That white guy who can't get a job at Tim Hortons? He's AI
David Michael Lamb, Ashley Fraser, Andrew Kitchen,
CBC,
2025/07/10
The gist: "It's part of a trend known as 'fake-fluencing.' That's when companies create fake personas with AI in order to make it look like a real person is endorsing a product or service. The company in this case is Nexa, an AI firm that develops software that other companies can use to recruit new hires. Some of the videos feature Nexa logos in the scene. The company's founder and CEO Divy Nayyar calls that a 'subconscious placement' of advertising." Now let me be super-clear about this: The fact that AI is used to create the content (instead of using real actors who lie, as has traditionally been the case) means nothing more than that it's cheaper, and more companies can do it. The problem is the fake content advertisers have been running fake content since advertsing began (at least, that's what nine out of ten dentists say) that it's transparently racist, another entry in a history of racist tropes being used in advertising over the years.
Web: [Direct Link] [This Post][Share]
Report: Privacy Preserving Interoperability and the Fediverse
Social Web Foundation,
2025/07/10
This is a short report with a link to the conference and a video. "While the Fediverse promises a radical departure from walled-garden platforms, participants agreed that privacy and consent need to be an important part of Fediverse infrastructure, both at the technical layer and the governance layer." I can sort of agree with this, with some caveats. Related: this introductory article from Dock on Zero Knowledge Proofs (ZKP).
Web: [Direct Link] [This Post][Share]
Artificial intelligence is the opposite of education
Helen Beetham,
2025/07/10
Helen Beetham ticks her argument against artificial intelligence up a notch. "What if, at at least in its current, (de)generative, hyper-capitalistic guise, the project of AI is actively inimical to the values of learning, teaching and scholarship, as well as to human flourishing on a finite planet?" This, of course, is a complex question: hyper-capitalism could well be actively inimical to human values while AI itself could be neutral. There's no necessary connection between the two. Anyhow, Beetham expands on three major arguments to this end, with the promise of more: that AI does not tell the truth, it does not reason or explain, and that it does not develop expertise.
Web: [Direct Link] [This Post][Share]
Who’s afraid of academic freedom?
Jean-François Venne,
University Affairs,
2025/07/10
My own inclinations on the subject are twofold: first, that academic freedom ought to apply to everybody, not just university professors; and second, having academic freedom doesn't create an obligation on someone else to pay for it. So universities, say, can't complain academic freedom is being infringed when governments are willing to fund science but not arts (there are other arguments; academic freedom just isn't one of them). Having said that, the strongest part of the argument offered in this article appears near the end where author Jean-François Venne cites Louis-Philippe Lampron arguing that "Academic freedom is institutional in nature, like freedom of the press." In other words, academic freedom is "about the autonomy and independence of the institutions themselves: their freedom from interference by governments, funding bodies and pressure groups." So are universities like the CBC? That's a pretty interesting question.
Web: [Direct Link] [This Post][Share]
Ethical Licensing for Impact Organisations
Open Thinkering,
2025/07/10
I personally would not use the "the Peer Production License (PPL) which focuses on cooperatives, non-profits, and worker-owned collectives" for the same reason I don't support CC Signals: it transforms the act of sharing onto a form of transaction. Let me be clear: I am fine with any entity using any of my content; that's why I share it openly. I use the non-commercial (NC) clause because I don't want that entity to turn around and somehow require compensation for the use of my material. That's the opposite of sharing. I doesn't matter who does it, whether they're an evil corporation or the most noble non-profit on the planet.
Web: [Direct Link] [This Post][Share]
There are many ways to read OLDaily; pick whatever works best for you:
This newsletter is sent only at the request of subscribers. If you would like to unsubscribe, Click here.
Know a friend who might enjoy this newsletter? Feel free to forward OLDaily to your colleagues. If you received this issue from a friend and would like a free subscription of your own, you can join our mailing list. Click here to subscribe.
Copyright 2025 Stephen Downes Contact: stephen@downes.ca
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.