Conservancy's Bradley Kuhn explains that OSI's new Open Source AI Definition is too early, ignores the input of relevant people, and caters to wealthy corporations.
I remember when he was active on Identi.ca ... he and fontana had some really interesting discussions about equalizing the benefits that come from licenses like the GPL, so that sponsor organizations can't grant themselves extra rights to the project's code that aren't available to others.
@inscius I can't see the context, but I believe there was a USA federal law after the 2000 election (extremely close, with many voters in Florida saying they were confused by "butterfly ballots" and lots of controversy about the resulting recounts) that helped bring voting machines to most of the nation.
The Los Angeles Dodgers won game 5, and with it, the World Series. The New York Yankees blew a 5 run lead mostly because of errors. Dodgers' first baseman Freddie Freeman did not hit a home run tonight, as he had in the previous 4 games (plus his last 2 World Series games when he played for Atlanta Braves ... so 6 in a row). I still expect him to win MVP (most valuable player).
This seems weird to me. People shouldn't be making announcements at a voting location, other than instructions about how to operate the voting machines.
"This person is a first time voter!" is roughly equivalent to "This person is a [insert ethnic group/ gender / sexual preference / age group] voter" or maybe even "This person is a [insert political party] voter". In that announcing this could potentially subject the person to undesirable pressures to vote for or against particular candidates or issues.
These two teams have some special history. The last two times the Dodgers and Yankees have met in the World Series, in 1978 and 1981, the team that won the first two games lost the next four (and the series).
Right now, Los Angeles Dodgers have won the first two games against the New York Yankees. It is currently LAD 4, NYY 0 top/6th in the third game.
A GNU+Linux bearing nomad migrating across a Windows-centric desert. I save the world from incompetent headquarters IT folks. I invite comment and discussion, but I dislike arguing.