Society's Child
The lawsuit was filed Sunday in the U.S. District Court in Washington D.C. by the non-profit organization International Rights Advocates, on behalf of 13 anonymous plaintiffs from the Democratic Republic of Congo. The complaint accuses the tech giants of "knowingly benefiting from and aiding and abetting the cruel and brutal use of young children in Democratic Republic of Congo ('DRC') to mine cobalt."
The suit demands a trial by jury for the plaintiffs, who include maimed child miners and the families of others killed in the cobalt mines.
Human rights Lawyer Terry Collingsworth of International Rights Advocates told CBS News that his organization "traced the supply chain back from the mine where the children were either killed or maimed and have traced it back up to these companies."
The lawsuit calls for the companies to take responsibility for child miners in their supply chains, and change the way they source the metal.
Miquela, who goes by @lilmiquela, has racked up 1.6 million followers on Instagram since she materialized out of thin air in 2016. As soon as she appeared, her posts were met with intrigue and questions about her robot-like appearance.
The truth is that despite Miquela being dubbed one of the 25 most influential people on the internet by Time magazine in 2018, she isn't really an influencer, a musician, or a model. She can't be, because she's a digital image.
The influencer market is huge and lucrative. According to a study by InfluencerDB, $5 billion was spent on Instagram influencer marketing in 2018, and the trend only continues to rise. The report estimated that 39% of all of Instagram's accounts are run by influencers. Considering there may be a billion active users on the platform, that's a lot of influencers to compete with.
So it makes sense that with the rise in both quality and accessibility of 3D imaging and computer-generated imagery (CGI) technology, digital figures would come for a piece of the action.
Comment: So it's not just deepfakes and fake news one needs to keep an eye out for - it's also fake people. Although, in essence the marketing angle isn't particularly new. If a cartoon character can be an 'influencer' then a CGI character could do the same. Perhaps it's the 'realism' blurring the line between a computer generated 'person' and a real human being that makes this all so creepy. See also:
- Former Reddit CEO: Internet traffic metrics are b******t - 'everything is fake'
- Samsung deepfake AI could fabricate a video of you from a single profile pic
- The importance of reviving critical thinking skills in a deepfake world
Comment: Notice how it's "Spain's public broadcaster," but "Russia's state-backed RT network."
Western propaganda at its subtlest!
The hack, which happened last Thursday, meant Spanish TV's +24 channel showed RT's interview between Puigdemont and the former Ecuadorian president Rafael Correa.
In the interview - one of RT's series Conversation with Correa - Puigdemont again insisted "there's no solution to the Catalan problem that doesn't involve independence".
Comment: With that as introduction, here's the RT (English) write-up of highlights from the interview:
If Kosovo, Albania & Macedonia are considered for EU membership, why not independent Scotland & Catalonia? - Puigdemont
Although support for impeachment never went over 50 percent, a plurality in favor of impeaching did stubbornly hold the lead in polling averages — at least, until Monday, the start of the week when the Democrat-controlled U.S. House is expected to pass two articles of impeachment against President Donald Trump.
One week ago, according to the RealClearPolitics poll of polls, 48 percent of those polled supported the impeachment and removal of Trump, while 45 percent were opposed. As of today, though, those numbers have flipped around: 46.7 percent support impeachment, while a plurality of 47.3 percent are opposed.
To the surprise of no one who watched the impeachment hearings, it was precisely those hearings that killed support for impeachment. Once the hearings launched, support began to face the pull of gravity that comes with having no evidence to back up your wild accusations.

Straight from the Ancient Silk Road: a camel caravan on the Afghan Wakhan Corridor.
This is arguably the ultimate road trip on earth. Marco Polo did it. All the legendary Silk Road explorers did it. Traveling the Pamir Highway back to back, as a harsh winter approaches, able to appreciate it in full, in silence and solitude, offers not only a historical plunge into the intricacies of the ancient Silk Road but a glimpse of what the future may bring in the form of the New Silk Roads.
This is a trip steeped in magic ancient history. Tajiks trace their roots back to tribes of Sogdians, Bactrians and Parthians. Indo-Iranians lived in Bactria ("a country of a thousand towns") and Sogdiana from the 6-7th centuries BC to the 8th century AD. Tajiks make up 80% of the republic's population, very proud of their Persian cultural heritage, and kin to Tajik-speaking peoples in northern Afghanistan and the region around Tashkurgan in Xinjiang.

Maajid Nawaz speaking at Maastricht University, 29 October 2018.
In 2010 he compiled a secret list of nonviolent Muslims - including well-known Muslim human rights activists - and accused them of sharing the ideology of terrorists, and submitted the report to the Conservative government. He has worked closely with torture apologists Sam Harris and Douglas Murray, and has been a vocal advocate of the Prevent strategy, a government counter-extremism strategy which has been condemned by the National Union of Teachers for encouraging surveillance of Muslim schoolchildren. Despite this, he is treated as a serious and credible voice in the UK; he is a weekly columnist for the Daily Beast, has his own radio show on LBC and has written for a wide range of mainstream British news outlets.
Comment: More on Mr. Nawaz' dubious background. It makes for eye-opening reading:
Maajid Nawaz: Case study of an (ex) status-driven extremist?
According to Columbus police, the situation began as a domestic dispute inside a home in the 3500 block of Headford Court. Officers were dispatched there shortly before 5 p.m. Saturday.
After speaking to the victim who had left the residence, officers went back to the location to make contact with the suspect, who refused to come out and barricaded himself inside.
Police called in SWAT based on threats officers say the man was making.

Gary He/Reuters
Aerial photo showing Boeing 737 Max airplanes parked at Boeing Field in Seattle, Washington, Oct. 20, 2019.
Boeing will suspend production of its 737 Max jets starting in January, the company announced Monday.
The company said no layoffs or furloughs are expected at this time as a result of the decision.
Comment: 'At this time'. It's highly unlikely that such a move will not result in cut backs.
The decision comes after Boeing board members met Monday to consider suspending or shutting down production of its 737 Max jets, which have been grounded for almost nine months.
Comment: Following the deadly crashes, no company in their right mind wants anything to do with Boeing's MAX 737: Paris air show: Airbus' autonomous planes, Boeing ghosted, while France, Germany & Spain agree to Euro jet fighter
See also:
- "It will be a crash for sure," said the man who blew the whistle on Boeing's 737Max
- Some Boeing 737 MAX parts "improperly manufactured" that need to be replaced - FAA
- Boeing introduces 737 Max software overhaul as lawmakers question FAA policies
Ah, Christmas in Europe! Rosy-cheeked children waiting for Santa Claus and his team of reindeer to overwhelm them with gifts. A feast of mince pies, turkey and mulled wine.
Today the only place to really experience this idyll is in your dreams. Because Christmas celebrations in Europe have become a violent, bleak, homogenized, commercial disappointment.
There are plenty of reasons for this, involving all the big issues of our times: terrorism, economics, cultural shifts, diversity and even climate change.
The 2020 US election is just around the corner and social media is crawling with wrongthink, according to the Daily Beast. This time, it's not Russian trolls - it's worse. The Russian trolls' ideas have infected so-called "American neo-confederates" and created an unholy hybrid of racist Russian trolls who are unstoppable by the usual mass-deplatforming solutions used to wipe out entire nests of foreign-origin trolls. It's almost like they're...real people.
The Beast partnered up with the NATO-backed Atlantic Council's Digital Forensic Research Lab (DFRL) - not exactly a bastion of neutral, level-headed reporting - to comb through the darker reaches of Instagram, where the platform has stubbornly refused to remove accounts that aren't violating its terms of service even as they "run some of the same racist crap" as the Internet Research Agency troll accounts of yore.
The offending memes include the Peanuts cartoon character Linus van Pelt sporting a t-shirt that reads "THE SOUTH" and hugging a Confederate flag as his blanket. A speech bubble that appears to be coming from the blanket says "Our Battle Flag Protecting Us From Tyranny Since 1861." Another meme shows the Confederate flag with a coiled snake, the caption "Don't tread on me," and another caption "HERITAGE NOT HATE." Won't someone think of the children?!?












Comment: The bigger issue is why these families and children have the need to work such jobs in the first place. It's because they need the money. As long as Congo's economy is mismanaged and exploited by its corrupt government and foreign governments and corporations willing to keep it that way as long as they share in the profits, children will continue to be used for jobs of this sort.