Summer Highlight: Meet Jacob Williams! https://lnkd.in/g3ruy5Ut
Drew Eckl & Farnham’s Post
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Where have we been? What led to this business in the first place? Read all about it in our recent blog 📑 https://lnkd.in/eTQjdC8a
Our Story: The Making of Lillian Augusta — Lillian Augusta Hair
hairwithoutharm.com
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The Digital Personal Data Protection Act, 2023 came into force on August 11. Somewhat complex act - with room for improvement in its structuring, but a welcome act nonetheless. Carries demanding compliances with stiff penalties for infringement. I discuss the act in the video below.
14 August 2023
https://www.youtube.com/
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Introducing the newest issue of Insti-News, featuring original content from members across the country, a recap on the 2023 Conference, member elevations and more! Start reading now. #assessors #municipalassessment #municipalassessors #propertyvaluation
Insti-News | Summer 2023
https://issuu.com
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On June 22, 2024, Philip Corbo will be a panelist at the 2024 Summer Meeting of The American College of Trust and Estate Counsel (ACTEC). The seminar titled “Having the Mettle to Settle: How to Steer Trust and Estate Controversies to Conclusion” will cover the special challenges involved in settling trust and estate controversies, key tax considerations to keep in mind when resolving disputes, and the importance of making sure all interested parties are bound.
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Something I've been musing about recently (and semi work related): I think we're probably in the tail-end period of usability and value of the public internet. With the proliferation of content generated by LLM's which are trained on the internet data, but also trained to generate content which "sounds believable" our of the aggregate data (without any actual knowledge or ability to check validity), the reliability and usefulness of the public internet data will decline over time. As the bot-garbage propagates, it will likely overwhelm "real" information, even without people leveraging LLM's for disinformation (as is already happening, with successful effect, because people are relatively easy to influence). I wonder if, at some point, we will be telling stories to our grand children about the period of time when the information which was free on the internet was also reasonably good and reliable, and not a wasteland of bot-garbage and propaganda spewed into the world, to be consumed by perpetually ill-informed people, and/or those conditioned to be easily entertained by zero-value content (not unlike what most of cable television has become now).
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It's a hard pill to swallow, but if we're being honest, the way most media companies make money has always been a bit ethically murky. This isn't a brand-new problem that just popped up with the rise of the internet. It's been around for ages, well before our current digital era. 🤷🏻♀️ The Past Wasn't Perfect Either We like to look back at the days before the Y2K as the golden era of journalism. Icons like the Financial Times and The Washington Post developed standards for the industry. But even then, the balance between earning a profit and unbiased reporting was tricky. There were stories of some newsrooms choosing profits or comfort over telling the whole truth, while others stuck to their guns, no matter what. 🤦🏻♀️ Today's Mess Now, the media has lost everything everywhere all at once: Quality, Trust, AND money! In their scramble to find new revenue sources, media companies often face a choice between bad and worse, all while struggling to stay within ethical boundaries that have been around for centuries. Yet, there’s a stubborn refusal to acknowledge that any decision made in desperation is likely to stray over those long-established ethical lines.
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The Supreme Court will soon consider two social media cases out of Florida and Texas. Although the primary focus of the litigation is content moderation, the laws also contain provisions seeking greater transparency from the platforms, which have implications for social science research. CSMaP filed an amicus brief in the case to emphasize: 1.) The importance of independent platform research 2.) How data access will help researchers, the public, and policymakers better understand the way platforms influence public discourse and democracy. Thank you to Darren Linvill, Patrick Warren, and Filippo Menczer for joining the brief, and to New York University School of Law's Technology Law and Policy Clinic for helping us write it.
CSMaP Files Amicus Brief in Supreme Court Social Media Cases
csmapnyu.org
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Take a look at our feature in the latest Darling Magazine. Want more? Visit our blog for extra details and an extended version of our content here: https://lnkd.in/gFs9tYtK #homedesign #interiortips #homerenovation #spacesaver #designtips #hometips
Our biggest edition yet - Summer Darling has landed. Read the full digital copy here: https://lnkd.in/gsbYD2dB
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Once unimaginable research tasks are now a reality with Westlaw Edge UK. Learn more about the first-of-its-kind features to help you expedite complex and time-consuming research tasks. https://ow.ly/Kpha50Pn7h3
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Our Antitrust & Foreign Investment partners Will Leslie (Global Co-Head of Tech Sector) and John Eichlin, will be speaking at the 21st Annual Stanford Digital Economy Best Practices Conference on June 10 at Stanford Law School. If you are attending please feel free to connect with them! #EUregulation #EUantitrust #consumerprotection
21st Annual Stanford Digital Economy Best Practices Conference
https://conferences.law.stanford.edu/bestpractices2024
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