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Biggest US labor unions fuel No Kings protests against Trump: ‘You need a voice to have freedom’

More than 2,600 events are planned across the US to dissent against Trump’s policies. Organizer James Phipps, 75, says: ‘Protest is all I’ve done all my life’
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Labour’s housing hypocrisy: councils serve almost 200 families with no-fault eviction notices

Exclusive: firms run by five of the party’s councils have used legal loophole to serve section 21 notices

Labour-run councils have used a legal loophole to issue almost 200 families with no-fault eviction notices since the party was elected on a promise to ban the practice, a Guardian investigation has found.

Scrapping these orders, known as section 21 evictions, was one of Keir Starmer’s main pledges before last July’s general election but, more than a year later, they remain lawful.

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The post Labour’s housing hypocrisy: councils serve almost 200 families with no-fault eviction notices first appeared on Capitol Riot – capitol-riot.com.

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Millions expected across all 50 US states to march in No Kings protests against Trump

Events scheduled in more than 2,700 locations, from small towns to large cities, aligning behind message that the US is sliding into authoritarianism

The post Millions expected across all 50 US states to march in No Kings protests against Trump first appeared on Capitol Riot – capitol-riot.com.

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From Washington: The President’s Escalating Drug War in The Caribbean

US military strikes on suspected drug-running boats in the Caribbean are not letting up. Since last month, when the operations began, at least six vessels have been targeted, resulting in the deaths of more than two-dozen alleged drug traffickers. President of Defense and Battlefield Consulting Firm IRIS Independent Research, Dr. Rebecca Grant, joins to unpack the legality of President Trump’s strikes on alleged Venezuelan drug boats after yet another vessel was sunk earlier in the week. Dr. Grant also explains the role US forces could potentially play in facilitating the Israel Gaza peace plan. Later, Secretary of the Interior Doug Burgum joins to discuss how President Trump is trying to loosen China’s chokehold on the global critical mineral supply chain.
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Tomahawk was always a pipe dream but ultimately it will not matter. IMO, Tomahawk is somewhat unsuitable for the model Ukraine operates with. Ukrainians have a much faster feedback loop so they’re better off developing their own long range strike weapons.

Tomahawk was always a pipe dream but ultimately it will not matter. IMO, Tomahawk is somewhat unsuitable for the model Ukraine operates with. Ukrainians have a much faster feedback loop so they’re better off developing their own long range strike weapons.

The post Tomahawk was always a pipe dream but ultimately it will not matter. IMO, Tomahawk is somewhat unsuitable for the model Ukraine operates with. Ukrainians have a much faster feedback loop so they’re better off developing their own long range strike weapons. first appeared on The Russian World – russianworld.net.

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@PressSec Stop using Ukraine people’s blood for your play. You forced Ukraine to give up nuke, long range weapons, pull out all teeth from Ukrainians! Now Ukrainians are fallen in the blood pool while Russians attacking daily. Send Tomahawk to Ukraine NOW! https://t.co/hzc31j0fiH

@PressSec Stop using Ukraine people’s blood for your play. You forced Ukraine to give up nuke, long range weapons, pull out all teeth from Ukrainians! Now Ukrainians are fallen in the blood pool while Russians attacking daily. Send Tomahawk to Ukraine NOW! https://t.co/hzc31j0fiH

The post @PressSec Stop using Ukraine people’s blood for your play. You forced Ukraine to give up nuke, long range weapons, pull out all teeth from Ukrainians! Now Ukrainians are fallen in the blood pool while Russians attacking daily. Send Tomahawk to Ukraine NOW! https://t.co/hzc31j0fiH first appeared on The Russian World – russianworld.net.

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I’m a Stanford professor and AI startup cofounder. Here’s how to get a job at an AI company.

Man in a button-down shirt, leaning against a pillar with his arms folded
Jure Leskovec, a computer-science professor at Stanford University, offers advice for landing a job at an AI company

  • AI job seekers should build real projects using public data sets, said Stanford professor Jure Leskovec.
  • Also a startup cofounder, he said adaptability and curiosity are crucial as AI evolves rapidly.
  • Communication and empathy matter as much as knowing how to code, Leskovec added.

This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation and written commentary from Jure Leskovec, a computer-science professor at Stanford University and cofounder of Kumo, a maker of AI tools for predicting business outcomes from company data. This story has been edited for length and clarity.

If you want to work in AI, you need to show that you can actually do the work. Launch real projects using public datasets, deploy a demo, post your work on GitHub, or write about it on a blog.

Participate in hackathons — they’re a fantastic way to demonstrate initiative and teamwork in a short time. We organize hackathons ourselves and are often impressed by what participants produce. It’s concrete proof of what you can do.

Even if you fail, you’re showing that you’re curious and proactive. By your second or third project or hackathon, you’ll have gained valuable experience.

We recently hired someone who stood out because he built a generative AI tool for analyzing customer purchase data. It showed ambition, curiosity, and problem-solving, which are qualities we really value.

Curiosity and flexibility matter

My second recommendation is to show adaptability — that you’re the kind of person who is always experimenting with new tools, and that you can learn quickly. This is essential because AI is evolving at a pace that surprises even those of us who work in the field every day.

The best job candidates have taught themselves frameworks like PyTorch, JAX, or LLM tooling, and they stay current on areas like GenAI, multimodal models, diffusion, and reinforcement learning. Curiosity and flexibility matter more than having a fixed set of skills, because the skills in demand today may look very different tomorrow.

A top school or credential might get your application looked at, but it won’t get you hired. We look for people who build things, who are adaptable and curious. In job interviews, we can tell if someone is just trying to map new ideas to what they learned in school versus truly engaging with what’s new.

There’s no playbook for AI. We’re writing it right now. I always value it when my students bring me solutions that haven’t been tried before, even if they’re wrong. We’re still at the experimental stage of AI in many ways, and there isn’t always a clear textbook answer.

Sharpen your thinking

At Kumo, we conduct several interviews to see an applicant’s full thought process. We pay close attention to how they approach problems and often value their reasoning as much as their final answer — if not more.

It may sound simple to say, “think outside the box,” but it is more critical now than ever. Who knows? Your idea today could become the standard tomorrow.

I encourage people to sharpen their thinking by questioning assumptions, trying to solve problems without relying on familiar tools, and deliberately exposing themselves to new domains. Practice brainstorming multiple answers to the same problem, even the ones that seem impractical at first. Over time, these habits train you to see possibilities others overlook.

One last piece of advice: Don’t forget to be human. Technical skills aren’t everything. I look for people who can communicate clearly, work well in teams, and think carefully about the ethical and social implications of what they’re building. Collaboration, empathy, and awareness of bias matter just as much as knowing how to code.

Read the original article on Business Insider

The post I’m a Stanford professor and AI startup cofounder. Here’s how to get a job at an AI company. first appeared on Capitol Riot – capitol-riot.com.

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@JohnKerriganSh1 @SlawomirDebski @grok You send ancient Soviet Shit that is used up in a day while we sponsor the building of a brand new Tank plant in western Ukraine. Our money buys American weapons for Ukraine and our Patriots/Gepards/IRIS-T protect Ukrainian skies. But I am willing to have you pay for everything!

@JohnKerriganSh1 @SlawomirDebski @grok You send ancient Soviet Shit that is used up in a day while we sponsor the building of a brand new Tank plant in western Ukraine. Our money buys American weapons for Ukraine and our Patriots/Gepards/IRIS-T protect Ukrainian skies. But I am willing to have you pay for everything!

The post @JohnKerriganSh1 @SlawomirDebski @grok You send ancient Soviet Shit that is used up in a day while we sponsor the building of a brand new Tank plant in western Ukraine. Our money buys American weapons for Ukraine and our Patriots/Gepards/IRIS-T protect Ukrainian skies. But I am willing to have you pay for everything! first appeared on The Russian World – russianworld.net.

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National Library of Azerbaijan opens exhibition dedicated to restoration of Independence Day

The National Library of Azerbaijan has inaugurated a virtual exhibition and a traditional book fair titled “October 18 – Day of Restoration of State Independence.”

The post National Library of Azerbaijan opens exhibition dedicated to restoration of Independence Day first appeared on The South Caucasus News – SouthCaucasusNews.com.

The post National Library of Azerbaijan opens exhibition dedicated to restoration of Independence Day first appeared on The World Web Times – worldwebtimes.com.

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Support for Micheál Martin falls to lowest level in over five years, poll shows

The poll showed that combined support for Fianna Fáil and Fine Gael, at 35 per cent, is at a historic low.

The post Support for Micheál Martin falls to lowest level in over five years, poll shows first appeared on Capitol Riot – capitol-riot.com.