Artificial Intelligence

Pentagon’s Top Spy Agency Turns To AI for Targeting and Operations Planning

The U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) is getting ready for the “next battlefield” and counting on the expertise of private concerns, like Booz Allen Hamilton, to implement what it calls Machine-assisted Analytic Rapid-repository System, or MARS for short. MARS is a critical data management system for “military targeting” and operation planning.

Pentagon & Google Partner On COVID-Driven AI “Predictive Health” & The Wuhan Chinese Virologist

Welcome to The Daily Wrap Up, a concise show dedicated to bringing you the most relevant independent news, as we see it, from the last 24 hours (9/17/20). As always, take the information discussed in the video below and research it for yourself, and come to your own conclusions. Anyone telling you what the truth Read More...

Twitter Bans Bitchute Links & The Matrix 'Trans Metaphor' - FF Ep88

This is the audio version of the show. If you want to watch the video version go here. We have RSS/Podcast feeds available here.
Henrik and Lana cover the latest absurd news. From Twitter censoring BitChute to Covid-1984. We also talk about The Matrix, the movie, which now is said to be a metaphor for transgenderism, by the (now) fully transitioned directors Larry and Andy Wachowski. Don't miss this highly entertaining show.

New Tech Company Partnership to Offset Responsibility for Public Safety and Health onto AI

The transition from a manned police force into an AI-assisted panopticon through which populations are monitored 24/7 is occurring at breakneck speed as tech giants like Google, Apple and Microsoft pour millions of dollars into a New York-based startup called RapidSOS, which “transmits data from 911 callers to emergency responders.”

Having Sucked America Dry, Tech Giants Seek New Markets Beyond Reach of US Antitrust Laws

The American consumer market for big tech gadgets appears to have reached the point of saturation as the novelty of mobile devices and laptops plateau and the persistent lockdown sees savings dwindle and discretionary spending disappear. Apple, which has enjoyed reigning over the smartphone market for more than a decade, has been forced to drop its prices over the last year as a result of a market at full capacity.