A Virginia circuit court has refused to block the implementation of Democrats' new congressional map, which voters approved in a statewide special election last week. read more
WIRED reported that a medical student from Northern India, Sam, who aimed to ease his financial difficulties and pay off his education bills, created Emily using Gemini AI. read more
A career federal law enforcement official who oversaw President Donald Trump's aggressive deportation campaign is leaving government service. read more
President Trump has been purging Black officials in independent agencies at a higher rate than anyone else, a new lawsuit says.
"Transgender discrimination is, by its very nature, sex discrimination," Justice Laurie McKinnon wrote in the court's decision. "Government issued identification documents are necessary to access public life. When they do not accurately reflect a person's sexual identity, the transgender Montanan is prevented, based on their sex, from obtaining the same attributes of public life that a cisgender Montanan may obtain. Hence, the inability of transgender Montanans to receive government-issued identification documents accurately reflecting their gender identity is fundamentally about the nature of sex and suspect class discrimination."
When is the last time you read a EULA?
#15 | Posted by sitzkrieg
Nobody reads EULAs.
AI Summary:
Google has not explicitly addressed the End User License Agreement (EULA) or Terms of Service in its recent statements regarding the silent download of the 4GB weights.bin file, which powers the Gemini Nano on-device AI model. Instead, the company has defended the practice by stating the model powers security features like scam detection and that users can disable it via settings, while denying privacy concerns.
However, privacy researchers and legal experts argue that this silent installation likely violates user rights and regulations, even if the EULA is technically accepted during initial browser setup. Key points of contention include:
Lack of Explicit Consent: Critics note there is no clear opt-in prompt or checkbox for downloading the 4GB file, which they argue breaches the ePrivacy Directive and GDPR principles of transparency and lawfulness.
Hidden Location: The file is stored in a hidden system folder (OptGuideOnDeviceModel) without user notification, leading to accusations of "deceptive design" and unauthorized storage usage.
Persistent Re-download: Simply deleting the file does not prevent it from returning, as Chrome automatically reinstalls it unless users manually disable specific experimental flags or use enterprise policies, a step not clearly communicated in standard user interfaces.
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I don't hate your mom.
Ask her for $5. She's got it.