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Week of January 1-5, 2025

Week of January 1-5, 2025 1

News

Latest

Wikipedia – Behind the Encyclopedia
Company ManJuly 20, 2020 (12:42)

This video talks about how the world’s largest encyclopedia came to be and how it operates differently than most other popular websites.

PBS News Hour full episode 1.3.25
PBS NewsHourJanuary 3, 2025 (57:00)

TODAY’S SEGMENTS: 

Johnson retains speakership, faces narrow GOP majority    • Johnson retains speakership, faces na…  

News Wrap: Judge sets sentencing for Trump hush-money case    • News Wrap: Judge orders Trump to appe…  

French Quarter begins return to normalcy after attack    • ‘They’re not going to run us off’: Fr…  

Why Biden blocked a Japanese bid to buy U.S. Steel    • Why Biden cited national security con…  

U.S. surgeon general calls for cancer warnings on alcohol    • U.S. surgeon general explains why he’…  

Manufacturers adopt unconventional methods to find workers    • Manufacturers adopt unconventional me…  

Brooks and Capehart on Johnson’s fight to remain speaker    • Brooks and Capehart on Johnson’s succ…  

PBS News Vice President of Production Operations Matt Speiser retires    • PBS News Vice President of Production…  

House begins new term, Johnson expected to face difficult vote as new speaker
PBS NewsHour, January 3, 2025 – 12:00 pm to 6:00 pm (ET)
PBS News Weekly: The best of 2024
PBS NewsHourJanuary 3, 2025 (27:15)

This week we rounded up some of the top stories we loved and enjoyed making in 2024. From discovering deep-sea creatures to the national symbol for the United States, we explore a few stories you may have missed.

i
Polls & Headlines 1.4.2025

Today’s Smerconish Poll

Do you agree with James Carville that Kamala Harris lost for one simple reason: the economy?
Yes
No

Yesterday’s Poll Results

Should the Philadelphia Eagles rest Saquon Barkley for the playoffs or let him chase Eric Dickerson’s rushing record on Sunday?
60.53% – Let him go for record
39.47% – Rest him
*Percentage of 18,294 votes

HEADLINES

Associated Press

News nonprofit sues ChatGPT maker OpenAI and Microsoft for ‘exploitative’ copyright infringement
The Center for Investigative Reporting said Thursday it has sued ChatGPT maker OpenAI and its closest business partner, Microsoft, marking a new front in the news industry’s fight against unauthorized use of its content on artificial intelligence platforms.

Trump’s sentencing is set for Jan. 10. Here’s what could happen next

The judge in President-elect Donald Trump’s hush money case has made a dramatic decision that could nevertheless bring the case to a muted end.

Soldier who died by suicide in Las Vegas told ex-girlfriend of pain and exhaustion after Afghanistan
The 37-year-old opened up about not being able to sleep at night and reliving the violence from his deployment in Afghanistan.

What to know as snow, freezing rain and bitter cold heads through much of the US
A major winter storm forecast to produce heavy snow, significant ice and frigid temperatures was set to begin in the central U.S. on Saturday and move east over the next several days, according to the National Weather Service.

Politico

Trump is days away from having to confront the kinds of crises he’s long been railing against
The president-elect is confronting a new year with a raft of challenges, from the attack in New Orleans to ongoing massive Chinese-linked hacks of critical systems.

‘He owes them’: MAGA activists worry about Musk’s influence over Trump in legal migration spat
Some hardliners concede big H-1B reforms are tough. But they still say they have power in the next administration.

PM HEADLINES

OTHER HEADLINES

Substack Articles: January 1-5, 2025

Articles that are also US onAir News Items

The Players on the Eve of Destruction
The insanity of war has returned to our world.
Noahpinion – January 2, 2025

Trade in the Ruins (Wonkish)
On misunderstanding the postwar boom
Krugman Wonks out, Paul Krugman – January 4, 2025

The Big Five – 4 Janaury 2025
My regular update on conflict and confrontation in Ukraine, the Middle East and the Pacific, accompanied by recommended readings on modern war and future conflict.
Futura Doctrina, Mick Ryan – January 4, 2025

How do we measure whether China’s economy is “ahead” of America’s?
Noahpinion, Noah Smith – January 4, 2025

The Important Thing About AGI is the Impact, Not the Name
Am I Stronger Yet?, Steve Newman – January 2, 2025

The Robots are coming: Genesis
AI Supremacy, Michael Spencer – December 31, 2024

The only real firewall against the Trump regime
Robert Reich – January 2, 2025

How we’ll use AI in 2025
Axios, Megan Morrone – January 1, 2025

Mainstream media faces a credibility crisis
The Conversation, Anita Varma – January 3, 2025

Don’t Let the Enemies of Truth Ruin Wikipedia
Arc Digital, Nicholas Grossman – December 27, 2024

How Wikipedia Launders Regime Propaganda
Pirate Wires, Ashley Rindsberg – September 18, 2024

More Substack Articles

Never Underestimate the Ignorance of the Powerful
When you’re a star, people let you think you’re smart
Paul Krugman, Jan 3, 2025

America’s Forgotten Generation (of Prosperity)
How and why the postwar boom got memory-holed
Paul Krugman

Lead to Win IV. The Power of Relationships
Without strong relationships, even the most brilliant ideas falter in execution.
Stoic Philosophy

The Dollar and the Trade Deficit
What will Trump do when his favorite obsession goes the wrong way?
Paul Krugman

Reflections on 2024
Democracy’s greatest year has led to the greatest oligarch push-back we’ve ever seen; legacy media had its worst year; social media shape-shifted, and my single best recommended follow for 2025.
Dr Dan Goyal

Twenty-five years in 2,500 words
The Slow Boring political narrative of every election I’ve voted in
Matthew Yglesias

 

The Conversation: January 1-5, 2025

New Orleans attacker’s apparent loyalty to Islamic State group highlights persistent threat of lone wolf terrorism

The New Orleans attack, like that earlier incident, underscores an important point: While the Islamic State group’s territorial caliphate – the area in Syria and Iraq in which it assumed both political and religious authority and sought to enforce its interpretation of Islamic law – has been dismantled, the group’s ability to inspire acts of terror on U.S. soil through online propaganda and ideological influence remains alarmingly potent.

Will AI revolutionize drug development? Researchers explain why it depends on how it’s used

While AI alone might not revolutionize drug development, it can help address the root causes of why drugs fail and streamline the lengthy process to approval.

Can science be both open and secure? Nations grapple with tightening research security as China’s dominance grows

The challenge for research institutions will be implementing these new requirements without creating a climate of suspicion or isolation. Retrenchment to national borders could slow progress. Some degree of risk is inherent in scientific openness, but we may be coming to the end of a global, collaborative era in science.

Mainstream media faces a credibility crisis – my journalism research shows how the news can still serve the public

Through solidarity practices, mainstream media has a chance to achieve what it has always claimed to contribute to society: truthful reporting based on what is happening on the ground, to real people, in real time – and with real impact.

Tech law in 2025: a look ahead at AI, privacy and social media regulation under the new Trump administration
Overall, while federal efforts on issues like Section 230 reform and children’s online protection may advance, federal-level AI regulation and data privacy laws could potentially slow down due to the administration’s deregulatory stance. Whether long-standing legislative efforts like federal data privacy protection materialize will depend on the balance of power between Congress, the courts and the incoming administration.

AI Articles: January 1-5, 2025

Will AI revolutionize drug development? Researchers explain why it depends on how it’s used

While AI alone might not revolutionize drug development, it can help address the root causes of why drugs fail and streamline the lengthy process to approval.
Duxin Sun & Christian Macedonia, University of Michigan

How we’ll use AI in 2025
As we enter Year 3 of the generative AI revolution, Axios’ Megan Morrone asked readers to tell us all the ways they’ve been using ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini and Copilot — not for work, but for everything else.

The Robots are coming: Genesis
2025 might open up a new paradigm for RL learning in robotics. Are we near an inflection point for humanoid general purpose robots?
Michael Spencer, AI Supremacy

Future of Life Institute Newsletter: 2024 in Review

  1. EU AI Act made final.
  2. Superintelligence Imagined.
  3. Major support for SB 1047.
  4. The Elders partnership on existential threats.
  5. WebSummit.

The Important Thing About AGI is the Impact, Not the Name
Reality Doesn’t Care How We Interpret the Words “General Intelligence”
Steve Newman

The Players on the Eve of Destruction
NoahpinionJanuary 2, 2025

The insanity of war has returned to our world.

When Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022, everyone knew something had changed. The Iraq War had been a harbinger of what was to come — a great power launching a war of choice against a smaller, non-threatening state. But Ukraine was different — Russia wasn’t just recklessly intervening in a neighboring country, but attempting to swallow it entirely. The age when great powers competed only by proxy and by temporary interventions was over, and the age of conquering empires had returned. The Russians themselves have said this openly, and the Chinese realized it as well:

And so across the sea, the old stormclouds gather again. In the seas around Taiwan, an armada assembles. Across the strait, the emperor orders a million kamikaze drones, hundreds of nuclear weapons, a forest of ballistic missiles, and a vast new navy. In Taipei, the sun is out, and people sip their tea, and eat their beef noodle soup, and and try not to think too hard about whether this will be the year the old world finally gives way to new.

Trade in the Ruins (Wonkish)
Krugman Wonks out, Paul KrugmanJanuary 4, 2025

On misunderstanding the postwar boom

All too often, I fear, the argument that we got rich because we had no competitors is an attempt to avoid admitting that an economy could prosper with high taxes on the rich and unions that gave workers a lot of bargaining power. Oh, and did I mention low overall income inequality?

What went right? Nobody really knows, but the best guess is that in the relative stability of the postwar environment businesses were able to fully exploit already existing technologies like electrification and the internal combustion engine. The key point is that the pro-labor, redistributive policies of the post-New-Deal era don’t appear to have gotten in the way of that success.

 

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