Forget the debate, the Supreme Court just declared open season on regulators | TechCrunch
"Voices from DARPA" Podcast, Episode 79: Integrating ELSI
Lawfare Daily: Juliette Kayyem on the New Critical Infrastructure Memo
(Jan. 6th was domestic. It was reported on both social and conventional media. What prevents it from recurring? What are some sequels? The current trial is actually about a winning season and a third party begs the question about figureheads. The public decides. Per the Constitution.)
Lawfare Daily: From Cranes to TikTok, from AI to Connected Cars: Protecting U.S. Information and ...
"Voices from DARPA" Podcast, Episode 78: Introducing ELSI
Sam Bankman-Fried: 'I never thought what I was doing was illegal'
(This requires critics rather than crickets. The philosophies include other influencers. They now have to show how well prison reforms or progresses in the longer term. Ancient academics also had to tutor fellow slaves. The regulations will be interpreted by each of the major ideologies. AI may become one. If it had been a cartel mastermind, they might have built the prison ahead of time themselves to be more like clubs, e.g. Escobar. Crypto is successful now. The sovereignties are looking at digital schemes as well to streamline financial transactions and reporting, so they will run into similar issues. In another scenario, this might be a government official. Juries find facts, jurists the law. Ultimately this defines justice. The issues are going to have spinoff strategies for management going forward. STEM training was also called out in other patent cases. Where IEEE tries to keep talent occupied in their domain, something like equivalent of IEET may be useful here, at least for accurate analysis. Constitutions go after tyranny, whether by monarchy or majority. What is going on in these contemporary instances also involving machines? Is there a good reply for voir dire and equal treatment? What will be the effect, if any, on innovation?)
Julian Assange wins temporary reprieve in case against extradition to US
Major US corporations threaten to return labor to ‘law of the jungle’
Proposed Voir Dire Questions – #273 in United States v. BANKMAN-FRIED (S.D.N.Y., 1:22-cr-00673) – CourtListener.com
Case 1:22-cr-00673-LAK questions for jurrors
The burden of proof was different for the grand jury than at trial, probable cause rather than beyond reasonable doubt.
United States v. BANKMAN-FRIED, 1:22-cr-00673 - CourtListener.com
Transcripts from proceedings would have to be purchased from https://pacer.uscourts.gov .
United States v. Samuel Bankman-Fried
Government side of story from the intriguing book from around the previous midterm election Lewis, M. (2023). Going Infinite: The Rise and Fall of a New Tycoon. They may have the Modelbot code.
Superseding Indictment