Sorta Secure

The FBI is recommending that we stop using text messages. After last week’s reports that Chinese hackers have infiltrated at least eight American telecommunications companies, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency issued recommendations to telcoms to help them secure their infrastructures. For the rest of us, the FBI “warned iPhone and Android users to stop texting and to use an encrypted messaging platform instead.” According … Continue reading Sorta Secure

What’s Next?

I was playing with Notebook LM a few weeks ago. This is an AI tool, developed by Google, that is supposed to help people interact with documents and resources. You can give it a bunch of content, and then summarize that content and ask questions about it. It has a cool feature that creates AI-generated audio overviews in a conversational, podcast-like format. So I fed … Continue reading What’s Next?

What Do I See?

My first experience with the firehose was Usenet. In the pre-web Internet days, there was a global discussion board with thousands of topic-specific groups called newsgroups. You could subscribe to the newsgroups you were interested in, and see the messages posted to those groups. Using special software, called a newsreader, you could manage which groups you belonged to, and read, post, and respond to messages … Continue reading What Do I See?

Not So Fast

I think I’m doing it wrong. Lately, I’ve been using both Google’s Gemini and ChatGPT for my generative AI needs. I recently posed this question to both: Gemini told me I would land in Los Angeles at 6:25 PM local time on July 30. ChatGPT told me I would land in Los Angeles at 6:25 AM on July 31. This is a real scenario, and … Continue reading Not So Fast

Shifting Bias

Twenty years ago, I was in the market for a new car. I wanted a mid-size sedan that was safe, reliable, and had good fuel economy. I gathered data from NHTSA and the EPA and combined it with reviews and reliability assessments from Edmunds, Car & Driver, and other resources. I had a lovely spreadsheet with all of the characteristics I cared about for every … Continue reading Shifting Bias

Detecting AI

On Monday, March 9, 2020, Governor Mike DeWine announced that three cases of COVID-19 had been confirmed in Ohio. Two days later, he reported that Ohio had four cases. I was confused. Does that mean Ohio now had seven cases, or does the second announcement include the three previously reported? When I figured out that seven was the total, I knew we had a problem. … Continue reading Detecting AI

Anywhere You Get Your Podcasts

It’s a casual throwaway line. You can listen to us anywhere that you get your podcasts… It is a radical statement. It is a political statement. It is a technical architectural statement. Because what it represents is a system that was designed to let anybody run their own podcast, and to be able to consume it without regard to one company controlling it… I have … Continue reading Anywhere You Get Your Podcasts

Asynchronous Learning Networks

I kind of fell into the world of personal learning networks. I didn’t know, back in 2005, that I was curating a group of professionals with whom I would exchange ideas, or that it would become the most valuable professional learning experience of my career. I just knew that there were interesting people talking about challenging ideas, and that the things they were struggling with … Continue reading Asynchronous Learning Networks