Special Commentary | You Have the Right to Record Law Enforcement Officers — Including at the Border
In a landmark settlement, the federal government was forced to concede that there is no border exception to this First Amendment right.
In a landmark settlement, the federal government was forced to concede that there is no border exception to this First Amendment right.
Artificial intelligence innovations such as OpenAI’s GPT-3 open new frontiers in language processing and generation but also enhance the risk of its use to “spread chaos, scale harm and watch the world burn.” Open AI is so concerned that it is offering a free content filter to identify profane language but also hate speech used against certain groups and people. (TechCrunch, June 1, 2022, by Natasha Lomas) OpenAI withheld release of GPT-3 to developers until
Margaret Sullivan of The Washington Post, June 5, 2022, warns that in retweeting or posting an arresting article, a reader should be aware that the article may not be a product of local news but rather fake news concocted to promote a political stance. Such a story emerged recently that a suburban Chicago school was assigning grades partly based on skin color or ethnicity. The article was published by the West Cook News, whose aim
Georgetown lecturer Ilya Shapiro was reinstated last week after the university suspended him for a tweet saying that President Joe Biden was not nominating the best pick to the Supreme Court but a “lessor Black woman.” (The Hill, June 2, 2022, by Monique Beals) Rather than accept his reinstatement and the conditions it specifies, Shapiro choose to resign. “IDEAA [Georgetown’s Office of Institutional Diversity, Equity and Affirmative Action],” writes Shapiro, “asserts that if I ‘were
Signalling that they would likely consider the case at a later time, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled 5-4 to grant an injunction against a Texas law prohibiting social media platforms from removing posts based on content. (The New York Times, May 31, 2022, by Adam Liptak) Law professor Ilya Somin in Reason, May 31, 2022, writes that with a 5-4 decision, there is cause to think that at least five justices think the Texas law