10 interesting stories served every morning and every evening.
...
Read the original on text.blogosphere.app »
The free AI already on your Mac. Every Mac with Apple Silicon has a built-in LLM. Apple locked it behind Siri. apfel sets it free - as a CLI tool, an OpenAI-compatible server, and a chat.
The AI is already installed on your Mac. Apple ships it with macOS. apfel just gives you a way to talk to it - from your terminal, from your code, from anywhere.
No API keys. No subscriptions. No per-token billing. It’s your hardware - use it.
Every token generated locally on your Apple Silicon. Nothing leaves your machine. Ever.
Context window for input and output combined. Enough for most single-turn tasks and short chats.
The model under the hood
Apple ML Research
Three ways to use it.
CLI tool, HTTP server, or interactive chat. Pick the one that fits.
Pipe-friendly and composable. Works with jq, xargs, and your shell scripts. stdin, stdout, JSON output, file attachments, proper exit codes.
apfel “What is the capital of Austria?”
The capital of Austria is Vienna.
Drop-in replacement at localhost:11434. Point any OpenAI SDK at it and go. Streaming, tool calling, CORS, response formats.
Multi-turn conversations with automatic context management. Five trimming strategies. System prompt support. All on your Mac.
> How do I reverse a list in Python?
Apple built an LLM into your Mac. apfel gives it a front door.
Starting with macOS 26 (Tahoe), every Apple Silicon Mac includes a language model as part of Apple Intelligence. Apple exposes it through the FoundationModels framework - a Swift API that gives apps access to SystemLanguageModel. All inference runs on the Neural Engine and GPU. No network calls, no cloud, no API keys. The model is just there.
But Apple only uses it for Siri
Out of the box, the on-device model powers Siri, Writing Tools, and system features. There is no terminal command, no HTTP endpoint, no way to pipe text through it. The FoundationModels framework exists, but you need to write a Swift app to use it. That is what apfel does.
apfel is a Swift 6.3 binary that wraps LanguageModelSession and exposes it three ways: as a UNIX command-line tool with stdin/stdout, as an OpenAI-compatible HTTP server (built on Hummingbird), and as an interactive chat with context management.
It handles the things Apple’s raw API does not: proper exit codes, JSON output, file attachments, five context trimming strategies for the small 4096-token window, real token counting via the SDK, and conversion of OpenAI tool schemas to Apple’s native Transcript. ToolDefinition format.
Shell scripts in the demo/ folder. Install apfel first, then grab the ones you want.
Natural language to shell command. Say what you want, get the command.
Pipe chains from plain English. awk, sed, sort, uniq - generated for you.
Explain any command, error message, or code snippet in plain English.
What’s this directory? Instant project orientation for any codebase.
Change one URL. Keep your code.
apfel speaks the OpenAI API. Any client library, any framework, any tool that talks to OpenAI can talk to your Mac’s AI instead. Just change the base URL.
from openai import OpenAI
# Just change the base_url. That’s it.
client = OpenAI(
base_url=“http://localhost:11434/v1”,
api_key=“unused” # no auth needed
resp = client.chat.completions.create(
model=“apple-foundationmodel”,
messages=[{
“role”: “user”,
“content”: “What is 1+1?”
print(resp.choices[0].message.content)
...
Read the original on apfel.franzai.com »
Artemis II is now on a looping path that will carry the crew around the far side of the Moon and back again. It is the first time since 1972 that humans have travelled outside of the Earth’s orbit.
...
Read the original on www.bbc.com »
Federal data shows the tech giant filed for over 3,000 foreign worker visas as it cuts thousands of American jobs.
Federal data shows the tech giant filed for over 3,000 foreign worker visas as it cuts thousands of American jobs.
Submit your updates here. ›
Oracle, the software company headquartered in Austin, Texas, has filed thousands of petitions for H-1B visas in the past two fiscal years, even as it lays off thousands of American workers as part of a broader organizational shift. Federal data shows Oracle filed for 2,690 H-1B visas in fiscal year 2025 and 436 so far in fiscal year 2026, totaling over 3,100 visa requests.
The H-1B visa program allows companies to temporarily employ foreign workers with specialized skills, often in the tech industry. Critics argue the program is used to replace American workers with cheaper foreign labor, while supporters say it helps fill crucial talent gaps. Oracle’s visa filings amid mass layoffs raise questions about the company’s motivations and the broader debate over the H-1B program’s impact on the American workforce.
According to U. S. Citizenship and Immigration Services data, Oracle America Inc. filed for 2,690 H-1B visas for fiscal year 2025 and 436 so far for fiscal year 2026. This comes as Oracle reportedly began laying off thousands of employees this week, with workers receiving letters stating ‘today is your last working day.’ The company has not provided public comment on the layoffs or the H-1B visa filings.
* Oracle filed for 2,690 H-1B visas for fiscal year 2025, which covers October 1, 2024 to September 30, 2025.
* Oracle filed for 436 H-1B visas so far for fiscal year 2026, which runs from October 1, 2025 to September 30, 2026.
The full impact of Oracle’s layoffs and H-1B visa filings remains to be seen, as the company has not provided detailed public comment on its workforce changes and foreign worker hiring plans.
The takeaway
Oracle’s actions raise concerns about the company potentially replacing American workers with cheaper foreign labor through the H-1B visa program, even as it undergoes a major organizational shift. This case highlights the ongoing debate over the H-1B program’s impact on the U.S. workforce and the need for greater transparency from companies utilizing the program.
...
Read the original on nationaltoday.com »
One US service member has been rescued after a US F-15E Strike Eagle fighter was shot down over Iran, prompting a frantic effort to locate its two-strong crew, in the first such incident since the war began almost five weeks ago.
US officials familiar with the situation said one crew member was still missing late on Friday, after Iranian state media released images of a tail fin and other debris accompanied by an initial claim that an advanced US F-35 had been hit by a new air defence system over central Iran.
Aviation experts said the wreckage pictured was in fact from a F-15E, from the US air force’s 494th squadron, based at RAF Lakenheath in the UK, though it could not at first be confirmed when and where the pictures were taken. Markings on the wreckage appeared to match those on the tips of the tail fins of Strike Eagles normally based in the UK.
US officials later confirmed off the record that an F-15E had been brought down and the Pentagon was scrambling to find the crew before the Iranians. There was no official comment from the US military about the incident.
The downing of a US fighter jet comes just days after Donald Trump delivered a bellicose national address in which he claimed the US had “beaten and completely decimated Iran” and the conflict was “nearing completion”.
“We have all the cards. They have none,” the US president declared on Wednesday.
The White House press secretary, Karoline Leavitt, said Trump had been briefed but she did not offer any additional information. In a brief interview with NBC News, the president declined to discuss the search and rescue mission but said the incident would not affect negotiations with Iran. “No, not at all,” he said. “No, it’s war. We’re in war.”
Iran’s semi-official Fars news agency said on Friday that Tehran had rejected a US proposal for a 48-hour ceasefire, citing an unnamed source.
Details of the rescue mission were few but it is likely to have been a high-risk operation with rescue aircraft potentially exposed to fire from the ground. The status of the second crew member was unclear, with rescue efforts continuing as evening fell in Iran.
Subsequent footage filmed in Iran showed a US C-130 Hercules and a HH-60 Pave Hawk helicopter flying low in south-west Iran, and at one point refuelling together during their rescue operation.
An Iranian businessman offered to pay a reward worth $60,000 (£45,000) to anyone capturing the crew members alive. And a presenter on an Iranian TV channel, based in Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad province, a mountainous region in the south-west of the country, urged residents to hand over any “enemy pilot” to police and promised a reward for anyone who did.
That gave a clue to the location of the incident. Geolocated footage of low-flying rescue aircraft indicated planes flying near Behbahan, in the neighbouring province of Khuzestan, around 30 miles from the Gulf coast.
The Iranian parliament speaker, Mohammad-Bagher Ghalibaf , ridiculed the US, posting on social media: “After defeating Iran 37 times in a row, this brilliant no-strategy war they started has now been downgraded from ‘regime change’ to: ‘Hey! Can anyone find our pilots? Please?’”
No US troops have so far been taken prisoner by Iran. Thirteen American service personnel have been killed and 300 wounded during a campaign in which more than 12,300 targets in Iran have been bombed by the US alone.
A social media account claiming to be linked to Iran’s Revolutionary Guards posted a picture of an ejector seat in a desert landscape, which appeared to be consistent with the ACES II type used in F-15Es. Justin Bronk, an aviation expert from Rusithe Royal United Services Institute (Rusi), said: “If genuine, it would suggest that at least one of the two aircrew did eject safely.”
Iran’s Tasnim news agency reported that the pilot of the jet had been taken into custody, contradicting Tehran’s initial claim that the pilot had probably died in the incident. But nothing then emerged to verify the revised Iranian statement.
The New York Times reported that a second US air force combat plane crashed in the Persian Gulf region on Friday, but the lone pilot was safely rescued.
The A-10 Warthog attack plane went down near the strait of Hormuz at roughly the same time as the air force F-15E was shot down over Iran, according to two US officials. Iranian state media said its air defence system had targeted an “enemy” A-10 aircraft in southern waters near the strait of Hormuz.
Up to now no US fighter jets had been lost over Iran during the five-week-long conflict, though three F-15Es were shot down by a Kuwaiti air defence system in a dramatic friendly fire incident on 1 March.
The total cost to the US air force of lost and damaged aircraft, which also includes 16 uncrewed Reaper drones, has been estimated at more than $3bn by the specialist news site Airforce Technology. An F-15E cost $31m when delivered in the late 1990s; newer models cost closer to $100m.
Meanwhile, powerful blasts rocked northern Tehran, as Israel said it had launched a new wave of strikes on the Iranian capital and Beirut.
The Associated Press also reported, citing an Israeli official, that Israel had suspended airstrikes in areas “relevant” to the rescue operation in Iran.
Late on Thursday, the US president reiterated his threat to bomb Iran’s infrastructure, hours after he claimed credit for an attack on a newly built 136-metre-high (446ft) suspension bridge between Tehran and Karaj that killed eight people and injured 95.
“Our Military, the greatest and most powerful (by far!) anywhere in the World, hasn’t even started destroying what’s left in Iran. Bridges next, then Electric Power Plants!” he posted on social media, repeating a threat to destroy Iran’s electricity network.
Fresh footage on Friday showed that the $400m bridge, on a highway between the Iranian capital and a city to the north-west, had been severed in three places by the bombing, increasing the cost of its eventual repair.
More than 100 international law experts signed a joint statement on the Just Security website warning that statements made by Trump and other senior US officials, and the conduct of US forces “raise serious concerns about violations of international human rights law and international humanitarian law, including potential war crimes”.
A particular concern, they said, was threats made by the US to Iran’s energy infrastructure. “International law protects from attack objects indispensable to the survival of civilians, and the attacks threatened by Trump, if implemented, could entail war crimes.”
A power and desalination plant in Kuwait was damaged in an attack on Friday, though Iran blamed Israel for the attack. The Mina al-Ahmadi refinery in the Gulf country was also closed after a drone strike from Iran, while the UK announced it had agreed to send a counter drone team to help the country in its defence.
Israeli media reported that the US had told Israel it did not want Iran’s new supreme leader, Mojtaba Khamenei, to be killed because Americans wanted to have at least one senior political figure available who could negotiate a peace agreement.
Iran’s regime, however, has so far shown little desire to stop fighting. Sirens sounded repeatedly in Israel, as missile attacks from Iran and Lebanon continued but casualty numbers were small, with 12 people treated for physical injuries by the country’s emergency medical service in the past 24 hours.
Israel also carried out fresh strikes on south Beirut after issuing an evacuation order for the area, which has largely been emptied of residents amid repeated raids.
...
Read the original on www.theguardian.com »
Every time I utter the phrase “Samsung Magician,” a fully formed plan for reinstating the Inquisition is presented to me, whose sole goal is to burn this Magician at the stake.
What kind of fucking name is that anyway? “Samsung Magician” - for a disk utility? Who greenlit this? Who sat in a meeting and said “yeah, Magician, like it does magic” ?
The actual steps are at the end, now sit back and let me take you on a wonderful journey full of wonder way down into the Samsung shitter. We will find exactly what we expected, but more of it.
I needed to set an encryption password on my T7 Shield SSD portable drive. To take advantage of the drive’s hardware encryption engine, I needed to use Samsung’s Magician software. I installed it. It didn’t work. I wanted it gone. So I started to look at how to remove this software.
First, there’s no uninstaller. Samsung - a trillion-dollar company - ships Mac software with no uninstall button. No drag-to-trash. Nothing.
So I’ve dug around and found a cleanup script buried six folders deep inside the app bundle. Let’s try to run it:
It ran. And my kitty exploded. Sweet kitty overflowed. Hundreds - literally hundreds - of lines of chown: Operation not permitted. The script’s grand strategy for uninstalling itself is to change the ownership of every single file, one by one, so it can then delete them. Except macOS blocks every single attempt. Five hundred chown errors. The script doesn’t stop, doesn’t catch the errors, doesn’t try plan B. It just keeps slamming its head into the wall for every file and then finishes like “yep, all done boss.” So, at this stage the files are all still there.
I rm -rf every Samsung folder I could find. The Preferences. The Caches. The LaunchAgents. The LaunchDaemons. The kernel extensions. The crash reports. I run eight, nine, ten separate rm -rf commands targeting different corners of the filesystem where normal applications would usually be:
Then I run find / -iname “*samsung*magician*” to check. 27 files STILL THERE!!! After the cleanup script. After nine manual delete commands, 27 files are still on my machine, scattered across locations like:
* Kernel extensions in /Library/StagedExtensions/ (dead drivers that macOS won’t let you touch)
* The same kernel extensions AGAIN in /System/Volumes/Data/Library/StagedExtensions/ (because macOS mirrors them,
so you get to see them twice)
* Package receipts in /private/var/db/receipts/ (Samsung left its receipts behind like a burglar leaving a bunch
of turds in the living room)
* Cached processes in /private/var/folders/7v/ (yes, Samsung is in there too)
* A crash reporter list (because of course it crashed at some point)
* And a Samsung Magician folder in Application Support that somehow survived everything
I ran find one final time and eight files remained.
And so at last, Samsung Magician performs its final and greatest trick. Behold, ladies and gentlemen! Step right up! Watch in awe as four dead files defy deletion, survive every command thrown at them, and take up permanent residence in the deepest, most protected vault your operating system has. sudo rm -rf? Pathetic. These files aren’t going anywhere.
Now, I can’t stand any trace of it, you see. I want it gone.
I shut down my Mac. Held the power button. Booted into Recovery Mode. Opened Terminal. Ran csrutil disable. Rebooted. Opened Terminal. Deleted the kernel extensions. Ran find to confirm they’re gone. Shut down AGAIN. Booted into Recovery Mode AGAIN. Ran csrutil enable. Rebooted AGAIN. All this just to delete four dead files and their mirrors from a disk utility.
In other words, two reboots into Recovery Mode to remove four dead files from a disk utility that didn’t even fucking work in the first motherfucking place.
The most insane thing wasn’t the absurd difficulty of removing it. It was the Magician’s insides.
Samsung Magician comes with frame-by-frame PNG animation sequences. For a spinning circle. There are over 150 individually numbered PNG files called things like Circle motion_00001.png through Circle motion_00149.png just to show you a little animation that says “Health: Good.” That’s not a joke. A team of Samsung engineers built this, a project manager approved it, QA tested it (allegedly), and at no point in that entire chain did a single human being raise their hand and say: “hey, should a disk utility really ship with 150 hand-numbered PNGs of a spinning circle?”
And it gets better. There’s a separate set of 150 PNGs for “Health: Critical.” And another set for a “gamer” theme. And another set for fingerprint progress animations. And fingerprint success animations. We’re talking about hundreds upon hundreds of individual PNG files for decorative animations in a DISK UTILITY.
* An entire Electron framework - yes, they embedded a full Chromium browser engine to show you a pie chart of your disk space
* Squirrel framework - an auto-update framework, because what if this nightmare were to end too early?
* Custom Samsung fonts in multiple weights (200, 300, 400, 450, 500, 600, 700, 800) because apparently system fonts
aren’t good enough for displaying “128GB free”
* Localization files for every language on Earth - Korean, Japanese, Chinese, German, French, Italian, Russian,
Portuguese, Spanish, Arabic, Hindi, Bengali, Tamil, Telugu, Gujarati, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Urdu, Swahili, Filipino,
Afrikaans - Samsung really wanted to make sure everyone on the planet could experience this suffering equally
* Banner advertisement JPGs (banner_1.jpg through banner_5.jpg) - that’s right, the app that you installed to manage
your hardware shows you ads
* Help documentation with 40+ screenshots in 10 languages
Samsung Magician is an infestation. It’s a monument to bloat, a love letter to unnecessary software and corporate bullshit, and a huge meaty middle finger to every user who just wanted to set a password on their portable drive.
Look for an uninstall button in the app. There isn’t one.
Run it. Watch 500 chown: Operation not permitted errors waterfall down your terminal. Nothing is removed.
Run find. Discover 27 files still remaining across six different system directories.
Manually delete the SECOND Samsung Magician folder in Application Support (yes, there were two).
Run find again. Eight kernel extension files remain, protected by SIP.
Shut down Mac. Boot into Recovery Mode AGAIN. Re-enable SIP. Reboot AGAIN.
...
Read the original on chalmovsky.com »
Appearing on the Founders podcast this week, venture capitalist Marc Andreessen made the rather extraordinary claim that - going back four hundred years - it would never have occurred to anyone to be “introspective.”
Andreessen apparently blames Sigmund Freud and the Vienna Circle with having somehow “manufactured” the whole practice of introspection somewhere between 1910-1920. He summarised his own approach to life thus: “Move forward. Go.”
Host David Senra, apparently delighted, congratulated Andreessen on developing what he called a “zero-introspection mindset.”
Marc Andreessen was right about web browsers.
But he has since been wrong about a great many things.
And he is entirely wrong about introspection.
If we accept that introspection is a Viennese invention of the early twentieth century, we have to explain away…well, rather a lot.
Socrates made the examined life a condition of the life worth living, and he arguably died for it. The Stoics built an entire philosophical practice around self-examination: Marcus Aurelius wrote the Meditations as a private exercise in catching himself failing to live by his own principles, and he did this while running the Roman Empire, which suggests he didn’t find the two activities incompatible. Augustine’s Confessions, written around 400 AD, offer a sustained and searching account of his own interior life that predates Freud by about fifteen centuries, give or take.
In Chinese philosophy, Mencius describes the concept of introspection as “seeking the lost heart,” the recovery of something innate that gets buried under the noise of ordinary life. Shakespeare’s Hamlet is a play about what happens when you’re constitutionally unable to stop examining yourself and start acting, and the fact that Elizabethan audiences immediately recognized this as a problem implies they were already somewhat familiar with the practice being satirized; you can’t parody a concept your audience has never encountered.
Andreessen’s novel idea that Freud invented introspection is an inversion of the record. What Freud actually did was systematize certain ideas about the unconscious that were already circulating in European intellectual culture and put them into a clinical framework. Half of those ideas were themselves wrong; but “Freud was often wrong” is a very different argument from “people had no inner lives worth examining before 1910.”
Andreessen is no stranger to the written word. His Techno-Optimist Manifesto quotes Nietzsche, he references the Italian Futurists with admiration and he’s not unfamiliar with the Western philosophical tradition. So the historical revisionism can’t be called ignorance; this is, on some level, a calculated move. The claim that introspection is a modern pathology serves a specific rhetorical function by delegitimizing an entire mode of engagement with human experience, clearing it off the table, and leaving only external action as the proper response to ~being alive.
Andreessen and his cronies are making large claims about what human beings want and need. His stated personal philosophy is explicitly a vision of human flourishing: abundance, growth, the elimination of material constraints etc. These are claims about what will make people’s lives go well. But you can’t evaluate those claims without some account of human inner life, because human inner life is where the question of whether a life is going well actually gets answered. You can measure GDP. You can measure life expectancy. You can measure the number of transactions per second your payment processor handles. But none, not one single of these measurements will tell you whether the people whose lives they describe feel that their lives are worth living, whether they find their work meaningful, whether they wake up with something that resembles purpose.
The only access anyone has to those questions is through something like introspection: either their own, or someone else’s honest reports of their experience, or the accumulated testimony of literature and philosophy about what it’s like to be a living, breathing, doubting, hurting, internally-screaming human being floating on a God-forsaken rock in a God-forsaken void. Strip that out and you’re left with a very thin theory of human flourishing. It basically runs to more is better, faster is better, bigger is better with nothing else added or subtracted or attempted.
Perhaps, you find this to be a defensible position; but you still have to actually argue for it. You can’t just claim that the question of what people find meaningful is a Viennese invention and move on.
The response to Andreessen’s interview that keeps circulating is that “he hath no soul.”
This is, of course, wrong.
Andreessen almost certainly has a rich inner life. He has enthusiasms and anxieties and aesthetic preferences and tribal loyalties and all the rest of it. The problem isn’t that there’s nothing inside; the problem is that he’s chosen not to examine what’s there, and has developed an elaborate post-hoc justification for that choice by claiming that examination is itself the pathology.
This is a recognizable pattern. The Victorian vitalists who viewed masturbation as physically debilitating were wrong about the physiology, but they were also engaged in motivated reasoning: they already knew they wanted to prohibit something, and the scientific-sounding justification came later. Andreessen already knows he wants to move fast without examining himself, and the historical argument that introspection is a Freudian manufacture serves exactly that same function.
The practical consequences of an unexamined inner life at scale are not theoretical. The social media platforms built by people who believed behavioral data was a reliable substitute for understanding human psychology produced a decade of engagement metrics while user wellbeing declined and our entire social order decayed. The engineers who built these systems weren’t malicious; they were optimizing for things they could measure, because they’d implicitly accepted the view that measurable outputs were a sufficient model of human flourishing. Goodhart’s Law exacted its toll: the measure became the target, and the target was not what anyone would have chosen if they’d been forced to actually specify what they were aiming for.
Andreessen’s advice to himself, and apparently to others, is directional without being specific. Forward, he says. Forward toward what? His manifesto obsesses over abundance, over the elimination of material suffering, and a future in which technology has lifted constraints that currently limit human possibility. These are goals I can get behind. But “forward” presupposes that you know where you’re going, and knowing where you’re going presupposes that you know what you want, and knowing what you want doesn’t happen without exactly the examination the man has ruled out.
Andreessen’s model of human beings is thin. He can observe behavior. He can track preferences as expressed through market choices. He can measure what people click on and buy and use. What he can’t do, without something like introspection, is understand why, and the why is where most of the important information lives.
Four hundred years ago, the people Andreessen imagines were blissfully unselfconscious were reading Augustine and Montaigne and arguing about Stoic philosophy. They were writing diaries and letters that examined their own motives with considerable care. They were not, in fact, just moving forward without asking where they were going. That habit is not a pathology Freud introduced into an otherwise healthy civilization. It’s one of the things that makes civilization possible, and pretending otherwise doesn’t make you a builder. It just makes you someone who’s never looked at the blueprints.
...
Read the original on www.joanwestenberg.com »
Explore and share your observations from the natural world.
Every observation can contribute to biodiversity science, from the rarest butterfly to the most common backyard weed. We share your findings with scientific data repositories like the
Global Biodiversity Information Facility
to help scientists find and use your data. All you have to do is observe.
Record your encounters with other organisms and maintain life lists, all in the cloud.
Help scientists and resource managers understand when and where organisms occur.
Connect with experts who can identify the organisms you observe.
Find a project with a mission that interests you, or start your own.
Build your knowledge by talking with other naturalists and helping others.
Hold an event where people try to find as many species as possible.
Works On All Your Devices
Install our mobile apps so you can always observe, even without cell reception or wifi.
...
Read the original on www.inaturalist.org »
Your directory for European software, products and services. For enhanced privacy, quality, and a strong Europe.
Select your currently used services and instantly receive tailored European solutions — secure, privacy-compliant, and powerful.
Your directory for European software, products and services. For enhanced privacy, quality, and a strong Europe.
Select your currently used services and instantly receive tailored European solutions — secure, privacy-compliant, and powerful.
What Europe does better
EU companies are subject to the world’s strictest environmental regulations. European products are designed for longevity — less throwaway culture, more responsibility.
Made in Europe has stood for top quality and durability for decades. Strict standards guarantee fair working conditions, while shorter supply chains measurably reduce CO₂.
EU providers are subject to the GDPR — the strictest data protection law worldwide. Your data belongs to you, not advertising networks. Note: US software can be compelled by the CLOUD Act to surrender data to US authorities — even if servers are located in Europe.
...
Read the original on only-eu.eu »
A growing number of NHS staff are reportedly refusing to work on the Federated Data Platform (FDP) due to ethical concerns with its US-based provider, Palantir. The US technology company was awarded a £330 million contract in 2023 to collate operational data, including patient information and waiting lists. However, Palantir’s involvement in the US defence sector and its leadership’s political affiliations have made the partnership contentious.
Senior health officials and data analysts have described a “workplace adjustment” where employees officially refuse to engage with the software. Some staff members reportedly work as slowly as possible when pressured to use the platform, while others avoid it entirely, citing better alternatives. Despite this resistance, 123 of 205 hospital trusts in England are currently using the FDP, and the project has received a high rating for on-time and on-budget delivery.
The government is currently under pressure from MPs and medical unions to eject the company from NHS systems. Reports suggest that ministers have sought advice on triggering a contract break clause. While Louis Mosley, the executive vice-chair of Palantir in the UK, maintains that such campaigns are ideologically motivated and could harm patient care, the level of dissent underscores a significant divide over the company’s suitability to manage national health data.
Training Announcement: The IAPP Certified Information Privacy Technologist (CIPT) is a privacy-focused professional IT certificate from the IAPP that addresses data protection requirements and controls within complex technological environments. It explores the data lifecycle, privacy risk models and frameworks, the principles of Privacy by Design, and the role of privacy-enhancing technologies within the organisation. Find out more.
...
Read the original on www.freevacy.com »
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