Tag: technologybreaking news

  • Google is going to check your facts from. Sensitive people to rate. The future is now.

    Google is going to check your facts from. Sensitive people to rate. The future is now.

    Raters now have access to a new “Upsetting-Offensive” flag which Google says should be used in the following instances:

    • Content that promotes hate or violence against a group of people based on criteria including (but not limited to) race or ethnicity, religion, gender, nationality or citizenship, disability, age, sexual orientation, or veteran status.
    • Content with racial slurs or extremely offensive terminology.
    • Graphic violence, including animal cruelty or child abuse.
    • Explicit how­ to information about harmful activities (e.g., how tos on human trafficking or violent assault).
    • Other types of content which users in your locale would find extremely upsetting or offensive.

    And there is more:

    Just being upsetting isn’t enough for raters to flag search results. Google points to an example regarding a “Holocaust history” search: one result is a Holocaust denial site, which the company says deserves the flag. The other, a website from The History Channel, might be upsetting due to subject matter but is a “factually accurate source of historical information” and doesn’t promote the hateful content mentioned above.

    Forgive me for being insensitive or potentially offensive, but I miss the wild west of the net.. when things were free and fierce, uncensored and raw..

    The content police may take things too far.

    (source)

  • Cell phone (non)safety draft now released to the public!

    Cell phone (non)safety draft now released to the public!

    CELL PHONE DANGERS REVEALED! But .. not revealed. It was held secret and in draft form until recently..

    As the SAN FRAN CBS affiliate reports,

    After keeping it hidden for years, California’s Department of Public Health has released a draft document outlining health officials’ concerns about cellphone radiation exposure.

    The previously unpublished document was released this week after a judge indicated she would order the documents be disclosed in the case Moskowitz v. CDPH.

    Joel Moskowitz, Ph.D., who is the director of the Center for Family and Community Health at UC Berkeley’s School of Public Health, sued the state in 2016 under the California Public Records Act to get the document released.

    The document is dated April 2014, but Moskowitz says the document was originally prepared seven years ago and updated several times, but never released to the public.