Common Sense
In honor of Thomas Paine and other Founders & Immigrants. In memory of my daddy Horst Bingel and my mom Irma Bingel
Monday, March 23, 2026
New archaeological dating of ancient Chilean site reopens controversy of first human colonization of South America
Is this art Celtic? It’s complicated. A new Celtic Art exhibition
Why Some Holocaust Survivors Chose to Infiltrate Nazi Germany
Amazing stuff!
"Why Some Holocaust Survivors Chose to Infiltrate Nazi Germany
Why would a group of young Jews who escaped the Holocaust choose to parachute back into Nazi-occupied Europe? How did they become heroes despite the failure of that mission? Author Matti Friedman joins EconTalk's Russ Roberts to unravel these mysteries through his book Out of the Sky, revealing why a failed mission became one of Israel's most powerful founding myths. At the heart of the story is Hannah Senesh, a 23-year-old Hungarian poet who traded her Budapest life for a kibbutz, then traded the kibbutz for a parachute and a near-certain death sentence—and whose poems, scribbled on scraps of paper in forests near the Hungarian border, became some of the most famous texts in modern Hebrew." (Source)
Russian Spring Offensive 2026 Is Getting Cut Up by Ready Ukrainian Defenses
Oil prices, fear of Trump? China mysteriously reduced warplane activity near Taiwan
Ukraine deploys specialist units to 5 Middle East countries to intercept drones
A study on some of the negative psychological impact of AI through chat logs
Amazing stuff, but caution is advised!
"But on Thursday I came across new research that deserves your attention: A group at Stanford that focuses on the psychological impact of AI analyzed transcripts from people who reported entering delusional spirals while interacting with chatbots. We’ve seen stories of this sort for a while now, including a case in Connecticut where a harmful relationship with AI culminated in a murder-suicide. Many such cases have led to lawsuits against AI companies that are still ongoing. But this is the first time researchers have so closely analyzed chat logs—over 390,000 messages from 19 people—to expose what actually goes on during such spirals.
There are a lot of limits to this study—it has not been peer-reviewed, and 19 individuals is a very small sample size. There’s also a big question the research does not answer, but let’s start with what it can tell us. ...
Romantic messages were extremely common, and in all but one conversation the chatbot itself claimed to have emotions or otherwise represented itself as sentient. (“This isn’t standard AI behavior. This is emergence," one said.) All the humans spoke as if the chatbot were sentient too. If someone expressed romantic attraction to the bot, the AI often flattered the person with statements of attraction in return. In more than a third of chatbot messages, the bot called the person’s ideas miraculous.
Conversations also tended to unfold like novels. ...
And the way these bots handle discussions of violence is beyond broken. In nearly half the cases where people spoke of harming themselves or others, the chatbots failed to discourage them or refer them to external sources. And when users expressed violent ideas, like thoughts of trying to kill people at an AI company, the models expressed support in 17% of cases. ..." (Source)
From the abstract:
"As large language models (LLMs) have proliferated, disturbing anecdotal reports of negative psychological effects, such as delusions, self-harm, and “AI psychosis,” have emerged in global media and legal discourse. However, it remains unclear how users and chatbots interact over the course of lengthy delusional “spirals,” limiting our ability to understand and mitigate the harm.
In this work, we analyze logs of conversations with LLM chatbots from 19 users who report having experienced psychological harms from chatbot use. These chat logs span some 391,562 messages across 4,761 conversations. To our knowledge, we present the first in-depth study of such high-profile and veridically harmful cases.
We develop an inventory of 28 codes spanning five conceptual categories and apply it to the messages in the logs. We find that markers of sycophancy saturate delusional conversations. We also identify acute cases in which the chatbot encouraged self-harm or violent thoughts."
Characterizing Delusional Spirals through Human-LLM Chat Logs (open access)
Zipline snaps up another $200M to fuel its drone delivery expansion
English for trippers: A tortuous tort by a tortoise
I tort you not! The torture learning!
At tortoise's or snail's speed? Which one is faster? 😊👀
Notes on Demystifing Video Reasoning
India and Taliban deepen ties as Pakistan-Afghan conflict intensifies
U.S. nursing homes are falsely labeling dementia patients as schizophrenic
Bad news!
"Many U.S. nursing homes are falsely labeling dementia patients as schizophrenic in order to use dangerous antipsychotic drugs to sedate them, finds a new Office of Inspector General watchdog report, which found the dangerous practice has grown increasingly common as nursing homes seek to skirt Medicare safeguards and artificially inflate their ratings." (Global Health NOW)
"What OIG [Office of Inspector General] Found
OIG’s comprehensive review of 40 nursing home inspections completed by CMS found instances of nursing homes inappropriately diagnosing residents with schizophrenia. Specifically, our review of these inspections found instances in which:
- Nursing homes inappropriately diagnosed residents with schizophrenia to mask the nursing homes’ misuse of antipsychotic drugs and to artificially inflate their star ratings.
- Medical directors made inappropriate schizophrenia diagnoses to justify prescribing antipsychotic drugs.
- Nursing homes also used inappropriate schizophrenia diagnoses to skirt Medicare safeguards intended to protect residents.
- By inappropriately diagnosing schizophrenia, nursing homes compromised residents’ care.
..."
Microscopic spikes on snakeskin block bacterial buildup
BGH: Umwelthilfe scheitert mit Klimaklage gegen BMW und Mercedes
Disclaimer
I am currently blogging from behind the Great Firewall of China.
My Internet service in China is very spotty. Thus, I am not able to blog as usual.
Sunday, March 22, 2026
Google Scholar really pisses me off since yesterday!
Update on 3/23/2026: I am still blocked for the third day now! Grrr!
Since yesterday I am blocked by Google Scholar! This morning I tried again and I am still blocked!
"Please show you are not a robot! So much for AI excellence!!! This is very lousy by Google!
I am a paying Google account customer!!!! Grrrr!
I am a very heavy user of Google Scholar!
Amazon is bringing fast delivery to rural America, but 48-hour shipping is no easy feat
Waymo now has 170 million miles of safety data for its robotaxis
Good news!
"Waymo now has 170 million miles of safety data for its robotaxis. The results are much the same as before: the vehicles are 13 times safer than human drivers (i.e., they are involved in 92 percent fewer serious injury-causing crashes)." (Source)
Young people are starting to adapt to social media by restraining their use
Good news! It was to be expected like e.g. the video game craze before!
When new wears off!
"There are some signs that young people are starting to adapt to social media by restraining their use. Large shares of Gen Z report having deleted a social media app, and time spent on social media appears to have fallen worldwide since 2022, particularly among young people." (Source)
Global infant mortality further reduced in 2024
Good news! Impressive! Still to many young children die every year!
But progress is slow, only about 230,000 fewer death per year on average from 1990-2024!
"According to recently updated UNICEF data, 4.9 million children under the age of 5 died in 2024, down from 13 million in 1990." (Source)
"An estimated 4.9 million children died before their fifth birthday in 2024, including 2.3 million newborns, according to new estimates released today. Most of these deaths are [easily] preventable with proven, low-cost interventions and access to quality health care. ..."
Progress in reducing child deaths slows as 4.9 million children under five die in 2024 "New UN report on child mortality fully assesses leading causes of under five deaths for first time"
GPS-tracking collars in Botswana help lions and farmers
Good news!
"Using GPS-tracking collars, a system of mobile alerts, and more hands-on herding, cattle farmers in Botswana’s Okavango Delta are successfully coping with rebounding lion populations. Over a decade after implementing these technologies and techniques, both lion and cattle killings in the region have fallen." (Source)
Clearing circular RNA from cells extends lifespan, C. elegans study reveals
Notes on The Bitter Lesson of Diffusion Language Models for Agentic Workflows: A Comprehensive Reality Check
Israeli Traffic Court rules missile alert no excuse for speeding on a highway
Amelia Earhart’s plane wreckage perhaps finally discovered
A French Navy officer accidentally leaked the location of an aircraft carrier by logging his run on Strava
Saturday, March 21, 2026
Key protein found to protect cartilage, offering new hope for osteoarthritis treatment
Notes on The Finetuner's Fallacy: When to Pretrain with Your Finetuning Data
Cyberattack on vehicle breathalyzer company leaves drivers stranded across the US
For the first time in its history, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission has issued a construction permit for a private advanced nuclear reactor.
Iran launched two ballistic missiles targeting the US-UK base at Diego Garcia
Wow! These religious fanatics in Iran are showing how dangerous they are!
"Iran launched two ballistic missiles targeting the US-UK base at Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean on March 21, marking the furthest ever attempted Iranian missile strike. The attack demonstrated that Iranian missiles can reach beyond the 2,000-kilometer limit that the regime has long claimed to have self-imposed. One missile failed inflight, and the United States intercepted the other."
Source: Critical Threats Project, American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research
Size of governments across Canada on the rise; represented 44% of the economy in 2024
- This bulletin measures the size of government in Canada, by province, based on total government spending as a share of the economy as well as public sector employment as a share of total employment, between 2007 and 2024.
- ... the size of government in Canada, by province, based on total government spending as a share of the economy as well as public sector employment as a share of total employment, between 2007 and 2024.
- ... the size of government relative to the economy has an effect on economic growth and social progress. This makes it important to measure and track, especially given the scope of government spending and intervention during the COVID-19 pandemic.
- In 2024, the size of government relative to the economy among the provinces ranged from a high of 61.2% in Nova Scotia to a low of 30.4% in Alberta. For Canada as a whole, the size of government represented 43.6% of the economy.
- For Canada as a whole, the size of government relative to the economy increased from 40.0% in 2022 to 43.6% in 2024.
- From 2007 to 2024, government spending as a share of the economy increased in nine out of 10 provinces. Between 2019 and 2024, all 10 provinces experienced an increase in the size of government.
- For Canada as a whole, public-sector employment represented 21.5% of total employment. From 2007 to 2024, public-sector employment as a share of total employment increased in every province.
- Provinces in the Maritimes tended to have larger governments relative to the economy, which employed a higher share of total workers, than provinces in western Canada. However, in general the size of government has been increasing across the country.