Read for free. Right now. Merry Christmas. https://t.co/V4iMOrYsZe
— B.L.A. (@CircoRingmaster) December 25, 2020
Tag: The Automation
We support the Internet Archive in sharing books. Read ours on the Open Library for free:
Read for free.
Publishers Are Taking the Internet to Court via @thenation https://t.co/Yc3XvmnnV0
— B.L.A. (@CircoRingmaster) September 11, 2020
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Also, if you’re an #indieauthor, you can share your book with the Internet Archive’s Open Library https://t.co/Nk2RNjZ5FS
— G.B. Gabbler (@CircoFootnotes) September 10, 2020
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People who value Wikipedia should rise to the defense of the Internet Archive, a core resource in accessing information that was once posted to the web, but later deleted. And also troves of out-of-copyright books. Not to mention the lending program for copyrighted books.
— Pete Forsyth (@PeteForsyth) June 11, 2020
Hercules and His Labor Day Weekend Reads:
He recommends you download the first book in the Circo del Herrero series for free here to prepare for tomorrow’s sequel giveaway.

“From ‘Upload’ to ‘Westworld’: The Cautionary Tales of Technology-Driven Series”

‘“Devs” mixes themes of religion with themes of technology because Garland considers them “versions of the same thing: They’re devotional, they’re faith-based, they make us feel dizzy, they make us feel small, they make us feel comforted,” he says, citing “the way in which the product launch of a new piece of tech can look like a very excited, feverish church meeting.”
All of these shows depict such devotion — often leading to great destruction — despite even the best of intentions. In “Devs,” Sergei (Karl Glusman) becomes physically ill when he learns what Forest’s code really does, and Forest has him killed. (Admittedly, he does resurrect him in that digital afterlife, making him what Garland calls “damaged” and “complicated,” rather than a “bad guy.”) “Westworld” spent its first two seasons peeling back the layers of both the people who both built and frequented the robot host-filled theme parks that let them play out their wildest childhood dreams, no matter how sadistic they turned out to be, and the hosts themselves as some of them gained awareness of their situation. And in “Next,” a pair of brothers (played by John Slattery and Jason Butler Harner) fall on opposite sides of what to do about an A.I. that develops into a super-intelligence and begins to manipulate the lives of those who are trying to shut it down.
Even though dramatic license is taken for the level to which these technologies evolve in these stories, the majority of the science is rooted in fact, which requires an ongoing research process, especially as the real world of technology changes over time.’
[Via]
See also: Gods in our Machines.
