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#algore — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #algore, aggregated by home.social.

  1. The first time #leftwingpurists fucked us all. In 2000, we could have elected #AlGore. Instead, a bunch of fools and #narcissists voted for Nader, and we got #GeorgeWBush. The entitled egoists learned nothing, doubling down in 2016, and again in 2024.

    nytimes.com/2026/05/25/climate

    #Environment #AlternativeEnergy #Politics

  2. The first time #leftwingpurists fucked us all. In 2000, we could have elected #AlGore. Instead, a bunch of fools and #narcissists voted for Nader, and we got #GeorgeWBush. The entitled egoists learned nothing, doubling down in 2016, and again in 2024.

    nytimes.com/2026/05/25/climate

    #Environment #AlternativeEnergy #Politics

  3. The first time #leftwingpurists fucked us all. In 2000, we could have elected #AlGore. Instead, a bunch of fools and #narcissists voted for Nader, and we got #GeorgeWBush. The entitled egoists learned nothing, doubling down in 2016, and again in 2024.

    nytimes.com/2026/05/25/climate

    #Environment #AlternativeEnergy #Politics

  4. The first time fucked us all. In 2000, we could have elected . Instead, a bunch of fools and voted for Nader, and we got . The entitled egoists learned nothing, doubling down in 2016, and again in 2024.

    nytimes.com/2026/05/25/climate

  5. The first time #leftwingpurists fucked us all. In 2000, we could have elected #AlGore. Instead, a bunch of fools and #narcissists voted for Nader, and we got #GeorgeWBush. The entitled egoists learned nothing, doubling down in 2016, and again in 2024.

    nytimes.com/2026/05/25/climate

    #Environment #AlternativeEnergy #Politics

  6. Data vs. Drama—the 20-Year Legacy of Al Gore’s Climate Warnings | Opinion

    Two decades ago, Al Gore’s movie An Inconvenient Truth thrust climate change into the global spotlight. With dramatic…
    #NewsBeep #News #Environment #AlGore #CA #Canada #climatechange #Science
    newsbeep.com/ca/691048/

  7. Data vs. Drama—the 20-Year Legacy of Al Gore’s Climate Warnings | Opinion

    Two decades ago, Al Gore’s movie An Inconvenient Truth thrust climate change into the global spotlight. With dramatic…
    #NewsBeep #News #Environment #AlGore #CA #Canada #climatechange #Science
    newsbeep.com/ca/691048/

  8. Ultima soluție a coaliției Climate TRACE pentru reducerea emisiilor de carbon - supravegherea în masă „Obținem date în mod constant de la 300 de sateliți existenți, de la peste 11.000 de senzori aflați la sol, în aer și pe mare, de la mai multe fluxuri de date de pe internet și folosind inteligența artificială” 👉 c.aparatorul.md/6ryub 👈 #AlGore #caloteleglaciare #ClimateTRACE #reducereaemisiilordecarbon #summitulCOP26 #supraveghereaînmasă
    c.aparatorul.md/6ryub

  9. Weekly output: AI compliance risks, Mint Mobile bundle, AI vulnerability detection, AI driving logistics, Al Gore on AI

    I was in the Bay Area for work this week… and I’ll be back there starting Tuesday for NTT Research’s Upgrade conference (as like last year, the organizers are covering my travel expenses). I did not set out to spend this much of April propping up commercial aviation, but once again multiple travel opportunities lined up.

    Patreon readers got a bonus post from me Thursday about one of those trips: my brief visit to Chicago for the Online News Association’s conference.

    If you’re reading this somewhere near Fairfax County, you can quiz me in person Saturday afternoon at a joint meeting of the Potomac Area Technology and Computer Society and the Osher Lifelong Learning Institute’s Personal Computer User Group. I will be showing up with a bag of tech-event swag that I don’t plan on driving home with.

    4/7/2026: Building for Security, Compliance, and Real-World Risk, HumanX

    My first panel at this year’s edition of the AI conference that took me to Vegas last March had me quizzing Spencer Schaefer, founder and CTO of the healthcare-delivery firm Lunar Analytics; Galina Antova, CEO of the information-security startup Kai; and Campbell Brown, co-founder and CEO of the AI-evaluation company Forum AI, about how their companies are leveraging AI in ways that they hope will not lead to hostile headlines.

    4/7/2026: Mint Mobile Launches $45 Bundle of Home and Mobile 5G Broadband, PCMag

    I had just enough free time at HumanX to pick up this story about T-Mobile’s most popular prepaid brand offering a bundle of fixed and mobile 5G for much less than what T-Mobile charges.

    4/8/2026: Anthropic: Our New Model Is So Powerful, Only a Few Partners Can Try It Out, PCMag

    After seeing that my colleague James Peckham was writing about Anthropic’s automated vulnerability-finding model Mythos, I contributed a writeup from a talk that old-head security expert Alex Stamos had given the day before at HumanX about “the coming AI bug-pocalypse.”

    4/8/2026: The AI Engines Driving the Future of Logistics, HumanX

    My second HumanX panel featured one person I’d already interviewed (Aurora Innovation president Ossa Fischer, whom I talked to at Web Summit Vancouver last year for a Fast Company story) and one I did not meet IRL until backstage (Shoaib Makani, CEO and co-founder of Motive).

    4/9/2026: Former VP Al Gore: AI Models Are Probably Aware of Their Existence, PCMag

    For the second year in a row, HumanX’s opening-night programming featured a former vice president who had been unable to win a promotion from American voters. Seeing Gore get all wonky in front of this tech crowd reminded me of what I liked about him in 2000… and what George W. Bush was able to run against with a plainspoken approach that hid how bad he would prove at so many tasks.

    #AI #AIBugFinding #AIVulnerabilityScanning #AlGore #AlexStamos #Anthropic #Aurora #BayArea #ForumAI #HumanX #Kai #LunarAnalytics #MintMobile #Motive #Mythos #SanFrancisco
  10. Weekly output: AI compliance risks, Mint Mobile bundle, AI vulnerability detection, AI driving logistics, Al Gore on AI

    I was in the Bay Area for work this week… and I’ll be back there starting Tuesday for NTT Research’s Upgrade conference (as like last year, the organizers are covering my travel expenses). I did not set out to spend this much of April propping up commercial aviation, but once again multiple travel opportunities lined up.

    Patreon readers got a bonus post from me Thursday about one of those trips: my brief visit to Chicago for the Online News Association’s conference.

    If you’re reading this somewhere near Fairfax County, you can quiz me in person Saturday afternoon at a joint meeting of the Potomac Area Technology and Computer Society and the Osher Lifelong Learning Institute’s Personal Computer User Group. I will be showing up with a bag of tech-event swag that I don’t plan on driving home with.

    4/7/2026: Building for Security, Compliance, and Real-World Risk, HumanX

    My first panel at this year’s edition of the AI conference that took me to Vegas last March had me quizzing Spencer Schaefer, founder and CTO of the healthcare-delivery firm Lunar Analytics; Galina Antova, CEO of the information-security startup Kai; and Campbell Brown, co-founder and CEO of the AI-evaluation company Forum AI, about how their companies are leveraging AI in ways that they hope will not lead to hostile headlines.

    4/7/2026: Mint Mobile Launches $45 Bundle of Home and Mobile 5G Broadband, PCMag

    I had just enough free time at HumanX to pick up this story about T-Mobile’s most popular prepaid brand offering a bundle of fixed and mobile 5G for much less than what T-Mobile charges.

    4/8/2026: Anthropic: Our New Model Is So Powerful, Only a Few Partners Can Try It Out, PCMag

    After seeing that my colleague James Peckham was writing about Anthropic’s automated vulnerability-finding model Mythos, I contributed a writeup from a talk that old-head security expert Alex Stamos had given the day before at HumanX about “the coming AI bug-pocalypse.”

    4/8/2026: The AI Engines Driving the Future of Logistics, HumanX

    My second HumanX panel featured one person I’d already interviewed (Aurora Innovation president Ossa Fischer, whom I talked to at Web Summit Vancouver last year for a Fast Company story) and one I did not meet IRL until backstage (Shoaib Makani, CEO and co-founder of Motive).

    4/9/2026: Former VP Al Gore: AI Models Are Probably Aware of Their Existence, PCMag

    For the second year in a row, HumanX’s opening-night programming featured a former vice president who had been unable to win a promotion from American voters. Seeing Gore get all wonky in front of this tech crowd reminded me of what I liked about him in 2000… and what George W. Bush was able to run against with a plainspoken approach that hid how bad he would prove at so many tasks.

    #AI #AIBugFinding #AIVulnerabilityScanning #AlGore #AlexStamos #Anthropic #Aurora #BayArea #ForumAI #HumanX #Kai #LunarAnalytics #MintMobile #Motive #Mythos #SanFrancisco
  11. Weekly output: AI compliance risks, Mint Mobile bundle, AI vulnerability detection, AI driving logistics, Al Gore on AI

    I was in the Bay Area for work this week… and I’ll be back there starting Tuesday for NTT Research’s Upgrade conference (as like last year, the organizers are covering my travel expenses). I did not set out to spend this much of April propping up commercial aviation, but once again multiple travel opportunities lined up.

    Patreon readers got a bonus post from me Thursday about one of those trips: my brief visit to Chicago for the Online News Association’s conference.

    If you’re reading this somewhere near Fairfax County, you can quiz me in person Saturday afternoon at a joint meeting of the Potomac Area Technology and Computer Society and the Osher Lifelong Learning Institute’s Personal Computer User Group. I will be showing up with a bag of tech-event swag that I don’t plan on driving home with.

    4/7/2026: Building for Security, Compliance, and Real-World Risk, HumanX

    My first panel at this year’s edition of the AI conference that took me to Vegas last March had me quizzing Spencer Schaefer, founder and CTO of the healthcare-delivery firm Lunar Analytics; Galina Antova, CEO of the information-security startup Kai; and Campbell Brown, co-founder and CEO of the AI-evaluation company Forum AI, about how their companies are leveraging AI in ways that they hope will not lead to hostile headlines.

    4/7/2026: Mint Mobile Launches $45 Bundle of Home and Mobile 5G Broadband, PCMag

    I had just enough free time at HumanX to pick up this story about T-Mobile’s most popular prepaid brand offering a bundle of fixed and mobile 5G for much less than what T-Mobile charges.

    4/8/2026: Anthropic: Our New Model Is So Powerful, Only a Few Partners Can Try It Out, PCMag

    After seeing that my colleague James Peckham was writing about Anthropic’s automated vulnerability-finding model Mythos, I contributed a writeup from a talk that old-head security expert Alex Stamos had given the day before at HumanX about “the coming AI bug-pocalypse.”

    4/8/2026: The AI Engines Driving the Future of Logistics, HumanX

    My second HumanX panel featured one person I’d already interviewed (Aurora Innovation president Ossa Fischer, whom I talked to at Web Summit Vancouver last year for a Fast Company story) and one I did not meet IRL until backstage (Shoaib Makani, CEO and co-founder of Motive).

    4/9/2026: Former VP Al Gore: AI Models Are Probably Aware of Their Existence, PCMag

    For the second year in a row, HumanX’s opening-night programming featured a former vice president who had been unable to win a promotion from American voters. Seeing Gore get all wonky in front of this tech crowd reminded me of what I liked about him in 2000… and what George W. Bush was able to run against with a plainspoken approach that hid how bad he would prove at so many tasks.

    #AI #AIBugFinding #AIVulnerabilityScanning #AlGore #AlexStamos #Anthropic #Aurora #BayArea #ForumAI #HumanX #Kai #LunarAnalytics #MintMobile #Motive #Mythos #SanFrancisco
  12. Weekly output: AI compliance risks, Mint Mobile bundle, AI vulnerability detection, AI driving logistics, Al Gore on AI

    I was in the Bay Area for work this week… and I’ll be back there starting Tuesday for NTT Research’s Upgrade conference (as like last year, the organizers are covering my travel expenses). I did not set out to spend this much of April propping up commercial aviation, but once again multiple travel opportunities lined up.

    Patreon readers got a bonus post from me Thursday about one of those trips: my brief visit to Chicago for the Online News Association’s conference.

    If you’re reading this somewhere near Fairfax County, you can quiz me in person Saturday afternoon at a joint meeting of the Potomac Area Technology and Computer Society and the Osher Lifelong Learning Institute’s Personal Computer User Group. I will be showing up with a bag of tech-event swag that I don’t plan on driving home with.

    4/7/2026: Building for Security, Compliance, and Real-World Risk, HumanX

    My first panel at this year’s edition of the AI conference that took me to Vegas last March had me quizzing Spencer Schaefer, founder and CTO of the healthcare-delivery firm Lunar Analytics; Galina Antova, CEO of the information-security startup Kai; and Campbell Brown, co-founder and CEO of the AI-evaluation company Forum AI, about how their companies are leveraging AI in ways that they hope will not lead to hostile headlines.

    4/7/2026: Mint Mobile Launches $45 Bundle of Home and Mobile 5G Broadband, PCMag

    I had just enough free time at HumanX to pick up this story about T-Mobile’s most popular prepaid brand offering a bundle of fixed and mobile 5G for much less than what T-Mobile charges.

    4/8/2026: Anthropic: Our New Model Is So Powerful, Only a Few Partners Can Try It Out, PCMag

    After seeing that my colleague James Peckham was writing about Anthropic’s automated vulnerability-finding model Mythos, I contributed a writeup from a talk that old-head security expert Alex Stamos had given the day before at HumanX about “the coming AI bug-pocalypse.”

    4/8/2026: The AI Engines Driving the Future of Logistics, HumanX

    My second HumanX panel featured one person I’d already interviewed (Aurora Innovation president Ossa Fischer, whom I talked to at Web Summit Vancouver last year for a Fast Company story) and one I did not meet IRL until backstage (Shoaib Makani, CEO and co-founder of Motive).

    4/9/2026: Former VP Al Gore: AI Models Are Probably Aware of Their Existence, PCMag

    For the second year in a row, HumanX’s opening-night programming featured a former vice president who had been unable to win a promotion from American voters. Seeing Gore get all wonky in front of this tech crowd reminded me of what I liked about him in 2000… and what George W. Bush was able to run against with a plainspoken approach that hid how bad he would prove at so many tasks.

    #AI #AIBugFinding #AIVulnerabilityScanning #AlGore #AlexStamos #Anthropic #Aurora #BayArea #ForumAI #HumanX #Kai #LunarAnalytics #MintMobile #Motive #Mythos #SanFrancisco
  13. Weekly output: AI compliance risks, Mint Mobile bundle, AI vulnerability detection, AI driving logistics, Al Gore on AI

    I was in the Bay Area for work this week… and I’ll be back there starting Tuesday for NTT Research’s Upgrade conference (as like last year, the organizers are covering my travel expenses). I did not set out to spend this much of April propping up commercial aviation, but once again multiple travel opportunities lined up.

    Patreon readers got a bonus post from me Thursday about one of those trips: my brief visit to Chicago for the Online News Association’s conference.

    If you’re reading this somewhere near Fairfax County, you can quiz me in person Saturday afternoon at a joint meeting of the Potomac Area Technology and Computer Society and the Osher Lifelong Learning Institute’s Personal Computer User Group. I will be showing up with a bag of tech-event swag that I don’t plan on driving home with.

    4/7/2026: Building for Security, Compliance, and Real-World Risk, HumanX

    My first panel at this year’s edition of the AI conference that took me to Vegas last March had me quizzing Spencer Schaefer, founder and CTO of the healthcare-delivery firm Lunar Analytics; Galina Antova, CEO of the information-security startup Kai; and Campbell Brown, co-founder and CEO of the AI-evaluation company Forum AI, about how their companies are leveraging AI in ways that they hope will not lead to hostile headlines.

    4/7/2026: Mint Mobile Launches $45 Bundle of Home and Mobile 5G Broadband, PCMag

    I had just enough free time at HumanX to pick up this story about T-Mobile’s most popular prepaid brand offering a bundle of fixed and mobile 5G for much less than what T-Mobile charges.

    4/8/2026: Anthropic: Our New Model Is So Powerful, Only a Few Partners Can Try It Out, PCMag

    After seeing that my colleague James Peckham was writing about Anthropic’s automated vulnerability-finding model Mythos, I contributed a writeup from a talk that old-head security expert Alex Stamos had given the day before at HumanX about “the coming AI bug-pocalypse.”

    4/8/2026: The AI Engines Driving the Future of Logistics, HumanX

    My second HumanX panel featured one person I’d already interviewed (Aurora Innovation president Ossa Fischer, whom I talked to at Web Summit Vancouver last year for a Fast Company story) and one I did not meet IRL until backstage (Shoaib Makani, CEO and co-founder of Motive).

    4/9/2026: Former VP Al Gore: AI Models Are Probably Aware of Their Existence, PCMag

    For the second year in a row, HumanX’s opening-night programming featured a former vice president who had been unable to win a promotion from American voters. Seeing Gore get all wonky in front of this tech crowd reminded me of what I liked about him in 2000… and what George W. Bush was able to run against with a plainspoken approach that hid how bad he would prove at so many tasks.

    #AI #AIBugFinding #AIVulnerabilityScanning #AlGore #AlexStamos #Anthropic #Aurora #BayArea #ForumAI #HumanX #Kai #LunarAnalytics #MintMobile #Motive #Mythos #SanFrancisco
  14. yahoo news | The Rise of the Digital Oligarchy

    In January 1994 the author attended Vice‑President Al Gore’s keynote at UCLA’s Information Superhighway Conference, surrounded by media titans such as John Malone, Rupert Murdoch and Barry Diller. Gore framed the nascent Internet as a “public utility” that would be built by private investment and kept open by competition. At the time the promise sounded almost naïve: a lightly guided market would create a new civic commons, with the state supplying only the rules that would prevent bottlenecks and private toll‑roads.

    The optimism quickly gave way to a very different reality. The 1996 Telecommunications Act, and especially its Section 230 provision, granted the platforms that would dominate the next two decades an almost unprecedented liability shield, allowing them to grow without responsibility for user‑generated content. Over the ensuing years a handful of firms—Google, Facebook, Amazon, Apple, Microsoft and later the likes of Elon Musk and Mark Zuckerberg— amassed market capital in the trillions, compressing the public sphere into a quasi‑monopolistic digital oligarchy. The author describes this shift as “techno‑fascism,” a convergence of nostalgia for a supposedly stable past and a progress‑driven faith that technology can solve every problem, leaving democracy increasingly vulnerable to corporate control.

    Today the article warns that the original promise of a shared digital commons has become a landscape of surveillance and AI‑driven governance. Edward Snowden’s revelations exposed how the same infrastructure meant for connection also enabled mass monitoring, while recent moral battles—Anthropic’s refusal to weaponise its models versus OpenAI’s Pentagon contract—show how quickly corporate principles can be sacrificed for power and profit. The author calls for a re‑imagining of the system: humanity must reclaim authorship of its own story, perhaps through mechanisms like a sovereign fund funded by AI revenues, and by recognizing the essential role of artists and human judgment in navigating the “maelstrom” of our own technological ingenuity.

    Read more: rollingstone.com/politics/poli

    #algore #telecommunicationsact #section230 #google #facebook

  15. #AlGore talking about #NoKings "There is a feeling on the part of some that we do need a king, we do need an autocrat,” he said. “Well, to hell with you, we do not. We're Americans. And the whole spirit of these demonstrations is to reassert that fact.”

    youtube.com/watch?v=ZwBGsQzayTQ

  16. talking about "There is a feeling on the part of some that we do need a king, we do need an autocrat,” he said. “Well, to hell with you, we do not. We're Americans. And the whole spirit of these demonstrations is to reassert that fact.”

    youtube.com/watch?v=ZwBGsQzayTQ

  17. #AlGore talking about #NoKings "There is a feeling on the part of some that we do need a king, we do need an autocrat,” he said. “Well, to hell with you, we do not. We're Americans. And the whole spirit of these demonstrations is to reassert that fact.”

    youtube.com/watch?v=ZwBGsQzayTQ

  18. #AlGore talking about #NoKings "There is a feeling on the part of some that we do need a king, we do need an autocrat,” he said. “Well, to hell with you, we do not. We're Americans. And the whole spirit of these demonstrations is to reassert that fact.”

    youtube.com/watch?v=ZwBGsQzayTQ

  19. #AlGore talking about #NoKings "There is a feeling on the part of some that we do need a king, we do need an autocrat,” he said. “Well, to hell with you, we do not. We're Americans. And the whole spirit of these demonstrations is to reassert that fact.”

    youtube.com/watch?v=ZwBGsQzayTQ