Message-ID: <tqbi7o1ドルi0uh5ドル@dont-email.me>
Date: 19 Jan 2023 08:57:16 -0500
From: Bill Horne <malQRMassimilation@gmail.com>
Subject: e& buys up more of rudderless Vodafone
by Mary Lennighan
e& has acquired another tranche of Vodafone shares taking its stake in
the troubled international telecoms group to 12%.
The United Arab Emirates-based operator made the purchase on Tuesday, it
revealed in a brief statement to the Abu Dhabi Securities Exchange. As
such, it now holds 3.27 billion Vodafone shares and has upped its stake
from the 11% it claimed after a similar purchase in December and the
initial 9.8% holding it acquired for US4ドル.4 billion back in May.
https://telecoms.com/519450/e-buys-up-more-of-rudderless-vodafone/
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Message-ID: <tqbmo81ドルjan91ドル@dont-email.me>
Date: 19 Jan 2023 10:14:20 -0500
From: Bill Horne <malQRMassimilation@gmail.com>
Subject: FCC Creates The Space Bureau
by Laura A. Stefani
With a metaphorical sweep of a pen (actually, a 4-0 commission vote),
FCC Chairwoman Rosenworcel moved to eliminate the agency’s
International Bureau and create a new Space Bureau plus an Office of
International Affairs (OIA). This decision moves all satellite- and
space-related work to the new bureau, while placing the agency’s
long-standing international telecommunications policy work into a
smaller office within the agency’s organizational structure. The
agency’s goal is to "promote a competitive and innovative global
telecommunications marketplace via space services."
https://www.mondaq.com/article/news/1271278?q=1803232&n=673&tp=3&tlk=1&lk=22
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Message-ID: <tqbi0p1ドルi0uh4ドル@dont-email.me>
Date: 19 Jan 2023 08:53:33 -0500
From: Bill Horne <malQRMassimilation@gmail.com>
Subject: Some states challenge FCC broadband map
States have already submitted more than 300,000 location challenges
since the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) opened the door for
them to request corrections to its new and improved broadband map. But
as a deadline for availability challenges looms, some states said
they’ve encountered issues with the submission process.
https://www.fiercetelecom.com/broadband/fcc-broadband-map-challenges-near-350k-deadline-looms
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Message-ID: <20230121173128.GA1330028@telecomdigest.us>
Date: 21 Jan 2023 06:31:20 +0000
From: "Marco" <mo01@posteo.de>
Subject: Re: How ChatGPT Hijacks Democracy
On Sun, Jan 15, 2023 at 04:28:56PM -0500, Monty Solomon wrote:
> How ChatGPT Hijacks Democracy
>
> ... for all the consternation over the potential for humans to be
> replaced by machines in formats like poetry and sitcom scripts, a far
> greater threat looms: artificial intelligence replacing humans in the
> democratic processes — not through voting, but through lobbying.
>
>
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/01/15/opinion/ai-chatgpt-lobbying-democracy.html
Business and society are changing all the time. Letterpress
revolutioned information distribution. Electricity replaced fuels for
light, computers and networking (partially) replaced paper in the
office. E-mail and instant messengers replaced snail mail letters in
many circumstances.
Now AI ([which is] just software) replaces certain activities, like
doing (very) basic research.
If I need to find something out, I don't go to the library, borrow
some book and the try to find it out. That is [my] grandparent's way
to deal with that, I use search engines for that. AI software is able
to handle basic customer questions, maybe not in the intended quality
yet, but it might be improved. It is there - like cars are there -
and will be used. We need to deal with that - there is no other way.
I know that it can be abused - but almost anything can be abused.
Is this "Chat" engine mislabelled? Is it an "AI-based response
system," or something else entirely?
I don't know much about it - AI is a term that is widely used for many
aspects.
In some circumstances it saves time and money, like computers did in
the last 30 years. Government, at least in Germany, is very, very
slow. There are people who don't want to change anything, because
there is no market with competition for government tasks. Ai software
is also used by the big players in the internet, e.g. for suggesting
content or finding answers to questions the customers ask,
e.g. Amazon's Alexa. People are free to use it or not. The
disadvantage: More data will be collected.
I don't think that this is different from other communications. The
internet is being used to influence people, TV and radio broadcasts
are being used for that, since the 1920s. Did that create so many
problems?