Hallo liebes #hackmas! Kennt ihr schon Mohnzelten? Das ist eine regionale Spezialität hier im Waldviertel die aus Mohn, meist lokaler Graumohn und Teig, oft Erdäpfelteig besteht.

Funfact: "Zelten" ist ein Wort für kleiner flacher Kuchen und kommt vom germanischen zelte / zelto. Es kann für Einzahl und Mehrzahl verwendet - der Zelten, die Zelten

This entry was edited (1 year ago)

When worrying about the harms from deploying AI, it’s issues like this that have caused and will cause the most harm. Not the AI suddenly turning into the machines from the Matrix and enslaving humanity.

The system that was meant to analyze income and health information to automatically determine eligibility for benefits simply didn’t work and often failed to load the correct data to analyze. 🤦🏾‍♂️

gizmodo.com/judge-rules-400-mi…

in reply to David Goldfield

I dunno. Those American news stations are quite superficial. They seem usually to operate on a 20 minute clock. I can see AI making this format much easier to produce. The algorithm can pick the stories, parse them for good broadcasting copy, and put them in a queue to be read by AI using good news voices that have been licensed. You would have live talent on a retainer for big stories that require intensive coverage.

The coming EU Cyber Resilience Act will affect all Open Source projects. The Eclipse Foundation has created the Open Regulatory Compliance working group together with a list of other Open Source organisations to jointly develop best current practises and have a continuous dialog with regulatory bodies.

Mikael Barbero will present this important workgroup at the NSSS24!

Register today for the conference - nsss.se

@EclipseFdn @owasp @openssf
#EUCRA #CRA #OPENSOURCE

in reply to Martin from Toronto

@mcourcel @bmoore123 @jfayre @FreakyFwoof @douglawlor @ppatel Many years ago, I contacted LinkedIn's accessibility team once or twice with feedback specific to accessibility. I would then hear back from them right away with a very friendly and personalized response but then nothing would get fixed. What that tells me is that, at least at that time, LinkedIn had a very dedicated and passionate accessibility team but that there was a disconnect between their accessibility team communicating the feedback and the actual development teams applying that feedback. In other words, I don't necessarily blame their accessibility experts for dropping the ball. I suspect that the ball is being dropped once it changed hands.
in reply to Pratik Patel

@ppatel @mcourcel @bmoore123 @jfayre @FreakyFwoof @douglawlor If LinkedIn claimed that accessibility was baked into their development process I would strongly disagree with that claim and I'd be happy to demonstrate why I believe this is not the case. It's a shame as they're such a valuable resource, which is why I maintain an active presence on that platform, but I would never pay for their premium plan, partially because of their accessibility challenges. To be fair, I haven't communicated with them about this in some time and so we as users do need to do that to do our part in at least trying to affect positive change.