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37 votes
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What's next for public television and radio in the US after Republicans strip funding?
21 votes -
CSU students’ 3D printing project improves campus Wi-Fi, saves thousands of dollars
29 votes -
‘Superman’s $57m second weekend propels Warner Bros. to top of YTD studio marketshare with $1.32b
7 votes -
Who'all remembers the A-bomb Kid? Guess what he's doing today...
I didn't know where to categorize this. It's not current, kinda politics, kinda tech, kinda a lot of things, but mostly I guess, I was just freaked out and wanted to share/discuss. I read about...
I didn't know where to categorize this. It's not current, kinda politics, kinda tech, kinda a lot of things, but mostly I guess, I was just freaked out and wanted to share/discuss.
I read about this guy 40-50 years ago in The Readers Digest, have never heard anything about him since then, until the other day, a forum chat reminded me and I went rabbit-holing...
John Aristotle Phillips did an independent research project for his Physics degree at Princeton, on how to build a simple nuclear explosive device, including explicit instructions on how and why and etc. His larger goal was to help stop nuclear material proliferation by showing that there were no "secrets" left, no tech hurdles for anyone with a brain, except that of actually acquiring weapons-grade material.
His advisor was no less than Freeman Dyson, who gave him an 'A' and then immediately pulled the paper out of circulation. A couple months later, the Pakistani govt called Phillips, asking to buy a copy of his paper.
So, that's the background. It was his claim to fame back in the '70s.
From there, he went into politics, and etc etc, long story short, he's a top data broker. For decades now, he has been the CEO of one of the biggest US data trawling corporations, holding detailed personal info on at least 175M Americans (as of 2007 - doubtless, it's more today), which they use to help get politicians elected.
"Aristotle has served every occupant of the White House since Ronald Reagan, and consults for several top political action committees."
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Aristotle_Phillips#Aristotle,_Inc.
Perhaps unsurprisingly for someone who's devoted his life to gathering info about other people, there doesn't seem to be all that much out there about him or his company.
So, my gut tells me he has become "a bad guy", just my automatic reaction to anyone who deals in this field ... But, IDK, bigger picture is just, I don't know how to process this info. Maybe there's nothing to process, it is what it is.
IDK. Just looking for other people's perspectives, I guess.
23 votes -
Transit passes are better but free fares are good too
29 votes -
CBS to cancel ‘Late Show With Stephen Colbert’ citing ‘financial decision’
75 votes -
David Lynch - Ghost of Love (2005)
5 votes -
Billie Eilish announces James Cameron 3D collab in Manchester
8 votes -
Damian Lillard reaches deal to return to Portland Trail Blazers
13 votes -
Brad Pitt drives an F1 car for the first time | Full day with McLaren
8 votes -
California hospital chain Dignity Health accused of losing track of bodies, failure to notify next of kin
17 votes -
The hidden engineering of floating bridges
17 votes -
Clipse - Let God Sort Em Out (2025)
18 votes -
Texas has long been under threat from the launches and explosions of SpaceX rockets. Now Hawaii is emerging as another possible victim.
15 votes -
Shouldn't somebody *stop* "Meta Superintelligence Labs"?
Noted smoked meats enthusiast Mark Zuckerberg has recently been running around collecting ML experts for a project involving an organization called Meta Superintelligence Labs, which is set to...
Noted smoked meats enthusiast Mark Zuckerberg has recently been running around collecting ML experts for a project involving an organization called Meta Superintelligence Labs, which is set to feature compute clusters with names like "Prometheus" and "Hyperion", and which will attempt to "deliver" superintelligence.
Isn't this sort of behavior on the list of things people are absolutely not to be allowed to do? Or has something changed and we now feel it's safe for Mark Zuckerberg to be allowed control of a piece of equipment that can outsmart all his enemies and also Mark Zuckerberg? Are we all safely convinced he will fail?
If it cannot be permitted, who is responsible for not permitting it?
26 votes -
Nebraska sues neighboring Colorado over how much water it’s drawing from the South Platte River
19 votes -
MI New York crowned Major League Cricket champions after beating Washington Freedom in thrilling final
5 votes -
Inside NPR's Tiny Desk Concert | Set tour
12 votes -
Emmy nominations 2025: ‘Severance’ leads all shows with twenty-seven nods, ‘The Penguin,’ ‘The Studio’ and ‘White Lotus’ close behind
18 votes -
A company tried to put real estate on the Blockchain and now it's facing a lawsuit from the city of Detroit
21 votes -
Highly Suspect - Arizona [Acoustic] (2020)
4 votes -
Delta strips engines off new Airbus jets to overcome US shortage
19 votes -
Data manipulation within the US Federal government
21 votes -
Why US anti-trans campaigns keep returning to the politics of meat
21 votes -
‘The Odyssey’ 70mm IMAX tickets are going on sale a year in advance — This Thursday, July 17
9 votes -
The state of American men is — not so good
42 votes -
A company called Inventwood is starting to mass-produce "superwood"
34 votes -
Pokey LaFarge - Get It 'Fore It's Gone (2021)
2 votes -
In a small Texas town, Pride grows loud and joyful
15 votes -
China is hoovering up market share in electric vehicle-friendly Norway, posing significant competition to Tesla and other Western auto giants
13 votes -
Fangbanger - Nobody (2025)
3 votes -
US aerospace company Beta Technologies' electric plane, ALIA CTOL, has completed a 200 kilometre journey between Sønderborg and Copenhagen airports
14 votes -
Google Wallet adds age verification and more government ID support
21 votes -
US National Institutes of Health suspends dozens of pathogen studies over ‘gain-of-function’ concerns
32 votes -
JetStream - An online school for weather
23 votes -
Huge fines after drone surveillance catches Californians with illegal fireworks
32 votes -
'I can't drink the water' - Life next to a US data centre
26 votes -
Legendary is mulling acquisition of Lionsgate Studios
8 votes -
Moneyball was supposed to kill the human eye - the opposite is happening
7 votes -
What dashcam do you use?
My last dashcam was a total dud and wasn't even operational for 6 hours. I'm hoping to get some community recommendations on reliable units with good image quality. If you would also share the...
My last dashcam was a total dud and wasn't even operational for 6 hours. I'm hoping to get some community recommendations on reliable units with good image quality. If you would also share the approx. length of time you've had/used it that would be a huge help as well. Thanks in advance!
26 votes -
Captain Beyond - Bright Blue Tango (1973)
2 votes -
Peak went from a cancelled game that couldn't get funding to selling millions on Steam – result of a killer collaboration between Aggro Crab and Landfall Games
19 votes -
underscores - Music (2025)
7 votes -
About Starfront Observatories
7 votes -
NCAA 2025 college football rules training video - targeting
6 votes -
Why America built a forest from Canada to Texas
14 votes -
What no one wants to admit about comic book sales (BONE video essay)
11 votes -
American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) suing Health and Human Services (HHS) secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. over vaccine policy
30 votes -
Studios decry cinemas’ ad-filled preshows as AMC warns of “25-30 extra minutes”: Here are the consequences for movie biz
35 votes