Australian government signs deal to deport former detainees to the tiny island country of NauruNew Foto - Australian government signs deal to deport former detainees to the tiny island country of Nauru

Australia and Nauru signed an agreement on Friday to allow the Australian government to deport formerly detained people without valid visas to the tiny island nation, the Australian Associated Press reported. Under the memorandum of understanding, Australia will pay Nauru 408 million Australian dollars ($267 million) up front once the first people arrive, followed by 70 million Australian dollars ($46 million) annually for the resettlement. The move is being slammed by refugee advocates, some of whom say the deal could open the door to mass deportations without notice. Human rights organizations have protested deportations to Nauru since a report by the United Nations found "systematic violations" of the International Convention Against Torture. Tony Burke, Australia's home affairs minister, said in a statement that the memorandum "contains undertakings for the proper treatment and long-term residence of people who have no legal right to stay in Australia, to be received in Nauru." The two countries struck a deal inFebruaryto allow Australia to deport three violent criminals to Nauru. They were granted 30-year visas. AnAustralian High Court decisionin 2023 overturned the government's policy of indefinite detention forimmigrantswho could neither get a visa, in some cases because of criminal conduct, nor be deported because they would face persecution or harm in their home countries. More than 200 immigrants have been released from detention as a result of the case. Some were charged with further offenses after their release. Burke said the Nauru deal would target this group. "Anyone who doesn't have a valid visa should leave the country," he said. "This is a fundamental element of a functioning visa system." In astatement posted online, Jana Favero, deputy CEO of the Asylum Seeker Resource Centre, criticized the agreement. "This deal is discriminatory, disgraceful and dangerous," she said. "At a time when the entire country has just voted for unity and rejected fear, rather than embrace this and show leadership, the Albanese Government has launched yet another attack on migrants and refugees."

Australian government signs deal to deport former detainees to the tiny island country of Nauru

Australian government signs deal to deport former detainees to the tiny island country of Nauru Australia and Nauru signed an agreement on F...
CDC workers told to return to office on September 15, weeks after gunman attacked headquartersNew Foto - CDC workers told to return to office on September 15, weeks after gunman attacked headquarters

Workers at the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have been told to return to the office September 15 – a little over a month after a gunman attacked the agency's Atlanta campus,firing almost 500 shotsand killing a police officer before dying of a self-inflicted gunshot wound. The push for workers to return to the office was shared in an email to staff, a Health and Human Services spokesperson confirmed. The announcement comes just weeks after the August 8 attack left CDC staff reeling, with one staffersaying employees felt like "sitting ducks"as the shooter unloaded hundreds of bullets, around 200 of which struck six CDC buildings, leaving bullet holes in windows. Employees, who were preparing to leave for the weekend, say they took cover under their desks as bullets flew over their heads. Many workers have been working remotely since. CDC staffers whose workspaces remain impacted by the shooting will be assigned alternate spaces, according to the HHS spokesperson. The agency's return-to-office plan was first reported by CNBC. The shooting unfolded duringa tumultuous timefor the CDC: The agency, which is tasked with protecting Americans' health, lost about a quarter of its staff during widespreadreduction-in-force layoffs of federal employeesled by the Trump administration earlier this year. And just earlier this week, at least 600 CDC employeesreceived permanent termination notices, according to the American Federation of Government Employees. This week, CDC DirectorSusan Monarez was oustedfrom her position after clashing with HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy overvaccine policyand her refusal to fire several veteran CDC leaders, according to people familiar with the situation. Her removal was followed by the resignations of several senior leaders. Late this week, Kennedy saidDeputy HHS Secretary Jim O'Neillwill serve as acting director of the CDC. "Our agency is crumbling," a source within the CDC, who is not allowed to speak to the media and did not want to be identified for fear of retribution, told CNN after Monarez's departure. The agency has also been the subject of dogged conspiracy theories surroundingthe Covid-19 vaccine– which may have contributed to the deadly attack. The gunman, 30-year-old Patrick Joseph White, had expressed discontent with the Covid-19 vaccine in writtendocumentsrecovered from his home. He "wanted to make the public aware of his public distrust of the vaccines," Georgia Bureau of Investigation director Chris Hosey previously said. More than 750 HHS employees implored Kennedy – a longtime critic of vaccines, including the Covid-19 vaccine – tostop spreading false informationabout vaccines and denigrating public health workers in a letter last week. The letter tied the deadly August shooting to political attacks on health agencies. "The attack came amid growing mistrust in public institutions, driven by politicized rhetoric that has turned public health professionals from trusted experts into targets of villainization – and now, violence," wrote the staffers, who emphasized they signed the letter "in our own personal capacities." Some signed anonymously "out of fear of retaliation and personal safety." The shooter who attacked the CDC stole five weapons from his father's safe, including a long gun, which was used for most of the shots, according to state investigators. White, wearing what appeared to be a surgical mask and armed with two handguns, a rifle, a shotgun and two backpacks filled with ammo, began shooting at the CDC campus and triggered a lockdown at the agency as well as nearby Emory University. Almost 100 children at a daycare on the campus were locked down, too. One unidentified witness described seeing the gunman shoot at a police officer on a 911 call, according toaudio released this weekby the Atlanta Police Department. "He's still shooting," the caller said. "He's shooting at the officer." The sound of gunfire is audible during the call. "Officer's hit, officer's down," the caller said. David Rose, a DeKalb County Police officer who arrived during the attack, was fatally shot. He left behind a pregnant wife and two children. No one at the CDC was injured in the shooting. White had no known criminal history. He was found dead on the second floor of the CVS store, directly across from the CDC's main entrance. Aliki Pappas Weakland, who works at the CDC, recalled in a social media post earlier this month the terror she felt during the attack. "I dropped to the floor when the shooting started. The fear that gripped me as the gunfire continued in a steady stream for an endless 15 minutes," she wrote after the attack. "My knees are chafed and hurting from crawling on the floor with my colleagues as we scrambled to seek shelter." CNN's Meg Tirrell, Chris Youd, Brenda Goodman, Ryan Young, Jason Morris, Dakin Andone, Dalia Faheid, and Sarah Dewberry contributed to this report. For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

CDC workers told to return to office on September 15, weeks after gunman attacked headquarters

CDC workers told to return to office on September 15, weeks after gunman attacked headquarters Workers at the US Centers for Disease Control...
Humans are being hired to make AI slop look less sloppyNew Foto - Humans are being hired to make AI slop look less sloppy

The same technology that was supposed to put graphic designer Lisa Carstens out of business is now keeping her busier than ever. Carstens, a longtime freelancer based in Spain, spends a good portion of her day working with startups and individual clients looking to fix their botched attempts at AI-generated logos. The illustrations clients bring to her are commonly littered with unclean lines and nonsensical text, and they look like a mess of pixels when blown up beyond a certain size. "There's people that are aware AI isn't perfect, and then there's people that come to you angry because they didn't manage to get it done themselves with AI," Carstens said. "And you kind of have to be empathetic. You don't want them to feel like idiots. Then you have to fix it." Such gigs are part of a new category of work spawned by the generative AI boom that threatened to displace creative jobs across the board: Anyone can now write blog posts, produce a graphic or code an app with a few text prompts, but AI-generated content rarely makes for a satisfactory final product on its own. The issue has transformed the job market for many gig workers. Despite widespread concern that AI is replacing workers across industries, some are saying they've found new work as a result of AI's incompetencies: Writers are asked to spruce up ChatGPT's writing. Artists are being hired to patch up wonky AI images. Even software developers are tasked with fixing buggy apps coded by AI assistants. Arecent MIT reportfound that AI has displaced outsourced workers more than permanent employees. But it also found that 95% of businesses' generative AI pilots are getting zero return on investment. "The core barrier to scaling is not infrastructure, regulation, or talent," the report states. "It is learning. Most GenAI systems do not retain feedback, adapt to context, or improve over time." For Carstens, the AI-generated logos clients send her are sometimes well-designed enough that they require only a few fixes on her end. But other times, delivering a quality result requires Carstens to redraw the entire logo from scratch while remaining true to the AI-generated design, which often takes longer than if she were to have come up with a design herself. Fixing AI's mistakes is not their ideal line of work, many freelancers say, as it tends to pay less than traditional gigs in their area of expertise. But some say it's what helps pay the bills. "That's all you can do, is learn and adapt," said freelance writer Kiesha Richardson. "And I have some colleagues who are adamant about not working with AI. But I'm like, 'I need money. I'm taking it.'" Richardson, who is based in Georgia, said half of her jobs nowadays come from clients who hire her to tweak or rewrite their AI-generated articles that "don't look remotely human at all." Some of the flaws are easier to correct: AI's overuse of em dashes, even in places where other punctuation would make more sense, or its clear bias toward words like "embark," "deep dive" and "delve." Beyond those quirks, however, Richardson said AI tends to give generic responses that don't answer questions as thoroughly as a human would, so rewriting an article also requires doing her own research on the topic at hand. But many clients don't appreciate the work that goes into revamping a poorly written AI article, she said, noting that companies often offer less pay for these gigs based on the assumption that they're less demanding. But making AI sound more human can require just as much thinking and creativity as writing the entire article herself, she said. "I am a bit concerned because people are using AI to cut costs, and one of those costs is my pay," Richardson said. "But at the same time, they find out that they can't really do it without humans. They're not getting the content that they want from AI, so hopefully we'll stick around a little longer." As companies struggle to figure out their approach to AI, recent data provided to NBC News from freelance job platforms Upwork, Freelancer and Fiverr also suggest that demand for various types of creative work surged this year, and that clients are increasingly looking for humans who can work alongside AI technologies without relying on or rejecting them entirely. Data from Upwork found that although AI is already automating lower-skilled and repetitive tasks, the platform is seeing growing demand for more complex work such as content strategy or creative art direction. And over the past six months, Fiverr said it has seen a 250% boost in demand for niche tasks across web design and book illustration, from "watercolor children story book illustration" to "Shopify website design." Similarly, Freelancer saw a surge in demand this year for humans in writing, branding, design and video production, including requests for emotionally engaging content like "heartfelt speeches." "I mean, the fastest way to get dumped is to send a love letter to your girlfriend or boyfriend and use ChatGPT to write it," Matt Barrie, CEO of Freelancer, said of the phenomenon. "And it's the same thing for brands. The market knows when something has been fully produced by AI, and there's an immediate visceral reaction to it." Brands caught using AI have continued to face backlash from consumers. Last month, Guess sparked outcry online when itfeatured an AI-generated modelin an advertisement that appeared in Vogue. So even outside of any obvious mistakes made by AI tools, some artists say their clients simply want a human touch to distinguish themselves from the growing pool of AI-generated content online. To Todd Van Linda, an illustrator and comic artist in Florida, AI art is easily discernible, if not by certain telltale inconsistencies in the details, then by the plasticine effect that defines AI-generated images across a range of styles. "I can look at a piece and not only tell that it's AI, I can tell you what descriptor they used to generate it," Van Linda said. "When it comes to, especially, independent authors, they don't want anything to do with that because it's so formulaic, it's obvious. It's like they stopped off at Walmart to get a bargain cover for their book." Authors come to him, he said, because they know that AI-generated art fails to capture the hyperspecific "vibe" of their individual story. Often, his clients can only give him a rough idea of what they want. It's then Van Linda's job to decipher their preferences and create something that draws out the exact feeling each client seeks to evoke from their art. Van Linda said he also gets approached by people who want him to "fix" their AI-generated art, but he avoids those jobs now because he has realized those clients are typically less willing to pay him what he believes his labor is worth. "There would be more work involved in fixing those images than there would be in starting from a clean sheet of paper and doing it right, because what they have is a mismatched collection of generalities that really don't follow what they're trying to do," he said. "But they're trying to wedge the square peg into the round hole because they don't want to spend any more money." The low pay from clients who have already cheaped out on AI tools has affected gig workers across industries, including more technical ones like coding. For India-based web and app developer Harsh Kumar, many of his clients say they had already invested much of their budget in "vibe coding" tools that couldn't deliver the results they wanted. But others, he said, are realizing that shelling out for a human developer is worth the headaches saved from trying to get an AI assistant to fix its own "crappy code." Kumar said his clients often bring him vibe-coded websites or apps that resulted in unstable or wholly unusable systems. His projects have included fixing an AI-powered support chatbot that gave customers inaccurate answers — and sometimes leaked sensitive system details due to poor safety measures — and rebuilding an AI content recommendation system that frequently crashed, gave irrelevant recommendations and exposed sensitive data. "AI may increase productivity, but it can't fully replace humans," Kumar said. "I'm still confident that humans will be required for long-term projects. At the end of the day, humans were the ones who developed AI."

Humans are being hired to make AI slop look less sloppy

Humans are being hired to make AI slop look less sloppy The same technology that was supposed to put graphic designer Lisa Carstens out of b...
Former Colombian rebels and soldiers work together to exhume remains, give families closureNew Foto - Former Colombian rebels and soldiers work together to exhume remains, give families closure

By Julia Symmes Cobb PALMIRA, Colombia (Reuters) -For nearly a year the ex-rebels worked shoulder to shoulder with their former enemies - retired soldiers from the Colombian military - in a place that viscerally expresses the toll of Colombia's six decades of conflict: a cemetery. The former combatants helped exhume unidentified remains believed to belong to conflict victims and then refurbished this corner of the cemetery in Palmira, in western Colombia, building new ossuaries and a tiny chapel. The project - the first of its kind - is a reparation effort taking place under the terms of the 2016 peace deal which led to the demobilization of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) rebels and set up a transitional justice court to try former guerrillas and military members for war crimes. At least 450,000 people are known to have been killed in Colombia's long civil war. A further 132,877 people are recorded as disappeared - their whereabouts unknown. The vast majority are likely dead. The ex-combatants taking part in this project were largely mid-level commanders, and their work will be taken into consideration by the transitional justice court when eventual reparations sentences are handed out. The process forced the ex-combatants to see their erstwhile adversaries as human beings, they told Reuters, and also to engage with conflict victims. "We're human beings. They took one side and we took the other, theirs an illegal one and ours a legal one. And in the end we all found ourselves on the same path," said retired army sergeant Fabian Durango, who spent 16 years in the military after joining in 1998. "We're here to try and mitigate the evil we did," said Durango, a veteran of special forces and counter-insurgency units who spent months in the deep jungle. Durango, who was 15 when he joined the army, is facing charges in the court's probe into so-called "false positives," when soldiers murdered civilians and reported them as guerrillas killed in combat to receive benefits. "In that moment you thought of yourself more than anything," said Durango, who admits the crimes. "It's a harm that whatever you do or don't do, you'll never repay." "The pain of their mothers has no reparation," he said. A former FARC commander who uses the nom de guerre Leonel Paez and declined to give his real name because he feared threats from former comrades said the Palmira project showed understanding is possible. "We became friends, and we didn't look at each other differently because you were a soldier or a rebel," he said. "Destiny put us against each other." Paez joined the FARC in 1979, when he was 17, and is accused of participating in kidnappings for ransom and of crimes committed in the region around Palmira. He says he may also face charges over child recruitment. 'FORGOTTEN CORNER' The remains of unidentified bodies exhumed from the area of the cemetery known by locals as "the forgotten corner" will have DNA samples taken and compared to a database of families of the disappeared. If identified, their families can choose where to give their loved ones a final, proper burial. Some victims' groups have painted a mural and planted a flower garden around the restored area. Judith Casallas is happy the resting place is now more dignified. Her 19-year-old daughter Mary Johanna Lopez disappeared with boyfriend Jose Didier Duque in 2007 in the nearby town of Pance, where the couple had gone in search of a cabin to rent for his birthday. No trace of them has ever been found. Casallas' participation in the project put her in contact with ex-combatants who were active when her daughter, the youngest of three girls and a voracious reader, vanished. "It was useful to communicate to them where my daughter disappeared. There were a lot of people here from that time, both army and (FARC) signatories," Casallas said, adding that some ex-combatants told her they would ask around about her case. Casallas, who suffers from heart and kidney problems, still buys a Christmas present for Mary Johanna every year. She has 18 saved up. She urged ex-combatants to tell the truth about their crimes to potentially help find the remains of the disappeared. "The day that I get my daughter's remains, I will believe she's gone," said Casallas. Some families are getting answers. On Tuesday, the remains of Wilson Losada Borrero were interred at Palmira. He was 19 when he disappeared in 2002 and was the first to be placed in the new ossuaries constructed during the project. His parents, siblings and other family members offered prayers as a worker cemented a plaque bearing his name and the image of a dove over his ossuary. "Today I thank God that I have him. Even if it's his bones," said his mother Maricela Borrero, who remembered her son as affectionate and a lover of football. Other mothers looking for their disappeared children should not lose hope, she said. "Yes, I feel sadness, but God has given me the tranquility, the courage to confront this." The Search Unit for the Disappeared, or UBPD, created under the peace deal to find the country's missing, led the exhumations at the Palmira cemetery. Records dating back to 1982 show at least 600 unidentified people were buried in the now-refurbished corner, said Marcela Rodriguez, the UBPD's regional investigator for nearby Cali. So far, 72 have been exhumed. Those not initially identified through DNA will be placed in the ossuaries. As many as 60% of Colombia's disappeared may have ended up in cemeteries, which are a major focus for recovery of remains nationwide, UBPD's national director Luz Janeth Forero told Reuters after a ceremony where the restored part of the cemetery was handed over by ex-combatants to the community. "This is a lesson for the country, to insist that peace is possible," said Rodriguez. "That we can do it, with small actions and concrete works." (Reporting by Julia Symmes Cobb, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)

Former Colombian rebels and soldiers work together to exhume remains, give families closure

Former Colombian rebels and soldiers work together to exhume remains, give families closure By Julia Symmes Cobb PALMIRA, Colombia (Reuters...
'Oh, my, gosh, they would never have known:' New warnings about rabies outbreaks as cases riseNew Foto - 'Oh, my, gosh, they would never have known:' New warnings about rabies outbreaks as cases rise

Six deaths from rabies have been reported over the last 12 months in the U.S., the highest number in years, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. From rabid skunks in Kentucky to gray foxes in Arizona and raccoons on Long Island, wild animals in more than a dozen places across the U.S. have experienced a rise in the deadly disease, at least partly driven by shrinking natural habitats and better surveillance. "We are currently tracking 15 different likely outbreaks," said Dr. Ryan Wallace, who leads the rabies team at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Areas with outbreaks include Nassau County, New York, which issued a health threat over rabid animals last month, as well as Cape Cod, Massachusetts, and parts of Alaska, Arizona, California, Indiana, Kentucky, Maine, North Carolina, Oregon and Vermont. "There are parts of the United States where it does seem like we're getting more calls and more reports," Wallace said, noting an increase in rabid foxes in the West and rabid bats across the country. "Whether those numbers are truly significant increases, we can only tell at the end of the year. But right now, at peak rabies season, it does seem like activity is higher." Rabies is present in all states except Hawaii. Bats are the most common cause ofrabies infection in peopleand are also the most likely species to beinfected with the virus, according to the CDC. Each year,1.4 million Americansare checked for possible exposure to the rabies virus and 100,000 receive a series of vaccine injections to prevent them from becoming ill, according to the CDC. Last month, Samantha Lang was one of them. Land, 22, was likely bitten by a bat that flew into her apartment from a hole in her ceiling in Greenwood, Indiana. The day after she noticed tiny marks on her arm, she discovered the bat, alive, hanging from her air conditioning vent. After contacting her local health department, she was urged to receive rabies post-exposure prophylaxis. She got it immediately. "I never thought that I would have to worry about it," Lang said. The rabies virus invades the central nervous system and is almost always fatal once symptoms start. Early symptoms, which can begin about a week or up to a year after exposure, may resemble the flu and progress quickly to confusion, paralysis, salivating, hallucinations and difficulty swallowing, followed by death within weeks. The number of human deaths over the last year is concerning, experts say. In comparison, from 2015 to 2024, 17 cases of human rabies were reported, two of which were contracted outside the U.S., according to the CDC. People are most often exposed to the rabies virus through the saliva of an infected wild animal that can get into the mouth, eyes or a wound, which is why bites are so dangerous. Prior to the 1960s, most cases in humans were from infected pets, usually a dog. Thanks to strict pet vaccination laws, the canine strain of rabies has been eliminated from the U.S. One of the more dramatic increases in wildlife infections has been in Franklin County, near the Research Triangle region of central North Carolina, which experienced a doubling of confirmed cases in wild animals over the past year. "For the number of confirmed cases to go up 100%, and we're not even over this year's rabies season, that's a big deal," said Scott LaVigne, the county's health director. LaVigne suspects that the urban growth that's been encroaching on wild animal habitats has been an important factor driving the spread of rabies. "The population of Franklin County since 2010 has increased 35%, and those people have to live somewhere," he said. "And so you're seeing increased land development and housing tracts going in." Animals that might have been isolated before are now crowded together, and if one gets rabies, it's more likely to spread to others in the group, LaVigne said. People may not always know they've been exposed to a rabid animal. There have been reported deaths from people whodidn't realize they had been bittenor scratched by a bat and who had refused the lifesaving vaccines. In December, aCalifornia teacher died a monthafter removing a bat from her classroom. She didn't know she'd been infected. The virus can evolve and manifest in different ways, depending on the animal species and the strain. Most people expect a rabid animal to be aggressive and vicious, but sometimes the infected animal can be quite docile. "There's a strain of rabies where the animals get very, very friendly," LaVigne said. A "family saw a raccoon that kind of showed up on their front step and he was sick and he was so cute and wanted to be petted. And you know when raccoons aren't barring their teeth they are pretty cute." The family petted and fed the animal until it died. They called animal services to pick up the body "and thank God they did, because when they sent the brain out to be tested, it was positive, and so the whole family had to get vaccinated," LaVigne said. "Oh, my gosh, they never would have known if they hadn't called animal services." As rabies seems to be spreading more in wildlife, veterinarians are especially worried about vaccine hesitancy spreading among pet owners, a dangerous trend that could lead to more dogs — and their owners — becoming infected. A 2023 study published in the journalVaccinefound in a nationally representative sample of Americans that nearly 40% believed canine vaccines were unsafe and 37% believed that vaccines could lead their dogs to develop cognitive issues, such as autism. Dr. Gabriella Motta, a veterinarian from Glenolden, Pennsylvania, and a co-author of the study, says she often sees clients who are concerned vaccines might hurt their dog. "It's an issue we're worried about, that could be on the rise in the future," Motta said. "If we continue to see plummeting vaccination rates or increasing vaccine hesitancy, are we going to see [rabies] in more pets, and not just wildlife? We're kind of starting to sound the alarms." Rabies vaccines after exposure have come a long way since the shots were injected into people's abdomens. The current series involves an injected dose of immunoglobulin, which contains rabies antibodies, immediately after exposure, followed by four vaccine injections. All the shots are now given in the arm. The rule of thumb, experts say, is that rabies should be suspected any time a wild animal is behaving in an aberrant way, whether it's too aggressive, too fearless or too friendly.

'Oh, my, gosh, they would never have known:' New warnings about rabies outbreaks as cases rise

'Oh, my, gosh, they would never have known:' New warnings about rabies outbreaks as cases rise Six deaths from rabies have been repo...

 

GRIF MAG © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com