Matt Edwards

Content Credentials for Digital Photographs

This is how the promise of digital technology is fulfilled. From Tim Bray: Leica, the German maker of elegant but absurdly-expensive cameras, just released the M11-P. The most interesting thing about it is a capability whose marketing name is “Content Credentials”, based on a tech standard called C2PA (Coalition for Content Provenance and Authenticity), a project of the Content Authenticity Initiative. The camera puts a digital watermark on its pictures, which might turn out to be extremely valuable in this era of disinformation and sketchy AI. ...

The States Suing Meta

From Mike Masnick at Techdirt: And now it’s lead to this: a whole bunch of states have sued Meta for claimed harms to kids. The complaint there lists 33 states, though reports say that another 9 states are filing a separate lawsuit (I haven’t seen that one yet). Much of the (heavily redacted) complaint seems to be based on the full-on belief in the moral panic about social media and harms to kids. It takes a bunch of things completely out of context — such as the fact that Meta, like any company, keeps trying to grow its business, as some sort of proof of nefarious intent. Unless these states are trying to argue that economic growth is illegal, many of these arguments seem pretty weak. ...

Riding the A Train

Out before the sun got too hot in NJ today for the annual bike club Labor Day rides. This year four area cycling clubs got together for a joint start. Various pace options (A = faster, B = less fast, C = slower, etc) were on offer, which allowed me to fall in with a different bike club and pace than I normally ride with. I grabbed the back of the Team Evesham A-pace group! ...

Beekeepers to the rescue after 5 million bees fall off truck in Canada

The BBC has this buzz: Beekeeper Michael Barber woke up on Wednesday morning to several calls from police looking for help after five million bees fell off a truck in Canada. The hives were being transported when the straps holding them in place came loose, allowing them to slip free. Mr Barber said he arrived to “a pretty crazy cloud of bees” who were “very angry, confused and homeless”. That sounds like a scene from a horror film, or perhaps a movie about the end times. Millions of bees, buzzing around in a massive cloud on the highway. ...

Kernza, a new take on wheat

All hail Kernza? Billed as the new wonder grain — a wheatgrass with a nutty, graham or rye-like flavor — Kernza uses very little nitrogen fertilizer, and its extremely long roots make it a powerhouse at soaking up nitrogen that would otherwise seep into groundwater… Looks like nitrogen pollution is a real problem: Nitrogen from fertilizer and manure is essential for crop growth, but in high levels can cause a host of problems, including coastal “dead zones”, freshwater pollution, poor air quality, biodiversity loss, and greenhouse gas emissions. ...

Hackers Rig Casino Card-Shuffling Machines for 'Full Control' Cheating

The purpose of a casino is to pit the gambler against the house in a game of chance. It stands to reason that as casinos adopt modern technology solutions that ‘gamblers’ in the form of white-hat hackers would join in on these games, as well! They ultimately found that if someone can plug a small device into a USB port on the most modern version of the Deckmate—known as the Deckmate 2, which they say often sits under a table next to players’ knees, with its USB port exposed—that hacking device could alter the shuffler’s code to fully hijack the machine and invisibly tamper with its shuffling. They found that the Deckmate 2 also has an internal camera designed to ensure that every card is present in the deck, and that they could gain access to that camera to learn the entire order of the deck in real time, sending the results from their small hacking device via Bluetooth to a nearby phone, potentially held by a partner who then could then send coded signals to the cheating player. ...

4,000 Miles on Zwift

Hit a fun milestone during this morning’s indoor cycling workout! 4,000 miles. Looking more broadly, and I’m on track to top 4,000 miles outdoors this year as well. That would be an lifetime achievement award for me, as I’ve never cycled that many miles in a single calendar year before. However, it would mean keeping up the pace during the cooler months (October-December) and that historically has not happened for me. Might be worth trying to stick to it in order to land the 4,000 mile mark! ...

Hi, we're a tech startup

A hilarious, tongue-in-cheek mastodon post by AJ Sadauskas: Hi, we’re a tech startup run by libertarian Silicon Valley tech bros. We’re not a newspaper, we’re a content portal. We’re not a taxi service, we’re a ride sharing app. We’re not a pay TV service, we’re a streaming platform. We’re not a department store, we’re an e-commerce marketplace. We’re not a financial services firm, we’re crypto. We’re not a space agency, we’re a group of visionaries who are totally going to Mars next year. We’re not a copywriting and graphic design agency, we’re a large language model generative AI platform. ...

A Trip to Denver, Colorado

Last year, we booked a trip to Florida’s Siesta Key along with some friends who had wanted to vacation there. Frontier Airlines had some…troubles…and we ended up re-booking that flight at least twice. The end result was a scrambled schedule (we arrived a day earlier than planned), and a flight credit since the re-booking ended up being cheaper than the original flights. We spent the difference flying somewhere we had never been before: Denver, Colorado. ...

The Indicator on why government websites and online services are so bad

I was catching up with some Planet Money podcasts in my feed today, and came across this gem - Why government websites and online services are so bad. It’s pretty much what you would expect! From the transcript: To sum up, Jennifer’s team found there were three overlapping problems that were common to a lot of government agencies - first, policy complexity built up and up over many, many years, often added to but rarely stripped back. And this led to the second problem, which was staffing. When staff need 25 years to feel like experts, you cannot hire yourself out of a mess. And thirdly, a top-down culture that was more concerned with optics and risk aversion was getting in the way. A common theme among all these issues seems to be a disconnect between the policy people and the people who are at the implementation part. ...