North Korea Increases Aid to Russia, Mos... Tue Nov 19, 2024 12:29 | Marko Marjanovi?
Trump Assembles a War Cabinet Sat Nov 16, 2024 10:29 | Marko Marjanovi?
Slavgrinder Ramps Up Into Overdrive Tue Nov 12, 2024 10:29 | Marko Marjanovi?
?Existential? Culling to Continue on Com... Mon Nov 11, 2024 10:28 | Marko Marjanovi?
US to Deploy Military Contractors to Ukr... Sun Nov 10, 2024 02:37 | Field Empty
Anti-Empire >>
Indymedia Ireland is a volunteer-run non-commercial open publishing website for local and international news, opinion & analysis, press releases and events. Its main objective is to enable the public to participate in reporting and analysis of the news and other important events and aspects of our daily lives and thereby give a voice to people.
Fraud and mismanagement at University College Cork Thu Aug 28, 2025 18:30 | Calli Morganite
UCC has paid huge sums to a criminal professor
This story is not for republication. I bear responsibility for the things I write. I have read the guidelines and understand that I must not write anything untrue, and I won't.
This is a public interest story about a complete failure of governance and management at UCC.
Deliberate Design Flaw In ChatGPT-5 Sun Aug 17, 2025 08:04 | Mind Agent
Socratic Dialog Between ChatGPT-5 and Mind Agent Reveals Fatal and Deliberate 'Design by Construction' Flaw
This design flaw in ChatGPT-5's default epistemic mode subverts what the much touted ChatGPT-5 can do... so long as the flaw is not tickled, any usage should be fine---The epistemological question is: how would anyone in the public, includes you reading this (since no one is all knowing), in an unfamiliar domain know whether or not the flaw has been tickled when seeking information or understanding of a domain without prior knowledge of that domain???!
This analysis is a pretty unique and significant contribution to the space of empirical evaluation of LLMs that exist in AI public world... at least thus far, as far as I am aware! For what it's worth--as if anyone in the ChatGPT universe cares as they pile up on using the "PhD level scholar in your pocket".
According to GPT-5, and according to my tests, this flaw exists in all LLMs... What is revealing is the deduction GPT-5 made: Why ?design choice? starts looking like ?deliberate flaw?.
People are paying $200 a month to not just ChatGPT, but all major LLMs have similar Pro pricing! I bet they, like the normal user of free ChatGPT, stay in LLM's default mode where the flaw manifests itself. As it did in this evaluation.
AI Reach: Gemini Reasoning Question of God Sat Aug 02, 2025 20:00 | Mind Agent
Evaluating Semantic Reasoning Capability of AI Chatbot on Ontologically Deep Abstract (bias neutral) Thought
I have been evaluating AI Chatbot agents for their epistemic limits over the past two months, and have tested all major AI Agents, ChatGPT, Grok, Claude, Perplexity, and DeepSeek, for their epistemic limits and their negative impact as information gate-keepers.... Today I decided to test for how AI could be the boon for humanity in other positive areas, such as in completely abstract realms, such as metaphysical thought. Meaning, I wanted to test the LLMs for Positives beyond what most researchers benchmark these for, or have expressed in the approx. 2500 Turing tests in Humanity?s Last Exam.. And I chose as my first candidate, Google DeepMind's Gemini as I had not evaluated it before on anything.
Israeli Human Rights Group B'Tselem finally Admits It is Genocide releasing Our Genocide report Fri Aug 01, 2025 23:54 | 1 of indy
We have all known it for over 2 years that it is a genocide in Gaza
Israeli human rights group B'Tselem has finally admitted what everyone else outside Israel has known for two years is that the Israeli state is carrying out a genocide in Gaza
Western governments like the USA are complicit in it as they have been supplying the huge bombs and missiles used by Israel and dropped on innocent civilians in Gaza. One phone call from the USA regime could have ended it at any point. However many other countries are complicity with their tacit approval and neighboring Arab countries have been pretty spinless too in their support
With the release of this report titled: Our Genocide -there is a good chance this will make it okay for more people within Israel itself to speak out and do something about it despite the fact that many there are actually in support of the Gaza
China?s CITY WIDE CASH SEIZURES Begin ? ATMs Frozen, Digital Yuan FORCED Overnight Wed Jul 30, 2025 21:40 | 1 of indy
This story is unverified but it is very instructive of what will happen when cash is removed
THIS STORY IS UNVERIFIED BUT PLEASE WATCH THE VIDEO OR READ THE TRANSCRIPT AS IT GIVES AN VERY GOOD IDEA OF WHAT A CASHLESS SOCIETY WILL LOOK LIKE. And it ain't pretty
A single video report has come out of China claiming China's biggest cities are now cashless, not by choice, but by force. The report goes on to claim ATMs have gone dark, vaults are being emptied. And overnight (July 20 into 21), the digital yuan is the only currency allowed.
The Saker >>
Interested in maladministration. Estd. 2005
RTEs Sarah McInerney ? Fianna Fail?supporter? Anthony
Joe Duffy is dishonest and untrustworthy Anthony
Robert Watt complaint: Time for decision by SIPO Anthony
RTE in breach of its own editorial principles Anthony
Waiting for SIPO Anthony
Public Inquiry >>
Indymedia Ireland is a volunteer-run non-commercial open publishing website for local and international news, opinion & analysis, press releases and events. Its main objective is to enable the public to participate in reporting and analysis of the news and other important events and aspects of our daily lives and thereby give a voice to people.
Trump hosts former head of Syrian Al-Qaeda Al-Jolani to the White House Tue Nov 11, 2025 22:01 | imc
Rip The Chicken Tree - 1800s - 2025 Tue Nov 04, 2025 03:40 | Mark
Study of 1.7 Million Children: Heart Damage Only Found in Covid-Vaxxed Kids Sat Nov 01, 2025 00:44 | imc
The Golden Haro Fri Oct 31, 2025 12:39 | Paul Ryan
Top Scientists Confirm Covid Shots Cause Heart Attacks in Children Sun Oct 05, 2025 21:31 | imc
Human Rights in Ireland >>
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Jump To Comment: 1 2 3 4Sunday people, on sun 23rd march, northern ireland Gulf war veteran Jim Hyndman's article about the debilitating illness affecting him since returning from the Gulf.BBC 24news for the story of the US soldier who lobbed grenades into his officers tents.
Master Sergeant William Wright was one of four soldiers at Fort Bragg suspected of killing their spouses in a six-week stretch last summer.
Three of the four soldiers suspected of killing their wives were in Special Forces units. Each of those three have now committed suicide.
Mr. Wright served with the 3rd Special Forces Group in Afghanistan and returned a few weeks before reporting his wife, Jennifer, missing July 1. He was charged with first-degree murder in her death and had been held in jail since then without bond allowed.
Sergeant 1st Class Rigoberto Nieves, 32, a Special Forces soldier, fatally shot his wife and himself on June 11, two days after he had returned from Afghanistan. Sergeant 1st Class Brandon Floyd, reportedly a member of the shadowy Delta Force — whose existence is not acknowledged by the U.S. government — shot his wife and then killed himself July 19.
Still facing charges is former army sergeant Cedric Griffin, who is accused of stabbing his wife, Marilyn, 50 times and setting her on fire July 9. He faces death if convicted.
Gulf war syndrome research reveals present danger
19:00 26 March 03
Exclusive from New Scientist Print Edition
A week into the invasion of Iraq and news networks are beaming home images of American and British soldiers donning gas masks and body suits to protect themselves from potential chemical weapons attack.
The troops have practised the drills, and are carrying the best high-tech chemical detectors an army can buy. The US marines even have a brand new piece of kit: pigeons, which act like canaries in a 19th-century coal mine. The birds are so sensitive to nerve agents such as sarin and VX that they fall ill at a whiff of danger.
What the soldiers have not been told is that about one in 10 of them are almost as sensitive to nerve agents as the pigeons. There is now mounting evidence that exposure to minuscule amounts of these chemicals can cause permanent brain damage in susceptible people, and that is exactly what happened 12 years ago when thousands of troops returning from Kuwait started to complain of debilitating symptoms.
Repeated surveys find 30 per cent more sick people among Gulf veterans than in comparable groups who did not serve. But the official position in Britain, Canada and the US is that Gulf war syndrome is not a specific medical condition.
All accept something is wrong with the 1991 veterans, but official research has focused on post-traumatic stress. The US has paid disability compensation to more than 110,000 of the 696,000 troops who fought in that war.
Neural damage
Then in October 2002, the US Department of Defense admitted there is "increasing evidence" that neural damage is affecting the ex-soldiers. It doubled research funding, including work on protective treatments. Veterans called it a "stunning reversal".
Part of the problem has been that veterans report a variety of symptoms which, though serious and chronic, are often vaguely defined. But in September 2002, researchers at the Gulf War Illnesses Research Unit at King's College in London showed that stress cannot explain symptoms displayed by British veterans.
At the same time, a medical team in the US identified three distinct syndromes among US Gulf war veterans. Han Kang and his team at the US Department of Veterans Affairs used a statistical technique called factor analysis that reveals unusual clusters of symptoms. They found syndromes that matched those seen in a smaller group by Robert Haley of the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas, who pioneered the investigation.
Syndrome 1 involves symptoms such as sleep and memory disturbance, while people with syndrome 3 have joint and muscle pain. The most serious is syndrome 2, whose symptoms include confusion and dizziness.
When Haley's team used magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) to study veterans with syndrome 2 they found that they had lost nerve cells in the basal ganglia, structures involved in the brain functions disturbed in those with the syndrome. Veterans with other syndromes had also lost neurons in brain areas that fitted their symptoms. The finding was confirmed in another group by MRS expert Michael Weiner at the University of California at San Francisco.
Chemical weapons alerts
But what caused the damage? Haley found that syndrome 2 veterans are eight times as likely as healthy veterans to have been present when chemical weapons alarms sounded in the Gulf: for example, in January 1991, when Czech experts using sensitive Russian-made equipment detected nerve agent near a US army camp in Saudi Arabia.
Military authorities have denied that any soldiers were damaged by chemical weapons during Desert Storm, as none ever showed symptoms of acute nerve gas poisoning. But Jonathan Tucker of the US Institute of Peace, a congressionally funded think tank in Washington DC, has found dozens of reports of low levels of chemical weapons being detected near troops. These could have been released when allied forces bombed Iraqi arms depots or factories.
Syndrome 2 veterans were also around eight times as likely as healthy comrades to have reacted badly to pyridostigmine, a drug given to soldiers in the Gulf, then and now, to protect against nerve agent attacks. In troops who were both exposed to nerve agent and showed side effects to the drug, the risk of long-term ill effects was five times the risk conferred by each factor separately.
The link, says Haley, is that chemical weapons, and the drug that protects against them, affect the same physiological pathway. Nerve gas sends muscles into fatal spasm by blocking an enzyme that destroys acetylcholine, the neurotransmitter that makes muscles contract. In theory, pyridostigmine protects by blocking the enzyme for a short time, keeping nerve agents from binding to it permanently.
But some people may not be able to cope with having the enzyme blocked at all. Animal experiments show that exposure to enzyme blockers at levels too low to produce acute toxic effects can subtly change acetylcholine activity in the brain, and the animals' long-term behaviour.
Memory and cognition
Rogene Henderson of the University of New Mexico reported in 2002 that low doses of sarin change the distribution of acetylcholine receptors in rats' brains. Affected regions include those used for memory and cognition - which are the functions disturbed in Gulf war veterans.
The effect is more marked in stressed animals, which may explain why soldiers who saw combat show more severe symptoms. Other groups have also shown that nerve agents cause basal ganglion damage in animals.
Why are all soldiers not equally affected by the exposure to nerve agents? Pigeons make good detectors because they do not produce the enzyme paraoxonase which destroys nerve gas. Haley has found that syndrome 2 victims have very low levels of the form of human paraoxonase that is most effective against nerve agents, an observation repeated by Department of Veterans Affairs researchers in New Jersey in a study yet to be published.
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Weblinks
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Gulf War Veterans
Conflict over Iraq, New Scientist
In Britain, Bharti Mackness and her team at the Manchester Royal Infirmary have found that British veterans with Gulf war syndrome have half the paraoxonase activity of healthy colleagues.
Evidence that this kind of physical damage underlies Gulf war syndrome has been mounting since 1997. But the US government did not begin to take it seriously until the Department of Veteran's Affairs appointed a new Research Advisory Committee on Gulf war veterans last year.
The Department is now planning a national survey of Gulf veterans based on the newly defined syndromes, while Haley is building a more powerful MRS lab to observe brain damage more precisely. "We will then turn to finding treatments," he says. He has already shown that mice induced to make more paraoxonase are protected from a chemical similar to sarin.
Such progress promises to shed more light on why so many Gulf veterans are sick, and stop it from happening again. But it has come too late to help soldiers exposed to chemical weapons during the current conflict.
Debora MacKenzie