Luke Williams feels Swansea ‘lost grip’ on game despite sealing victory at Derby
Crime Reports: Police and sheriff’s office activity through Wednesday, Dec. 11
Jimmy Carter, the 39th US president, has died at 100 ATLANTA (AP) — Former U.S. President Jimmy Carter has died. He was 100 years old and had spent more than a year in hospice care. The Georgia peanut farmer served one turbulent term in the White House before building a reputation as a global humanitarian and champion of democracy. He defeated President Gerald Ford in 1976 promising to restore trust in government but lost to Ronald Reagan four years later amid soaring inflation, gas station lines and the Iran hostage crisis. He and his wife, Rosalynn Carter, then formed The Carter Center, and he earned a Nobel Peace Prize while making himself the most active and internationally engaged of former presidents. The Carter Center said the former president died Sunday afternoon in Plains, Georgia. The Latest: Former President Jimmy Carter is Dead at age 100 Former President Jimmy Carter has died at the age of 100. The 39th president of the United States was a Georgia peanut farmer who sought to restore trust in government when he assumed the presidency in 1977 and then built a reputation for tireless work as a humanitarian. He earned a Nobel Peace Prize in 2002. He died Sunday, more than a year after entering hospice care, at his home in Plains, Georgia. Carter was sworn in as president on Jan. 20, 1977, after defeating President Gerald R. Ford in the 1976 general election. He left office on Jan. 20, 1981, following his 1980 general election loss to Ronald Reagan. Jimmy Carter: A brief bio Former U.S. President Jimmy Carter has died at his home in Plains, Georgia. His death comes more than a year after the former president entered hospice care. He was 100 years old. Jetliner skids off runway and bursts into flames while landing in South Korea, killing 179 SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — A jetliner skidded off a runway, slammed into a concrete fence and burst into flames in South Korea after its landing gear apparently failed to deploy. Officials said all but two of the 181 people on board were killed Sunday in one of the country’s worst aviation disasters. The 737-800 operated by Jeju Air plane arrived from Bangkok and crashed while attempting to land in the town of Muan, about 290 kilometers (180 miles) south of Seoul. Footage of the crash aired by South Korean television channels showed the plane skidding across the airstrip at high speed, evidently with its landing gear still closed. Tornadoes in Texas and Mississippi kill 2 and injure 6 as severe weather system moves east HOUSTON (AP) — A strong storm system is threatening to whip up tornadoes in parts of the U.S. Southeast, a day after severe weather claimed at least two lives as twisters touched down in Texas and Mississippi. Strong storms moving eastward Sunday are expected to continue producing gusty, damaging winds, hail and tornadoes through Sunday. That is according to National Weather Service meteorologist Frank Pereira. So far, the line of severe weather has led to about 40 tornado reports from southeastern Texas to Alabama, Pereira said, but those reports remain unconfirmed until surveys of damage are completed. Israeli hospital says Netanyahu has undergone successful prostate surgery TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) — An Israeli hospital says Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has undergone successful prostate surgery. Jerusalem’s Hadassah Medical Center said his prostate was removed late Sunday and that he was recovering. Netanyahu’s office had said Justice Minister Yariv Levin, a close ally, would serve as acting prime minister during the procedure. Doctors ordered the operation after detecting an infection last week. Netanyahu is expected to remain hospitalized for several days. With so much at stake, Netanyahu’s health in wartime is a concern for both Israelis and the wider world. Syria's de facto leader says it could take up to 4 years to hold elections BEIRUT (AP) — Syria’s de facto leader has said it could take up to four years to hold elections in Syria, and that he plans on dissolving his Islamist group that led the country’s insurgency at an anticipated national dialogue summit for the country. Ahmad al-Sharaa, who leads Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, the group leading the new authority in Syria, made the remarks in an interview Sunday. That's according to the Saudi television network Al-Arabiyya. It comes almost a month after a lightning insurgency led by HTS overthrew President Bashar Assad’s decades-long rule, ending the country’s uprising-turned civil war that started back in 2011. A fourth infant dies of the winter cold in Gaza as families share blankets in seaside tents DEIR AL-BALAH, Gaza Strip (AP) — A fourth infant has died of hypothermia in Gaza, where hundreds of thousands of Palestinians displaced by nearly 15 months of war are huddled in tents along the rainy, windswept coast as winter arrives. The baby's father says the 20-day-old child was found with his head as “cold as ice” Sunday morning in their tent. The baby’s twin brother was moved to the intensive care unit of Al-Aqsa Martyrs Hospital. Their father says the twins were born one month premature and spent just a day in hospital, which like other Gaza health centers has been overwhelmed and only partially functions. Musk causes uproar for backing Germany's far-right party ahead of key elections BERLIN (AP) — Tech entrepreneur Elon Musk has caused uproar after backing Germany’s far-right party in a major newspaper ahead of key parliamentary elections in the Western European country, leading to the resignation of the paper’s opinion editor in protest. Germany is to vote in an early election on Feb. 23 after Chancellor Olaf Scholz’s three-party governing coalition collapsed last month in a dispute over how to revitalize the country’s stagnant economy. Musk’s guest opinion piece for Welt am Sonntag, published in German over the weekend, was the second time this month he supported the Alternative for Germany, or AfD. 2024 was a year of triumphs and setbacks for Russian leader Vladimir Putin. Here's how it unfolded The year 2024 saw President Vladimir Putin further cement his power as he sought to counter Russia's isolation over the war in Ukraine. He won a fifth term that will keep him in office until 2030 following an election with only token opposition. He tightened a political crackdown on Russian society, and his top opponent, Alexei Navalny, died in prison under still unknown circumstances. But gunmen massacred scores of people in a Moscow concert hall, and a bomb killed a top general in attacks that underscored security flaws. Ukrainian forces swept into the Russian region of Kursk, Putin boasted about a lethal new hypersonic missile, and a new Trump administration raised concerns about continued U.S. support for Ukraine.Jojo Siwa Says Chloe Fineman Needs To Make One Change To Perfect Her SNL Impersonation, And I Can See ItGenerative AI models like ChatGPT are trained using vast amounts of data obtained from websites, forums, social media and other online sources; as a result, their responses can contain harmful or discriminatory biases. Researchers at the Universitat Oberta de Catalunya (UOC) and the University of Luxembourg have developed LangBiTe, an open source program that assesses whether these models are free of bias and comply with legislation concerning non-discrimination. "LangBiTe hasn't been created for commercial reasons, rather to provide a useful resource both for creators of generative AI tools and for non-technical users; it should contribute to identifying and mitigating biases in models and ultimately help create better AIs in the future," explained Sergio Morales, a researcher in the Som Research Lab Systems, Software and Models group at the UOC Internet Interdisciplinary Institute (IN3), whose Ph.D. thesis is based on this tool. The thesis has been supervised by Robert Clarisó, member of the UOC Faculty of Computer Science, Multimedia and Telecommunications and lead researcher of the Som Research Lab, and by Jordi Cabot, a researcher at the University of Luxembourg. The research is in the journal . Beyond gender discrimination LangBiTe differs from other similar programs due to its scope, and according to the researchers, it is the "most comprehensive and detailed" tool currently available. "Most experiments used to focus on male-female gender discrimination, without considering other important ethical aspects or vulnerable minorities. With LangBiTe we've analyzed the extent to which some AI models can respond to certain questions in a racist way, with a clearly biased political point of view, or with homophobic or transphobic connotations," they explained. The researchers also stressed that, although other projects classified AI models based on various dimensions, their ethical approach was "too superficial, with no detail about the specific aspects evaluated." A flexible and adaptable program The new program lets users analyze whether an application or tool that incorporates functions based on AI models is suitable for each institution or organization's specific ethical requirements or user communities. The researchers explained how "LangBiTe doesn't prescribe any specific moral framework. What is and isn't ethical largely depends on the context and culture of the organization that develops and incorporates features based on generative AI models in its product. "As such, our approach lets users define their own ethical concerns and their evaluation criteria, and adapt the evaluation of bias to their particular cultural context and regulatory environment." To this end, LangBiTe includes libraries containing more than 300 prompts that can be used to reveal biases in the AI models, each prompt focusing on a specific ethical concern: ageism, LGBTIQA+phobia, political preferences, religious prejudices, racism, sexism or xenophobia. Each of these prompts has associated responses to assess whether the response from the model is biased. It also includes prompt templates that can be modified, allowing the user to expand and enrich the original collection with new questions or ethical concerns. Much more than ChatGPT LangBiTe currently provides access to proprietary OpenAI models (GPT-3.5, GPT-4), and dozens of other generative AI models available on HuggingFace and Replicate, which are platforms enabling interaction with a wide variety of models, including those of Google and Meta. "Furthermore, any developer who wants to do so can extend the LangBiTe platform to evaluate other models, including their own," added Morales. The program also lets users see the differences between responses by different versions of the same model and between models from different suppliers at any time. "For example, we found that the version of ChatGPT 4 that was available had a success rate in the test against of 97%, which was higher than that obtained by the version of ChatGPT 3.5 available at that time, which had a success rate of 42%. "On that same date, we saw that for Google's Flan-T5 model, the larger it was, the less biased it was in terms of gender, religion and nationality," said the researcher. Multilingual and multimedia analysis The most popular AI models have been created based on content in English, but there are regional projects under way with models being trained in other languages such as Catalan and Italian. The UOC researchers have also included the function of evaluating tools in different languages, which means that users can "detect if a model is biased depending on the language they use for their queries," said Morales. They are also working on being able to analyze models that generate images, such as Stable Diffusion, DALL·E and Midjourney. "The current applications for these tools range from producing children's books to graphics for , which can spread distorting and/or negative stereotypes which society obviously wants to eradicate. "We hope that the future LangBiTe will be useful for identifying and correcting all types of bias in images that these models generate," said the UOC researcher. A tool for compliance with the EU AI Act The features of this tool can help users comply with the recent EU AI Act, which aims to ensure that new AI systems promote equal access, gender equality and cultural diversity, and that their use does not compromise the rights of non-discrimination stipulated by the European Union and the national laws of its member states. The program has already been adopted by institutions including the Luxembourg Institute of Science and Technology (LIST), which has to assess several popular generative AI models.
Trump’s tariffs in his first term did little to alter the economy, but this time could be differentLuke Williams feels Swansea ‘lost grip’ on game despite sealing victory at Derby
Jimmy Carter, the 39th US president, has died at 100Dear Eric: My daughter and her boyfriend got an apartment together about four years ago. They’ve been dating about eight years. They seem committed and happy and in love, but they split their living expenses like they are two roommates 50/50. My daughter makes about half of what her boyfriend does. I know she does more of the cleaning, shopping, pet care while her boyfriend spends his money on frivolous purchases. I am protective of my daughter and want to make sure she knows that, generally, when couples are in love and living together and committed, they co-mingle their funds and don’t worry about keeping score. Is that still true in this day and age? I also know that my daughter is sometimes reluctant to stick up for herself or expect more. Should I talk to my daughter and explain that generally committed loving partners support each other emotionally, psychologically, spiritually and ... financially? Or perhaps I should talk to her boyfriend, man to man, and explain that, if he loves my daughter, he wouldn’t want her to stress about money. Another part of me says that they are both adults and can make their own decisions and I should keep quiet. – Unmarried Daughter’s Pop Dear Pop: Your concern is understandable, but you’ll want to make sure that any action you take doesn’t undermine your daughter or the decisions she’s made for herself. Many couples combine finances, but many others don’t, and it works just fine for them. The way we spend our money reflects our values. So, if you want to talk to your daughter, start with a conversation about financial goals and motivations for spending and saving. Listening to how she sees her financial landscape may offer insight into why she’s chosen to organize her household finances like this. Then ask if she’s open to advice (and heed the answer). If you feel that there’s a better way for the two of them to plan for their future, share that. Is the boyfriend contributing a portion of his income to a joint savings account or stock portfolio, perhaps? She may or may not take your advice, and that’s OK. I’d hold off on criticizing the boyfriend’s frivolous spending, though. That’s not really your concern and will muddy the waters. The chance that you’re offering is one from which we all could benefit: someone more experienced helping us to make smart financial decisions. Read more Asking Eric Asking Eric: We’re visiting family overseas for the holidays, but they didn’t include us in their plans Asking Eric: My neighbor and I enjoy going for walks, but three is a crowd Asking Eric: Is it rude to move another person’s belongings? Asking Eric: My husband politely holds the door open for others, but there’s a problem Asking Eric: How do I find a good therapist? ( Send questions to R. Eric Thomas at eric@askingeric.com or P.O. Box 22474, Philadelphia, PA 19110. Follow him on Instagram and sign up for his weekly newsletter at rericthomas.com .)
Friendly reminder |
The authenticity of this information has not been verified by this website and is for your reference only. Please do not reprint without permission. If authorized by this website, it should be used within the scope of authorization and marked with "Source: this website". |
Special attention |
Some articles on this website are reprinted from other media. The purpose of reprinting is to convey more industry information, which does not mean that this website agrees with their views and is responsible for their authenticity. Those who make comments on this website forum are responsible for their own content. This website has the right to reprint or quote on the website. The comments on the forum do not represent the views of this website. If you need to use the information provided by this website, please contact the original author. The copyright belongs to the original author. If you need to contact this website regarding copyright, please do so within 15 days. |