[ExI] AI Foundation launches AI.XYZ to give people their own AI assistants

William Flynn Wallace foozler83 at gmail.com
Mon Jul 3 16:20:52 UTC 2023


MB, we have to understand that policemen do not come from the higher IQ
levels.  And that any bureaucracy is almost by definition a mess.

The chief guardians of our privacy rights is the Supreme Court.  I think
we'd better keep a close eye on them.  I think we don't see enough privacy
cases being decided there.   bill w

On Mon, Jul 3, 2023 at 10:22 AM MB via extropy-chat <
extropy-chat at lists.extropy.org> wrote:

> bill w, what you say is how it is *supposed* to work, only some judges
> rubberstamp warrants without ever asking how valid the info is - hence
> people who get shot in no-knock raids to the wrong address and such.  And
> some cops don't do proper checking of what they put on a warrant request.
> Either oversight or deliberate, who knows.  "Trusted informers" are not
> always trustworthy - they have their own reasons for saying correct or
> wrong things, which is why Red Flag laws are so very tricky.
>
> Regards,
> MB
>
>
>
> On Mon, July 3, 2023 09:51, William Flynn Wallace via extropy-chat wrote:
> > No, Ben, I really do not know our privacy laws.  I know that for some
> > things (and I don't know what) a judge has to agree to let the police dig
> > into your life.  A warrant.
> >
> > Millions of cops.  A few bad eggs.  Many problems:  we don't screen them
> > enough at all; we don't pay them enough at all.  We present being a cop
> as
> > a military police type of thing.  Wrong attitude.  Many cops are from the
> > lower classes and there is where you get more racism.  So many weapons
> the
> > cops are afraid and angry before they even get to a crime scene.  So that
> > leads to irrational overreacting.
> >
> > Many cops have been kicked off the force, indicted,and put in prison.  It
> > is a shame that so much bad cop behavior happens, but we don't tend to
> > tolerate it.  Body cameras on cops have been really helpful.
> >
> > bill w
> >
> > On Sun, Jul 2, 2023 at 4:14 PM Ben Zaiboc via extropy-chat <
> > extropy-chat at lists.extropy.org> wrote:
> >
> >> On 02/07/2023 19:00, bill w wrote:
> >> > Does being arrested let the police dig into your smartphone, PC,
> >> > online media, etc.?  If we don't have privacy laws covering some of
> >> > this, we need them.  bill w
> >>
> >> Bill, you live in the USA, you should know that being arrested lets the
> >> police do anything they damn well please, up to and including murder.
> >>
> >> But you don't have to be arrested for various government bodies to dig
> >> into any information at all. Privacy laws are irrelevant. if Edward
> >> Snowden et. al. did nothing else, they proved that.
> >>
> >> Ben
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