Radio Blue Heart is on the air!

npr:

A few years ago, Paul Allen, the co-founder of Microsoft, published the results of something called the Great Elephant Census, which counted all the savanna elephants in Africa. What it found rocked the conservation world: In the seven years between 2007 and 2014, Africa’s savanna elephant population decreased by about a third and was on track to disappear completely from some African countries in as few as 10 years.

To reverse that trend, researchers landed on a technology that is rewriting the rules for everything from our household appliances to our cars: artificial intelligence. AI’s ability to find patterns in enormous volumes of information is demystifying not just elephant behavior but human behavior — specifically poacher behavior — too.

“AI can process huge amounts of information to tell us where the elephants are, how many there are,” said Cornell University researcher Peter Wrege. “And ideally tell us what they are doing.”

There are two kinds of elephants in Africa: savanna elephants, which were counted by Allen’s census, and forest elephants, which the census couldn’t account for because that elephant lives beneath a thick rainforest canopy. Even at the level of the jungle, Wrege says, losing a forest elephant is easy to do. “Sometimes you see them, let’s say, 15 meters [16 yards] away from you and then they move 5 meters into the forest and you can’t see them,” he said. “Somehow they just disappear.”

Researchers at Cornell University have been studying the forest elephant for years, trying to figure out — like Allen did with the savanna elephant — how many there are and how fast they are being killed. Given how stealthy the forest elephants are, Wrege began to think that rather than look for them, maybe he should try something a little different: Maybe he should listen for them.

To do this, Wrege had 50 custom audio recorders made. He divided the rainforest into a grid and headed to Central Africa. His team hung the custom recorders every 23 feet to 30 feet in the treetops, just a little higher than an elephant could reach with its trunk while standing on its hind legs. And then they hit record. Three months later, they would return to the forest, locate the recorders, change the batteries, put in new audio cards, and start all over again.

Elephants Under Attack Have An Unlikely Ally: Artificial Intelligence

Photos: Thoko Chikondi for NPR

If a person wanted to out someone they know as a white supremacist are there any sites/accounts you'd recommend they reach out to, and how to make sure any information about the doxxer is safely protected? I know there are there accounts on Twitter that handle that but I can't remember which ones are legitimate and which aren't.
Anonymous

antifainternational:

Our answer depends on whether we’re talking about local nazis or not.

Here’s the thing if we’re talking about nazis in your neighborhood/community: currently, there is not antifa internet police that will mount up and go take care of your local white supremacist for you.  So while you could send whatever information you have about your local racist bonehead to a wide variety of antifa/anti-racist sites, that’s not going to do a hell of a lot.

A better idea: getting people together locally to take care of your local bonehead problem.  Y’all know your own community so y’all what’s going to be most effective.  A popular strategy employed all over the place is to out the nazis publicly:

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Southside Chicago ARA, Philly Anitfa, Rose City Antifa, and Rocky Mountain Antifa have all run local campaign to out local boneheads.

Now, if we’re talking about nazis that live elsewhere, the nearest antifa crew is probably going to be happy to receive any info you have on them.  Check out our guide to finding antifa crews for some help getting started with that, or check our follow list on Twitter.  And speaking of Twitter, if you’re wondering if an account is legit antifa or a garbage honeypot set up by nazi trolls, again check our follow list or Antifa Checker’s follow list as a starting point.

Hope this helps!

brokehorrorfan:

Don’t Go in the House’s original motion picture soundtrack is available on vinyl for $35 via Waxwork Records. The score is composed by Richard Einhorn (The Prowler, Shock Waves).

This marks the first time the soundtrack has been available in any format. The double-LP album is pressed on 180-gram “Steel and Smoke” colored vinyl. It’s housed in a gatefold jacket featuring artwork by Marc Schoenbach.

The album includes the complete score as well as unused music from the recording sessions. It has been remastered for vinyl by Thomas Dimuzio from the original analog master tapes.

Listen to the first suite from the Don’t Do in the House soundtrack below.

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ekelarsons:

aggressivelycalm:

nubiana-americana:

revere-irreverence:

fbdbsgdg:

averagefairy:

working full time is terrible why do we just accept that having 8 days off a month is normal and okay…….. being alive could be cool but we waste it at our JOBS…. sorry i’m just heated about capitalism again i’ll be fine

8 days….never thought about it like that 😓

This seems really whiny to me. Like, I agree with you, work sucks, but our ancestors didn’t get to browse tumblr at their desks or have the option to gleefully spend their ENTIRE WEEKENDS horizontal on the couch stuffing their faces/watching tv/playing video games/wacking off.  They didn’t have weekends. They just slaved away as fucking peasants from dawn to dusk until they died in childbirth or got the consumption.

I am perfectly happy working 8 hrs a day because I don’t have to:

grow my own food

find my own clean water

heat my house

shit in the woods

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Hi, I study social and cultural anthropology. Humans working 40+ hours a week is 100% an industrial revolution thing and was not normal in the early stages of our existence. In fact, hunter and gatherer societies that still exist to this day spend about 15-20 hours a week TOPS working. The rest is dedicated to sitting around and telling stories and jokes, dancing, singing, eating, sleeping, fucking and so forth. Read a damn book.

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brody75:

The War of the Gargantuas (1966)