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Fri, 05 Nov 2021
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Are you for real? Fake CGI influencer Lil Miquela claims she was 'sexually assaulted'

lil miquela
© Instagram / @lilmiquela
A fake, computer-generated social media influencer and 'musician' Lil Miquela has irked some of her 1.8 million followers and many others online after claiming she was "sexually assaulted."

Dubbed the "first virtual influencer," Lil Miquela is part influencer, pushing a variety of clothing brands, part activist, vocally supporting Black Lives Matter and LGBT+ rights, and part dystopian nightmare.


Her bio describes her as a "change-seeking robot" and she is the product of an odd AI startup called Brud, whose website consists of a view-only Google document in which the company claims to be based in LA and makes 'story worlds' that "create a more tolerant world by leveraging cultural understanding and technology."

Comment: She's not the only fake character out there with a following. See also: Fake, computer-generated Instagram influencers are modeling designer clothes, wearing Spanx, and attending red carpet premieres


Jet5

First made-in-China aircraft carrier, the Shandong, officially enters service


Comment: Shandong province was one of the first places in which the 1899-1901 Boxer Rebellion started and became one of the centers of the uprising. The Chinese were 'punished' for this insurrection by having Shandong handed over as a colony, first to Imperial Germany, then to Imperial Japan. This was the nadir of China's 'Century of Humiliation', and sparked the May Fourth protest movement that led to China becoming a republic and eventually free of foreign interference. So when the Chinese today name an aircraft carrier the Shandong, take note that it is a very pointed spear with a long, deep train of history behind it...


Shandong aircraft carrier

The carrier officially entered into service after a ceremony in Hainan on Tuesday.
China's first home-built aircraft carrier was officially commissioned by President Xi Jinping on Tuesday as Beijing flexed its military muscles.

The new warship will be called the Shandong and its formal entry into service is a significant milestone in the country's efforts to build up its naval power.

This drive has been viewed warily by its neighbours and the United States in light of tensions in strategically sensitive areas such as the Taiwan Strait and South China Sea.

The state broadcaster CCTV reported that the ceremony in Sanya, a port in the southern island province of Hainan, was attended by officials from the Southern Theatre Command which oversees the South China Sea.

The ship's captain will be Lai Yijun, who previously commanded the frigate Lianyungang, while its political commissar will be Pang Jianhong, who served on the destroyer Xian. Both are senior colonels.

Comment: See also:


Attention

Establishment journo's calls for big tech 'censorship' blasted as 'threat to press freedom

censoreship
Journalist Sulome Anderson claims The Grayzone news outlet publishes 'conspiracy theories' and that asking Google to distinguish between different outlets is not the same as censorship.

An establishment journalist has triggered controversy, and an online debate on press freedom, by publicly requesting Google de-rank the independent news site The Grayzone. Sulome Anderson, who, according to her bio on her Twitter page, has published with news outlets such as The Washington Post, Newsweek, New York Magazine, and Foreign Policy, labelled a recent article by Grayzone contributor Rania Khalek as "dangerous". For her part, Khalek called Anderson's comments to Google a "dangerous threat to press freedom"

Freedom of Press vs Big Tech Control

Khalek's article, which Anderson specifically took aim at, is part of a two-piece investigation into alleged US and Gulf states attempts to co-opt and influence the ongoing anti-corruption protests in Lebanon. Khalek writes that:
"By joining the roadblocks around Beirut, the protesters have inadvertently allowed themselves to be used by these US-allied parties. Whether they know it or not, the media-friendly artists and students at the ring road in downtown Beirut have given cover to the Lebanese Forces roadblocks in the north and the [Progressive Socialist Party] and Future Party roadblocks in the south."
Anderson lashed out against the article, calling The Grayzone a "conspiracy theorist website":

Comment: See also:


Oil Well

Citing climate change, Goldman Sachs rules out financing new Arctic oil projects

beaufort Sea oil rig
© Shell Alaska file photo
A drilling unit works at a Shell prospect in the Beaufort Sea in 2012.
The major U.S. investment bank acknowledged that a changing climate is linked to a raft of social and economic issues.

After previously declaring there was no economic rationale for Arctic oil and gas drilling, Goldman Sachs now says it will go a step further and refuse to finance new oil projects in the region, in part on environmental and social grounds.

In updated corporate environmental guidelines published Sunday, Goldman Sachs, one of America's "big-six" banks, said it "will decline any financing transaction that directly supports new upstream Arctic oil exploration or development. This includes but is not limited to the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge."

The change comes after Goldman Sachs, earlier this month, said it "has not and would not expect to finance oil exploration" in oil-rich, but environmentally sensitive section of Alaska's North Slope area.

Comment: So Goldman Sachs finally got (climate) religion? They are concerned about a native tribe whose name the head honchos probably couldn't even pronounce? No bank turns down a chance to make money on a vital commodity. Is it possible that by drying up funds for proven technologies, the energy industries will be herded into risky, untried methods of providing their product? This even as the 'green power revolution' is already showing cracks.

What is really going on here?


Handcuffs

Nanny state: Texas schools are arresting & imprisoning teens for the 'crime' of vaping

Thomas Williams-Platt arrested vaping Texas
© Angela Piazza for The Texas Tribune
Thomas Williams-Platt, 18, in the backyard of his aunt’s home in Georgetown on Nov. 22, 2019. Last December the then 17-year-old was arrested for bringing a vape pen to his high school.
Imagine a building where drug-sniffing dogs roam the corridors, air-quality sensors alert officials if anyone is inhaling a controlled substance, using the bathroom is a privilege rather than a right, clothing is searched in case anyone is hiding contraband up their sleeves, and those who are caught breaking the rules could face life-derailing punishments.

You might be imagining a prison. In fact, I have just described a public school in Texas, where the authorities are so obsessed with stopping teenagers from vaping that they are perfectly willing to treat them like inmates.

That's the only conclusion one can reach from this eye-opening Texas Tribune article, which details the state's draconian efforts to crack down on the vaping scourge. This year, Texas raised the vaping age from 18 to 21, and schools are pulling out all the stops — including installing "vape-detecting" sensors in the hallways — to prevent underage usage. The Tribune reports:

Comment: Is the so called 'war on vaping' to blame for the surge in sentences to these 'alternative schools' or have authorities created another excuse to pad the wallets of those who are able to profit from a school to prison pipeline? While vaping may present health consequences, arresting teenagers will definitely harm their future prospects and throwing them into 'alternative schools' with a population of disturbed youth is unlikely to improve things.


Handcuffs

German security services to recruit HUNDREDS of new officers to combat right-wing radicals - interior minister

German police
© Reuters / Thilo Schmuelgen 56
Germany's police and its domestic security service, the BfV, are to be beefed up with 600 new staff members tasked specifically with tackling right-wing extremism, Interior Minister Horst Seehofer has announced.

Unveiling his plan in Berlin on Tuesday, the minister warned that more than 12,000 potentially violent right-wing radicals are on the loose in Germany, adding that half of all politically motivated acts of violence in Germany are committed by such people.

Seehofer also decried the "ugly blood trail" left behind by right-wing extremists over the last couple of decades, specifically mentioning a series of murders committed by a neo-Nazi group known as the National Socialist Underground (NSU) between 2001 and 2006. The minister also referred to the assassination of Walter Luebcke - a member of Chancellor Angela Merkel's Christian Democratic Union, who actively supported her immigration policies - in June 2019 as well as a shooting attack in Halle in October, which left two people dead.

Comment: Sounds like Germany is entering phase two of its fear and chaos agenda. The first was to destabilize the country with unrestricted immigration policy, and the second is to increase fear about reactionary types, and thus increase authoritative power over the population.


Cross

Pope lifts secrecy obligation for those who report having been abused

pope francis
Pope Francis has abolished the obligation of secrecy for those who report having been sexually abused by a priest and for those who testify in a church trial or process having to do with clerical sexual abuse.

"The person who files the report, the person who alleges to have been harmed and the witnesses shall not be bound by any obligation of silence with regard to matters involving the case," the pope ordered in a new "Instruction On the Confidentiality of Legal Proceedings," published Dec. 17.

In an accompanying note, Bishop Juan Ignacio Arrieta, secretary of the Pontifical Council for Legislative Texts, said the change regarding the "pontifical secret" has nothing to do with the seal of the sacrament of confession.

"The absolute obligation to observe the sacramental seal," he said, "is an obligation imposed on the priest by reason of the position he holds in administering the sacrament of confession and not even the penitent can free him of it."

The instruction was published by the Vatican along with changes to the already-updated "Sacramentorum Sanctitatis Tutela" ("Safeguarding the Sanctity of the Sacraments"), the 2001 document issued by St. John Paul II outlining procedures for the investigation and trial of any member of the clergy accused of sexually abusing a child or vulnerable adult or accused of acquiring, possessing or distributing child pornography.

In the first of the amendments, Pope Francis changed the definition of child pornography. Previously the subject was a person under the age of 14. The new description of the crime says, "The acquisition, possession or distribution by a cleric of pornographic images of minors under the age of 18, for purposes of sexual gratification, by whatever means or using whatever technology."

Dig

Apple, Google, Microsoft, Tesla and Dell sued over child-mined cobalt from Africa

cobalt mine children congo
Some of the biggest technology firms in the United States have been accused in a lawsuit of complicity in the death and maiming of hundreds, if not thousands of African children who mine cobalt, a mineral vital to the production of the lithium-ion batteries in everything from smartphones to electric cars. The defendants named in the suit are Apple, Google parent company Alphabet, Microsoft, Dell and Tesla.

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.

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.


Control Panel

Fake, computer-generated Instagram influencers are modeling designer clothes, wearing Spanx, and attending red carpet premieres

Miquela
© Baauer / YouTube
Miquela in her video for "Hate Me."
"Congrats @travisscott on the premiere of #lookmomicanfly," Instagram influencer and artist Miquela wrote on one of her latest posts, apparently after attending the red carpet premiere for the rapper's new Netflix series. "I laughed, I cried, I almost fell out of your jet."

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:


Quenelle - Golden

Someone hacked Spanish state TV to broadcast RT interview with rebel Catalan leader

RT Spanish Correa Puidgemont
Spain's public broadcaster has inadvertently carried an interview with the exiled Catalan separatist leader Carles Puigdemont after hackers hijacked its online news channel and substituted its content for that of Russia's state-backed RT network.


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