaign. The tenth snowdenversary has prompted a lot of commentary. I really liked Alan Rusbridger’s retrospective:
Rusbridger was the editor-in-chief of The Guardian during the Snowden publications, who reminds us that whistleblowers continue to meet with cruel treatment and punishment, rather than the celebration they’re due. He also reminds us that editorial independence is key to the brave reporting that whistleblowers rely on: when he was publishing the Snowden revelations, his bosses were incapable of ordering him to stop. They could have fired him, but they were not permitted to override his editorial judgments.
Another good Snowden take comes from Ewen MacAskill, the former Guardian defense and security correspondent, who was one of the original Snowden reporters:
MacAskill tells us that neither he nor Snowden have any regrets about their decision. More to the point, he quotes the ACLU’s Ben Wizner, Snowden’s lawyer, who reminds us that as dismal as Snowden’s exile in Russia is, it’s far better than what everyone expected at the time — lifetime confinement to a Gitmo-style American gulag or worse, a firing squad.
(Snowden wasn’t trying to get to Russia — he was aiming for Ecuador, but Secretary of State John Kerry canceled his passport after his flight took off from Hong Kong, which gave the Russians the pretext they needed to detain and effectively kidnap him.)
The Snowden leaks ushered in an era of mass encryption, ending the age in which most data was sent or stored “in the clear.” From the mass storage on your phone to the web sessions your browser initiates to the instant messages you send and receive, the age of cleartext is over.
Meanwhile, the claims by the spy agencies — who have proved time and again that they will lie to the public and their democratically elected overseers about their illegal surveillance — that Snowden did untold harms to national security remain as empty as they were a decade ago. As Snowden told MacAskill: “Disruption? Sure, that is plausible. But it is hard to claim ‘damage’ if, despite 10 years of hysterics, the sky never fell in.”
It took a brave, independent press to publish the Snowden revelations, but even a decade ago, the press was ailing. Big Tech’s chokehold over subscription payments, ads, and delivery of content has allowed it to steal a fortune in cash from the news business. Unfortunately, the media — and its friends in government — have decided that the real problem is that tech is stealing “content,” not money, leading to proposals to restrict who can link to, quote and discuss the news. For the past month, I’ve been working with EFF on a series describing how tech steals money (not content) from the news, and what to do about it:
Though I disagree with people who say tech is stealing news content, I firmly agree that the collapse of the news industry is bad news for society. Indeed, one of the reasons we desperately need an independent press is to ensure critical investigations of the tech industry — something we’re more likely to get if the news isn’t “partnered” with tech for its survival.
Every press outlet has its blind spots and biases, and press competition can really sharpen a media outlet. For example, editors from across the chummy UK press spiked stories detailing the sexual predation of a veteran reporter, Nick Cohen. It took the NY Times to break the story:
Perhaps the New York Post will keep the Times honest, but what about other American cities where news coverage has dwindled to one or fewer outlets. In Baltimore, a new news outlet called the Baltimore Banner is looking to discipline the ailing Baltimore Sun, which was recently purchased by Alden Global Capital. Alden is a notorious vulture capitalist that buys up once-great papers, asset-strips and debt-loads them, fires their best reporters, and lets them degrade into a slurry of advertorials, wire service articles, and nonsense:
The Banner got its seed capital from Stewart Bainum, a former Maryland assemblyman and hereditary rich guy, who nevertheless has embraced a relatively progressive set of causes throughout his political and business careers. Bainum tried to buy the Sun, but lost out to Alden, so he started his own (nonprofit) rival:
While the Sun is slashing its newsroom (down to 70 from a peak of 400), Bainum has committed $50m to hire journalists. They’re starting with 70 and plan to grow from there. They’ve already poached high-profile editors and writers from the Sun and Washington Post. The Banner will be a local paper, focusing on Baltimore metro stories. Per Ron Cassie in Baltimore Magazine, the paper won’t run a story about the State of the Union address “unless there is a significant Baltimore angle.”
The focus will be on “enterprising, explanatory, and investigative journalism” — not covering the tick-tock of every fire or burglary, but rather, the ‘why and how questions.” Their revenue target is 50% subscriptions (they’re paywalled), 25% ads, 15% donations, 5% events and 5% misc.
One key cleavage line in the fight between news and tech is workers’ rights. News workers — like nurses, librarians, teachers, and creative workers — are easy to exploit, thanks to their vocational awe. This awe — described by Fobazi Ettarh in a now-canonical essay — is in contrast to Graeber’s bullshit jobs, the idea that since your job makes a difference, you don’t deserve to be treated decently:
It’s truly perverse — you have to be well-compensated to serve a box on an org chart to inflate a corporate princeling’s sense of self-worth, but if you actually help people, that is its own reward.
Reporters (and other “awe-struck” workers) have reached a breaking point. The latest newsroom to strike is Business Insider, and Insider Union is publishing a delightful countersite called (what else?), Business Outsider:
https://www.insiderunion.org/business-outsider
When those workers bring their bosses to their knees, win their demands, and go back to reporting on business, they’ll have a great new tool: the DoJ has finally launched its long overdue Corporate Crime Database:
Activists and journalists have been clamoring for this for more than a decade, led by Ralph Nader. Corporate Crime Reporter describes the database: “all of the cases in its system from Main Justice and all 93 U.S. Attorneys offices”:
The database doesn’t have an RSS feed or other “advanced” features from the previous decade, but all works of federal authorship are public domain, so someone could hack up a scraper that turns new entries into an easy-to-follow feed.
On the subject of innovative databases: Shepherd is a book recommendation site that’s attempting to provide an independent alternative to the hegemonic dominance of Amazon’s Goodreads:
https://shepherd.com/
It aggregates writers’ recommendations — “8,000+ authors have shared five of their favorite books around a topic, theme, or mood.”
These break down well on topics; there’s a great science fiction section:
https://shepherd.com/bookshelf/science-fiction
If you’re interested in sf writers and their thoughts, you could do worse than to follow Applied Sci-Fi from ASU’s Center for Science and the Imagination. These are seminars in which sf writers and practitioners talk about the way that sf can contest, inform and inspire discussions of current events:
The next event (a free webinar) is “What is the future of [X]?,” on Jun 14 at 9hPT: “what can broaden society’s thinking and impact decision-making about our shared technological future?”
The speakers are great: Annalee Newitz, Tobias Buckell, August Cole, Amy Johnson and Tory Stephens, moderated by Joey Eschrich.
Well, that wraps it up for this linkdump, the third in an occassional and erratic series. Previous editions are here:
https://pluralistic.net/tag/linkdump/
Actually — just one more thing. Have you ever wanted to preserve your short, tweet-length thoughts in an awkward archival medium? Me too! Thankfully, there’s Dumb Cuneiform, who will transliterate your tweet into cuneiform and hand-punch it into a palm-sized clay tablet, bake it, and mail it to you, all for $20:
https://dumbcuneiform.com/
If you’d like an essay-formatted version of this post to read or share, here’s a link to it on pluralistic.net, my surveillance-free, ad-free, tracker-free blog:
Planning your Spring, Summer, Fall and Winter events? 📆 We're open for webinar and in-person workshop requests! Whether it's Día de la Niñez, Día de los Muertos, Indigenous Peoples' Day, or any time of the year focusing on Nahuatl Language & Culture or about Mesoamerican Indigenous Languages & Cultures from an Indigenous perspective...we're here for it! 🌽🫘🌶️🍈🗣️
🤔Who can participate?
- 👩🏽💻Student organizations
- 👨🏫Classes
- 🏫School departments
- ✍🏽Writing/Study groups
- 🖼️🏺Cultural Centers/Museums
-👥👥Community centers
🗓️ When?
Available slots: Available slots: All year (Winter, Spring, Summer, Fall). The earlier, the better.
Scheduling: Please submit requests at least four weeks in advance.
🌎 Where?
- Webinars available internationally
- In-person workshops across the so-called USA
💬 How to request? Send us an 📨email [[email protected]] with the following:
While looking for an artist, I came across a show Kathy had been in. She played Lady Capulet in a production set in Central Asia, where the Capulets were Chinese and the Montagues were Russian. Wow! Varsha and Kathy were brilliant together. They showed how Romeo and Juliet, a play many people admire for being a ‘universal’ love story, can explore something like Asian cultures in our present moment – varieties of lived experience, ongoing stereotypes, non-traditional casting, the value of representation in the theatre, diverse styles of storytelling, you name it. By approaching Shakespeare’s play from the perspective of Indian audiences or relocating Romeo and Juliet to a different cultural setting, Varsha and Kathy showed how the play is relevant to diverse audiences.
Email marketing is one of the most cost-effective marketing strategies for small businesses. It is easy to manage, gives you full control, and allows you to establish direct contact with your customers. There are a few things you need to consider when looking at your email marketing services such as Price, Ease of Use, Deliverability, A/B split testing tools, Analytics & Reporting, Automation tools, integration, and Form builder.
GetResponse Review – Is this the best tool for you?
In this GetResponse review, you will come to know all the pros and cons of the software and save a lot of time reviewing it.
GetResponse email marketing software short summary
GetResponse is one of the best email marketing tools around and is very popular today. It is a powerful email marketing software that offers most of the essential features that professional email marketing should have. It offers professional email templates, easy design tools, and proven deliverability. With this, you can create stunning emails in minutes and use advanced segmentation tools to make more impact. It offers a 30 days completely free trial without the need for any credit card details. This is very useful for those who want to try and test. Pricing is very reasonable compared to any other email marketing software.
Is GetResponse legit and good for email marketing? ( Get a Free Trial Offer No Credit Card Required )
GetResponse's email marketing service for small businesses is totally legit. It safely stores your customer data and offers a secure way to manage your subscribers.
GetResponse is good for email marketing. It's a user-friendly email marketing and marketing automation software. They offer an easy way to design and send email marketing messages. You can create high-converting newsletters, autoresponders, automated funnels, and more. Getresponse is good for list building, sales conversion, and cart abandonment campaigns.
Why one should choose Get Response? Try GetResponse for free here
* One-month free trial without credit card It offers 30 days completely free trial without the need for any credit card details. This is very useful for Bloggers, who believe in “Try before buy”.
* GetResponse is perfect for scaling and supports both small and large businesses
* Beautiful Drag-and-Drop Email Creator/Editor -: Creating marketing emails and newsletters is easy. Drag content blocks on the canvas and edit them directly. Add special elements like images, videos, and products to your emails.
* Flexible setup and scheduling
* Goal-oriented templates - library of high-quality, professionally-designed email templates.
* Mobile-focused design tools - Create fully mobile responsive emails designed to look perfect on all devices.
* Powerful, built-in photo editor - Impress your audience with professional designs without ever leaving the drag-and-drop creator.
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* Conversion Funnel - Ready-made, automated sales funnel creator. Build your landing pages, automate your emails, sell your products, recover abandoned orders, and convert your customers.
Getresponse pros are plenty, but one that really stands out is the Conversion Funnel. This is a lead-generation feature that allows you to create sales funnels and landing pages for various areas of your business. This is a great addition for those who are running e-commerce sites or promoting webinars and other events. With the Conversion funnel feature, you can set up your e-commerce site and start building your sales funnels with landing pages, social media campaigns, webinars, and much more.
* Web push notification - Reach your audience while they're browsing other sites. Send web push notifications on desktop and mobile browsers to promote new offers or content, grow your list, and make more sales.
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Email templates: GetResponse comes with 120+ email templates. You can save templates for future use, design in HTML, or build your own design from scratch.
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Email automation: GetResponse is full of email automation features. If you want to create an email or series of emails to be sent to a group of subscribers automatically it is impossible to do it manually. GetResponse makes this easy via autoresponders. You can create drip campaigns, triggered emails, and autoresponders. GetResponse automation has lead scoring to single out your hottest leads.
Webinars - GetResponse is the only email marketing platform that has built-in webinar capabilities. You can host an online presentation or seminar where your audience or subscribers to join and learn about the topic.
A/B testing: This plays an important role in helping you determine which variant generates higher conversions. The backbone of every successful campaign is testing. In GetResponse you use an A/B testing wizard for emails and landing pages, and automatically use the best version as the winner.
Landing pages- If you want to convert visitors into subscribers or even customers, you can use landing pages instead of forms. You can easily build landing pages with a drag-and-drop editor. GetResponse's landing page editor can add forms and videos. The pages are hosted by GetResponse, so you don't need separate hosting.
Customer support: GetResponse has a responsive support team. There is a knowledge base, a help center, and 24/7 email and chat support.
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How much does GetResponse cost?
Pricing is reasonable compared to all its close alternatives.GetResponse pricing is competitive and it's easy to scale as your business grows. Their entry plan is reasonably priced, with features such as autoresponders, basic segmentation, and more. Their free forever plan provides users with key marketing features such as a landing page/website builder, signup forms, and popups.
GetResponse has a free plan for up to 500 subscribers which includes unlimited emails. GetResponse pricing starts from $19 for 1000 contacts and goes up to $119 for their eCommerce marketing plan. The price of each plan increases as your subscriber count goes up.
GetResponse email marketing alternatives
SendinBlue
SendinBlue is a good choice for small to medium businesses but not the best at the enterprise level. It is budget-friendly. Although most users will find the tools to be enough. Its features are limited compared to GetResponse.
Both companies offer a free plan. Sendinblue is free for 300 emails a day, while GetResponse is free for up to 500 contacts. Sendinblue is a budget-friendly email marketing solution. We like their registration forms, which are flexible and have room for personalization. Their automation is also smart, and they should be enough for most users.
AWeber - A weber is one of the most effective, cost-efficient, user-friendly, and beginner-friendly email software. It is absolutely free for the first 500 subscribers. A weber is a simple connectivity to business systems.
A Weber is powerfully simple email marketing for small businesses, entrepreneurs, nonprofits, bloggers, podcasters, and other online content creators around the world.Visit the website for more details.
Final Verdict
Let's wrap up this GetResponse review. GetResponse is one of the best choices for engaging your audience and converting them into customers. GetResponse is the more logical choice because of its lower price point, webinar capabilities, sales funnel builder and robust marketing automation.
Sign up for a 30-day free trial so you can get a feel for it.