#71 December 2024 | Monthly Digital Breadcrumbs

Necklace of bones
byu/Badspacecomics incomics

A bunch of things (which I added to my Tumblr) for your eyes and ears plus brain to spend time on (as no longer on Twitter).

READ

“On one hand, the predators in the Dark Internet Forest are the mega-platforms themselves, at the core of which are machines for turning human action and feeling into saleable data objects. On the other hand, the predators are clearly us: Individual people doing galaxy-brain bad-faith readings of other people’s banal posts for the juice and swarms of people looking for ideological opponents to mob, largely as a way of claiming or defending quasi-spatial territory: This is ours, not yours. We don’t do that here.”
against the dark forest

“…Amazon had refused during the inquiry to disclose how it used data recorded from Alexa devices, Kindle or Audible to train its AI. Google too, he said, had refused to answer questions about what user data from its services and products it used to train its AI products. Meta admitted it had been scraping from Australian Facebook and Instagram users since 2007, in preparation for future AI models. But the company was unable to explain how users could consent for their data to be used for something that did not exist in 2007. Sheldon said Meta dodged questions about how it used data from its WhatsApp and Messenger products.”
Amazon, Google and Meta are ‘pillaging culture, data and creativity’ to train AI, Australian inquiry finds | Artificial intelligence (AI) | The Guardian

“For most people in the U.S., the threats that they face and the methods by which they are likely to be surveilled or harassed have not changed, but the consequences of digital privacy or security failures may become much more serious, especially for vulnerable populations such as journalists, activists, LGBTQ+ people, people seeking or providing abortion-related care, Black or Indigenous people, and undocumented immigrants. EFF has decades of experience in providing digital privacy and security resources, particularly for vulnerable people. We’ve written a lot of resources over the years and here are the top ten that we think are most useful right now:”
Top Ten EFF Digital Security Resources for People Concerned About the Incoming Trump Administration | Electronic Frontier Foundation

“Spotify, I discovered, not only has partnerships with a web of production companies, which, as one former employee put it, provide Spotify with “music we benefited from financially,” but also a team of employees working to seed these tracks on playlists across the platform. In doing so, they are effectively working to grow the percentage of total streams of music that is cheaper for the platform. The program’s name: Perfect Fit Content (PFC). The PFC program raises troubling prospects for working musicians. Some face the possibility of losing out on crucial income by having their tracks passed over for playlist placement or replaced in favor of PFC; others, who record PFC music themselves, must often give up control of certain royalty rights that, if a track becomes popular, could be highly lucrative. But it also raises worrying questions for all of us who listen to music. It puts forth an image of a future in which—as streaming services push music further into the background, and normalize anonymous, low-cost playlist filler—the relationship between listener and artist might be severed completely.”
The Ghosts in the Machine, by Liz Pelly

“StumbleUpon commanded a massive influence in the early 2010s. For many, it became the go-to place to waste time online. People were hitting the Stumble button over a billion times a month at the height of its powers. By some measures, more than half of the traffic that social media platforms sent to other parts of the internet in 2011 came from StumbleUpon – it sometimes beat out Facebook, even though StumbleUpon had hundreds of millions fewer users.”
‘There was almost a utopian feeling to it’: How StumbleUpon pioneered the way we use the internet

“Quantum computing – which harnesses the discovery that matter can exist in multiple states at once – is predicted to have the power to carry out far bigger calculations than previously possible and so hasten the creation of nuclear fusion reactors and accelerate the impact of artificial intelligence, notably in medical science. For example, it could allow MRI scans to be read in atom-level detail, unlocking new caches of data about human bodies and disease for AI to process, Google said. But there are also fears that without guardrails, the technology has the power to crack even the most sophisticated encryption, undermining computer security.”
Google unveils ‘mindboggling’ quantum computing chip | Computing | The Guardian

WATCH

EXPLORE

Make It Yourself is a pdf with links to a 1000 useful DIY projects.

Times New Dumbass is inspired by Elon Musk’s attempt to do a star-jump.

Does what it says on the tin: Page Printer creates a printer ready pdf from a url.

Great post about the Creator economy platform costs which deconstructs the varied pricing models out there.

A massive ‘playbook’ of how to approach and be successful at cold emailing in this The Cold Email Handbook.

Dive deep into the The Holotypic Occlupanid Research Group Identification Guide (the plastic thing that keeps the bread fresh which ties off the bag).

121 Brands That Matter in 2024 is Fast Company’s attempt to list those who have made a mark in marketing rather than anything else—still a list to peruse.

B612 is a free and open source font and is the result of a research project initiated by Airbus to improve the display of information on the cockpit screens.

A little ‘manifesto’ regarding humanity’s place in the Universe and our role in its future, by investor Yuri Milner (basically advocating for evolving our species into the cosmos).

Nominations for the Trustbuilding Awards are open which aim to recognise and uplift outstanding organisations and individuals in trustbuilding, empower youth efforts to create a more cohesive future, and inspire higher standards for trustbuilders worldwide (applications close on 15 February 2025).

All monthly digital breadcrumbs posts.
Published

Is Creativity Just A Catchphrase? | Finding Creativity Podcast

FC+Logo+Season+2+logo

In between festive things have a listen to this which I was recently involved with:

To wrap up season 2, I had the wonderful privilege to be invited by the wonderfully wonderful actor, movement specialist and director, Alexis Milligan, to participate in her Finding Creativity Podcast and to explore is creativity just a catch phrase?

Related stuff mentioned in the podcast:

Was thinking on my feet lots in this podcast inspired by the superb provocations by Alexis and learning from her as I go. Let us know your thoughts on some of the concepts explored in this one via the comments as keen to learn more.

Check out some other podcasts I’ve been on.
Published

#70 November 2024 | Monthly Digital Breadcrumbs

Vanity Fair 2024 Election Digital Cover - Trump
The human cheeto…

A bunch of things (which I added to my Tumblr) for your eyes and ears plus brain to spend time on (as no longer on Twitter).

READ

“When a Leader restores civility and fair play, eliminating dysfunction, it is not unusual for the Community Builders to join the good guys as they discover the personal empowerment inherent in authentic belonging. No longer able to manipulate circumstance and sully reputations, Dragons and Shapeshifters willingly leave, are dismissed, or they change their behavior to adjust to the new culture. Figureheads follow, or they are transferred out of leadership roles, opening up a space for the Creatives to get to work.”
Surviving Work: A Creative’s Guide to Dysfunctional Cultures | Psychology Today

“The hasty imposition of a deal at the UN climate conference, Cop29, in Azerbaijan, over the objections of poorer nations has fractured global trust and undermined recent progress. This was supposed to be the “finance Cop” when two dozen industrialised countries – including the US, Europe and Canada – promised to pay developing nations for the damage caused by their rise. Instead, developing nations – led by a group including India, Nigeria and Bolivia – say this weekend’s agreement for $300bn a year in 2035 is too little, too late. Worse, rich-world governments will be able to escape their obligations by being able to rely on cash from private companies and international lenders.”
The Guardian view on Cop29: poor-world discontent over a failure of rich countries to deliver | Editorial | The Guardian

“The best information we have is from informed third-party estimates: training GPT-3, a precursor to the current model, used an estimated 5.4m litres of water, according to one academic study, and produced as much CO2 as would be generated by flying between New York and San Francisco 550 times.”
Concerned about your data use? Here is the carbon footprint of an average day of emails, WhatsApps and more | Environment | The Guardian

“On a much grander scale, she and Zhao tell me they hope that Glaze and Nightshade will eventually have the power to overhaul how AI companies use art and how their products produce it. It is eye-wateringly expensive to train AI models, and it’s extremely laborious for engineers to find and purge poisoned samples in a data set of billions of images. Theoretically, if there are enough Nightshaded images on the internet and tech companies see their models breaking as a result, it could push developers to the negotiating table to bargain over licensing and fair compensation.”
The AI lab waging a guerrilla war over exploitative AI | MIT Technology Review

“As the physical reality of the nation slips beneath the ocean, the government is building a digital copy of the country, backing up everything from its houses to its beaches to its trees. It hopes this virtual replica will preserve the nation’s beauty and culture – as well as the legal rights of its 11,000 citizens – for generations to come.”
Tuvalu: The disappearing island nation recreating itself in the metaverse – BBC Future

“A paper by Tang and colleagues published in Nature Neuroscience in May 2023 gave an example. When one participant listened to the words, “I didn’t know whether to scream, cry, or run away. Instead, I said, ‘Leave me alone!’”, the AI decoded the thought as: “Started to scream and cry, and then she just said, ‘I told you to leave me alone. You can’t hurt me.’” “It’s not perfect, but it’s shockingly good for using fMRI,” Huth said at a February 2024 meeting of the National Institutes of Health’s Neuroethics Working Group, where he discussed his and his team’s work.”
We Want to Hear Your Thoughts | Discover Magazine

WATCH

EXPLORE

Poki – Free Online Games, loads here to lose time on!

Draw.Audio is a free musical sketch-pad for exploring ideas in sound (my first attempt).

Smithsonian Open Access is a digital archive that now contains some 4.5 million images.

An extension which works on Chromium browsers to transfer your Twitter followers to your Bluesky account.

What’s New In Unicode 16.0 (or latest emoji’s to drop which includes Face with Bags Under Eyes, Fingerprint, Splatter, Root Vegetable, Leafless Tree, Harp, Shovel, Flag: Sark).

Soundplant: computer keyboard sample triggering for Windows & Mac), basically, turns your computer keyboard into a versatile, low latency sound trigger and playable instrument.

December 6th is the deadline for the Fast Company ‘World Changing Ideas Awards’ which focuses on “products, concepts, companies, and policies that are designed to make the world safer, cleaner, more sustainable, and more equitable.“

All monthly digital breadcrumbs posts.
Published

The Sacred Vastness Of Being | Forrest Landry At HATCH 20

Developing the ecosystem of wisdom, community-led governance and the stewardship of care.

A few weeks ago at HATCH 20, the above talk closed out an evening and left the whole audience in wonderful awe.

In a little over twenty minutes, this gentle offering was fierce in revealing the compassionate truth of where humanity finds itself, and invited us all to be buoyed in the potential of embracing the cooperative choice of prioritising community and connection through feeling / sensing.

For me, what was revealed is what we innately know: living is giving, and love is the only path.

After Forrest finished speaking, it felt like the whole room sighed, together.

Through the welcome tears I wrote the following on one of my mundane postcards and gifted it quickly to Forrest later on in proceedings:

“For small creatures such as we, the vastness is bearable only through love.”
Carl Sagan

Published

Deconstructing My TEDx Talk | A Critique Via The GhostRanch Podcast

A wonderful gift from peers I’ve never met.

So honoured that my TEDxNelson talk was the topic of discussion for GhostRanch, leading presentation design agency, via their Presentation Thinking podcast:

Click play above for a energetic deconstruction regarding the elements of said talk, a detailed verbal essay which pulls out the storytelling components I was using plus the highlights which mattered to them. All whilst offering further insights and broadening out the lessons learned plus sharing their own experiences as well.

Thank you Mikey Mioduski and Molly Geoghegan for the sigh-inducing-kind-and-smile-inducing overview.

PS Current walk on song.

Check out some other podcasts I’ve been on.
Published

Standing Out In The Global Media Industry | Connecting Two Small But Perfectly Formed Nations

nz wales pin small - justadandak.com

UPDATED WITH VIDS: A little side Cymru-Aotearoa / Wales-New Zealand project.

A few months ago in a catch-up with the superb Robin Moore, the topic of collaborating (again) came up, specifically around activating my network in the media industry from my time in New Zealand and if there was anyway to share insights back into the Welsh ecosystem.

What followed is alignment with Media Cymru and the opportunity for me develop the following three unique learning opportunities (click on the images below to go to the event listings to sign up)—CHECK OUT THE VIDEOS BELOW:

BIG THANKS to Dave Gougé, Founder, Squirelball and ex-Head of Marketing and Publicity, Wētā FX & Richard Fletcher, Producer and Co-President of SPADA (the Screen Production and Development Association)
BIG THANKS to Jessica Manins, Co-Founder at Beyond, Mario Wynands, Chief Executive Officer at PikPok & Dan Milward, Founder & Games Designer, Gamefroot
BIG THANKS to Chantelle Cole, Programme Director GDSR NZ on Air, Former CEO at Dinosaur Polo Club, Amber Marie Naveira, Virtual Production Manager, 880 Productions, Producer & Co-
Founder, The Granary
& Greg Harman, CEO / Product Visionary @ Motion Tech Lab

I’ll be facilitating said events and doing my best to extract applicable lessons, build some bridges plus allow our guests to shine.

Join us and / or spread the word to others in Wales, please and thank you!

Published

#69 October 2024 | Monthly Digital Breadcrumbs

Can’t beat the classics – Steve Cutts

A bunch of things (which I added to my Tumblr) for your eyes and ears plus brain to spend time on (as no longer on Twitter).

READ

““A factor of 10 is an enormous difference, and this is what happens when you look at a reproduction compared to a real work,” said Martine Gosselink, director of the Mauritshuis, on Wednesday. “You become [mentally] richer when you see things, whether you are conscious of it or not, because you make connections in your brain.” Gosselink said she had been convinced of the power of the real before the study but had wanted her hunch to be formally investigated. “We all feel the difference – but is it measurable, is it real?” she said she had asked her colleagues a year ago. “Now, today we can really say that it is true.””
Real art in museums stimulates brain much more than reprints, study finds | Neuroscience | The Guardian

“Let’s be clear: the UK’s mooted copyright scheme would effectively enable companies to nick our data – every post we make, every book we write, every song we create – with impunity. It would require us to sign up to every individual service and tell them that no, we don’t want them to chew up our data and spit out a poor composite image of us. Potentially hundreds of them, from big tech companies to small research labs. Lest we forget, OpenAI – a company now valued at more than $150bn – is planning to forswear its founding non-profit principles to become a for-profit company. It has more than enough money in its coffers to pay for training data, rather than rely on the beneficence of the general public. Companies like that can certainly afford to put their hands in their own pockets, rather than ours. So hands off.”
Here’s the deal: AI giants get to grab all your data unless you say they can’t. Fancy that? No, neither do I | Chris Stokel-Walker | The Guardian

““The existing structure of OpenAI is quite convoluted,” said Brian Quinn, a professor at Boston College law school. “If they simplify their structure in some way and have a public benefit corporation as the parent company, they can make as much money as they want.” The ChatGPT developer is reportedly heading for a valuation of $150bn under the new fundraising, making it worth nearly as much as Uber. Apple and the chipmaker Nvidia are among the companies cited in reports as potential investors in the funding round.”
OpenAI planning to become for-profit company, say reports | OpenAI | The Guardian

“The TikTok owner launched its own web scraper, Bytespider, in April, and it’s now scraping data multiple times faster than bots from other companies, Fortune reported, citing research from Kasada, a bot management company, and Dark Visitors, a monitor of scraper bots. Companies developing AI models, such as Google and Meta, use scraper bots to gather data to train and improve the large language models (LLMs) and multimodal models that power the companies’ AI services.”
TikTok owner ByteDance scrapes the web faster than OpenAI

“Kline sat at his keyboard between the lime-green walls of UCLA’s Boelter Hall Room 3420, prepared to connect with Duvall, who was working a computer halfway across the state of California. But Kline didn’t even make it all the way through the word “L-O-G-I-N” before Duvall told him over the phone that his system crashed. Thanks to that error, the first “message” that Kline sent Duvall on that autumn day in 1969 was simply the letters “L-O”.”
‘We were just trying to get it to work’: The failure that started the internet

“This week, Balaji posted an essay on his personal website, in which he argued that OpenAI was breaking copyright law. In the essay, he attempted to show “how much copyrighted information” from an AI system’s training dataset ultimately “makes its way to the outputs of a model.“ Balaji’s conclusion from his analysis was that ChatGPT’s output does not meet the standard for “fair use,” the legal standard that allows the limited use of copyrighted material without the copyright holder’s permission.”
Former OpenAI Staffer Says the Company Is Breaking Copyright Law and Destroying the Internet

WATCH

EXPLORE

The Mudita Kompakt is live on Kickstarter and fun attempt at cutting out the digital distractions of a phone (apart from the e-ink this can be achieved with any phone though but good for kids as a dumb phone).

The WikiProject AI Cleanup aims combat the increasing problem of unsourced, poorly written AI-generated content on Wikipedia.

Linkwarden is a self-hosted, open-source collaborative bookmark manager to collect, organize and archive webpages.

Great overview / blog post on how to create an On-Stage Teleprompter using Free Open Source Tools.

Just a bunch loud of free ‘plaid patterns’ for use, because, well, you never know!

All monthly digital breadcrumbs posts.
Published

HATCH 20 | Impact Summit 2024

HATCH 20 Alumni - group shot - justadandak.com
HATCH 20 Alumni – group shot.

A unique conference where hugs are longer / more sincere.

Situated in the high desert of Bend, Oregon at the superb Juniper Reserve, the four-day-20th-anniversary event of HATCH just rocked my soul.

This was my fifth time attending (see 2013, 2014, 2016 and 2023 write-ups) so I knew what to expect, however, what blossomed for me was the understanding that even though the events of this past year had broken me in many ways, HATCH broke me open…

…open to connect (with self / others / ideas), to listen (really listen), to appreciate music, to dance, to explore, to talk, to sing, to move, to write, to participate, to observe, to learn, to lead, to play, to be tempted, to be.

A cherished time which greatly expanded my already hungry curiosity, accelerated my muted creative belief / potential whilst amplifying the obvious but not-heard-often-enough-truth that we all need other humans to thrive.

Dual badger.

Apparently, I was the first to register this year and was honoured to play a dual role: as an attendee / alum and also leading a reflection activation on the last day / eve, running a pop-up session on speaking with purpose, facilitating an ‘intention session’ plus arrived a day early to help set-up:

HATCH 20 - justadandak.com - DK DIY session
HATCH 20 - justadandak.com - DK on stage from Stu

Attendees are medley of seekers, doers, artists, creatives, business greats, technologists, environmentalists, investors, next generation’ers—simply, a confluence of talent (what I learned after my first two is not to be awed but instead be playful / grateful in the possibility to learn from impressiveness):

HATCH-Bend-20th-HATCH-100-small-gif

One of the cornerstone pieces of any HATCH is the ‘ask and offer’ whereby the community is invited to create in-situ the reciprocal-ness we all need to flourish. For most, the offer part is easy, it’s the ask which causes challenges as it should be personal, honest and intentional. These are then displayed for the duration, amended and added to via other offers from those in the room who can aid the call:

My ask of the community.

HATCH is the most effective event I know at creating the conditions for people to feel trust, find purpose, see kindness manifest and generate creative value. All stemming from the curative skills of the organisers, the space / place, the talks / sessions offered, emotional positioning by the MC’s, as well as those who answer the call to step into the unknown and embrace the fluid nature of the experience:

Thank you HATCH for again being there when I needed it. For allowing me to be seen. For providing the space and place for others to shine. For giving us the belief that connection, true human connection is the currency of success.

BONUS playlist from some of the artists sharing their talents on stage:

Read other HATCH posts.
Published

Digby Scott, Dig Deeper Podcast | Translation, Narration, Curation and Host Leadership

DK & Digby Scott podcast screenshot - 2024.png
Taken from when we recorded the below audio podcast episode

A new leadership framework coming soon (wink-face-emoji).

What a joy to converse with fellow curious soul Digby Scott on his new fortnightly podcast, Dig Deeper, conversations with depth to change the way you lead:

Check out all the ways to listen / subscribe here

We talk about mundanity (it’s now a word, sod off!), hobbies, context vs content, audacity, white space, delegate experience design, what’s eternal, hearing, listening, speaking, storytelling, coaching, translation / narration / curation / host leadership™ plus what the world needs more of.

Hope you enjoy and thank you again Digby for the opportunity to spend time with you again!

Check out some other podcasts I’ve been on.
Published