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Candell and Houser Earn First-Team Men’s Track and Field and … – WUSTL Athletics

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Across all divisions, WashU ranks eighth in total Academic All-America honorees and owns the third most selections in Division III behind Massachusetts Institue of Technology (MIT) and Johns Hopkins.

Candell, an Arlington, Mass. native, owns a 3.98 GPA with a major in computer science. Candell assembled a sensational senior campaign across the cross country and track and field seasons. At the University Athletic Association (UAA) Outdoor Championships, Candell bested the league in the 3,000m steeplechase as he claimed the event title with a time of 9:17.97.

Additionally, Candell ran the lead leg in the distance medley relay (DMR) at the NCAA Indoor Track & Field Championships. The relay team turned in a mark of 9:50.40, which gave the Bears the sixth-best time in the country. At the UAA Indoor Championships, he was a part of the distance medley relay team that secured first (9:57.81).

In the cross country season, Candell placed 81st at the NCAA Division III Cross Country Championships as he registered an 8k time of 25:59.50. Candell also finished 18th (25:30.60) at the NCAA Division III Midwest Region Cross Country Championships and 14th (25:16.80) at the UAA Cross Country Championships.

Houser, a native of Glenview, Ill., is majoring in computer science and sports a 4.0 GPA.

Houser ran the anchor leg in the distance medley relay at the NCAA Indoor Championships. Houser and the rest of the relay team posted the sixth-fastest mark in Division III with a timeof 9:50.40.

Furthermore, Houser secured two event wins (one individual and one relay) at the UAA Indoor Championships. The Academic All-American claimed the mile victory as he crossed the finish line with a time of 4:16.45. Houser also garnered a UAA title in the distance medley relay (9:57.81).

At the UAA Outdoor Championships, Houser finished third in the 800m with a time of 1:52.43.

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QS ranks MIT the world’s No. 1 university for 2023-24 – MIT News

MIT has again been named the worlds top university by the QS World University Rankings, which were announced today. This is the 12th year in a row MIT has received this distinction.

The full 2024 edition of the rankings published by Quacquarelli Symonds, an organization specializing in education and study abroad can be found at TopUniversities.com. The QS rankings are based on factors including academic reputation, employer reputation, citations per faculty, student-to-faculty ratio, proportion of international faculty, and proportion of international students.

MIT was also ranked the worlds top university in 11 of the subject areas ranked by QS, as announced in March of this year.

The Institute received a No. 1 ranking in the following QS subject areas: Chemical Engineering; Civil and Structural Engineering; Computer Science and Information Systems; Data Science and Artificial Intelligence; Electrical and Electronic Engineering; Linguistics; Materials Science; Mechanical, Aeronautical, and Manufacturing Engineering; Mathematics; Physics and Astronomy; and Statistics and Operational Research.

MIT also placed second in five subject areas: Accounting and Finance; Architecture/Built Environment; Biological Sciences; Chemistry; and Economics and Econometrics.

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Comp science paper with questions from IT stumps engg examinees – Times of India

PUNE: Computer science students from the engineering faculty of Savitribai Phule Pune University (SPPU) were in for a surprise on Tuesday when they took their examination. Half the questions in their software engineering subject paper were based on the information technology branch syllabus. Students who took the exam were confused, but attempted them. After the exam, when they gathered to discuss the paper, they found out that the questions were not from the computer science syllabus at all. The exam department of SPPU has said they are investigating the matter, but admitted that there was a mix-up since many students had approached them about it. If the outcome of the exam department investigation matched the students claims, the officials from SPPU said that the paper would be cancelled and students would have to appear for the exam once again. A student who took the exam from a college in Sadashiv Peth said, I attempted the paper. While answering the questions, I felt it was a tough exam. Nevertheless, I attempted as many question as I could based on my preparation. After getting out of the classroom on submission of my answer sheet, I found that there was a lot of discussion among students. So, we checked our syllabus and found that the questions were not a part of our syllabus.

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Little by little, a bird builds its nest – Nature.com

In my early research, I focused on foundational artificial intelligence (AI), but Ive always been interested in addressing real world problems by advancing AI. Research can be broadly categorized based on how closely it is linked to practical applications and on how much it advances our foundational understanding. My research falls in the so-called Pasteur quadrant, which represents user-inspired basic research. Initially, I worked on general application areas and techniques, such as AI planning and constraint-based optimization. However, I always wanted my work to have broader societal impact, so I started to work on different types of problems. With my collaborators, I conceived the field of computational sustainability, motivated by my desire to focus on societally meaningful and impactful problems, as opposed to the more traditional commercial applications of computer science, as pursued by large tech companies.

What I find particularly exciting about computational sustainability is that its a two-way street: on one hand, we inject computational thinking and methodologies into sustainability challenges, but on the other hand, addressing sustainability problems leads us to novel computational challenges. These interactions lead us to develop new computational approaches that are general and can be applied to different domains. For instance, one of the first problems that I encountered was designing scientific experiments for nitrogen management in fertilizers, which is challenging both from a computational and a statistics perspective because the experimental design needs to eliminate complex interdependencies and biases of the fertilizer treatments. The project led my research group to develop a general methodology for unbiased sampling under complex combinatorial constraints. I also worked on designing wildlife corridors for different species, which is a network design problem. There, we borrowed ideas from the area of complex networks, such as how to design robust large-scale smart electric grids, and in turn, we developed new methodologies for network design.

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NSF CAREER award invests in the future of stable computing – Virginia Tech

Freezes and fixes

Part of the operating system of every server, computer, and networked device, the kernel acts like an air traffic controller making sure software and cloud-based services run without crashing into each other. It sits between the hardware, software, and cloud services that users interact with, managing all communications between them. When a user touches an object on the screen or types on a keypad, its the kernel that ensures those commands are followed.

When a computer freezes, that often points to a mistake in the kernel, Williams said. Its working to fix something that went wrong. If it cant fix it, the computer crashes sometimes taking important data with it.

All those overnight updates your OS does for you? Williams said many of those are fixes to bugs that have cropped up in the kernel. But the updates are bandages. Bugs, viruses, memory shortages, and other issues can slow it down and make the system vulnerable to attacks, like ransomware.

Globally, computing relies on just a handful of kernels, Williams said. A vast swath of devices, including Google, Amazon, and Android, run on the Linux kernel. No matter which OS a system uses, all kernels suffer from similar weaknesses, he said.

According to an analysis conducted in 2021, there are more than 28.8 million lines of code in the Linux OS kernel.

It is so complex that no one person can understand all its functions, Williams said. And in some ways, it is mysterious even to those who study it. Its a black box.

Williams spent 10 years at IBM Research testing new ways to fix or replace the Linux kernel. But so many industries and critical government systems rely on it, changes can cause unintended problems. And the stakes are so high that its functionally impossible to replace it wholesale with a new one.

The kernel is in many ways too big to fail. And this unchecked kernel complexity has become a significant barrier to entry for students and practitioners to learn or innovate at the kernel level, said Williams. If this is not addressed, we may lose any hope of improving, securing, or maintaining the essential kernels our society depends on.

Two years ago, Williams came to Virginia Tech with an idea for a new approach that could help stabilize the kernel and could also help more students get interested in studying it. Under this NSF CAREER grant, his research team will experiment with building a new open source extension framework that would target existing weaknesses in the kernel.

The idea is to build these sections of code in the more flexible and robust Rust language and install them as bypasses to problematic sections of the existing kernel. If the approach is successful, adding more extensions could, over time, replace the existing kernel with a better one without disrupting existing applications and users.

Williams said his lab will work on creating a new model of the kernel for undergraduate and graduate students to experiment with. It could be used in new computer science classes and educational boot camps. Because anyone can use the open source code the team develops, it could spur more broad interest and experimentation.

The work also could prepare students for internship opportunities in industry to work on existing kernels in real-world situations.

Without exposure to the real systems in use today, the number of students qualified and interested in operating systems kernels will fall below what it should be for a piece of software as crucial for society as the OS kernel, Williams said. Our efforts on this project can help us reach our educational goals, and the open-source nature of our work will allow those already working in this space to engage in innovative thinking and approaches around OS kernels.

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Rice CS team helps robots rearrange objects without gripping them … – Rice University

Enabling robots to rearrange objects without grasping them is the focus of recent research by Rice University Computer Scientists. The work, one of five papers presented in June by Rice CS researchers at the 2023 International Conference on Robotics and Automation (ICRA) in London, represents a collaboration between Assistant Professor of Computer Science Kaiyu Hang and Noah Harding Professor of Computer Science Lydia Kavraki. The project is led by CS Ph.D. student Kejia Ren in collaboration with CS Ph.D. student Podshara Chanrungmaneekul.

This is Rens second publication with his advisor, Hang. The paper, "Kinodynamic Rapidly-exploring Random Forest for Rearrangement-Based Nonprehensile Manipulation, launches Rens trajectory as a first author and builds on his previous work with Hang and Kavraki.

Rearrangement of objects is very common and important for our daily life. For example, you may want to tidy up a messy table by placing each object on the table to where it should be. And when you need to grasp a target object occluded by others, you have to rearrange them first to create a clear path for your arm to approach the target one, said Ren.

Traditionally, robots rearrange objects mostly by pick-and-place type of manipulation. However, this is not always feasible since there is often no free space around the objects allowing for a grasp. Moreover, pick-and-place might not be the most efficient strategy as it only manipulates one object at a time. In contrast, nonprehensile actions (e.g., pushing and sliding), which are able to simultaneously manipulate multiple objects in clutters, provide a very efficient skill complementary to pick-and-place for rearrangement."

State-of-the-art methods commonly find robot rearrangement actions via building a single constrained motion tree. In our work, by concurrently generating forests of motion trees and adaptively switching the algorithms attention across different trees in the forest, robots are now provided with more optimized actions generated in real-time to more effectively rearrange objects.

This work has been conducted in the Robotics and Physical Interactions Lab (RobotLab) led by Hang, who said, We are very enthusiastic about Kejias work not only because it has been published by one of the most prestigious robotics conferences in the world. More importantly, we believe this work can inspire many more novel approaches to empower robots with more interesting skills.

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Northwest scientists help find a green alternative to produce beauty products: algae – Oregon Public Broadcasting

In this monthly rundown from OPB, we feature the most interesting, wondrous and hopeful science coming out of the Pacific Northwest, from Jes Burns, creator of All Science. No Fiction. And remember: Science builds on the science that came before. No one study tells the whole story.

This image released by Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution shows a pipette droplet of oil extracted from algae. Researchers say wax made from algae has the potential to replace petroleum-based waxes in products such as lipstick, sunscreen and deodorant.

Tom Kleindinst/WHOI

Paraffin is the most common wax produced worldwide, and its relatively common in cosmetics. But paraffin is made from petroleum, and a market has popped up for renewable alternatives to beauty products.

Researchers at Western Washington University and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute hope theyve found the next big thing: wax derived from algae.

The scientists were originally trying to create new biofuels from a substance called alkenone, which is produced by certain ocean phytoplankton. They couldnt get the biofuel idea to pan out economically, so they shifted their attention to a more promising market.

Now theyve licensed their formulation to a new company called Upwell Cosmetics with the goal of commercializing the algae-based wax. The researchers say their invention has the potential to replace petroleum-based waxes in products such as lipstick, sunscreen and deodorant.

Read more about how alkenone performs in product trials in the International Journal of Cosmetic Science here.

Birth control pills have been available to people who dont want to get pregnant since 1960 in the United States, but the U.S. Food and Drug Administration still hasnt approved a male contraceptive pill (the more general story of why is pretty interesting).

Researchers at Washington State University are hoping to buck this trend by developing the pill for men and anyone else who doesnt want to get someone pregnant. Theyve identified a particular gene expression, called Arrdc5, that shows up as a protein in testicular tissues of mammals. When they knocked out that gene expression in male mice and let them have sexy times with females, nary a pregnancy resulted.

Men who naturally dont have Arrdc5 protein have a condition called oligoasthenoteratospermia. Theyre often infertile because their sperm production drops, and the sperm that are made are deformed and dont swim very well.

The scientists say developing a drug that inhibits the Arrdc5 protein could result in an effective and reversible male contraceptive. Theyve applied for a patent to do just that.

Read the paper in the journal Nature Communications here.

In this photo released by OSU-Cascades, computer science faculty member Patrick Donnelly (second from left) works with juniors Micah Stalberg, Kimberly Markley and Daniel Lau (left to right). The lab is developing a smart compost bin that tracks how much food is tossed inside.

Robert Gill

Every year its estimated that up to 40% of the food produced in the United States is wasted. Most of that waste happens at retail outlets and at home. But the reality is we dont know exactly how much food is actually thrown out at the end of the line and its very difficult to manage something that isnt being measured.

Computer science and agricultural researchers at Oregon State University Cascades have just received a chunk of funding to find a solution for this problem. Theyre developing a smart compost bin that tracks how much food is tossed inside.

In the first iteration, youll tell the bin what youre throwing inside. It will use voice recognition to record the data. Eventually the idea is to have a bin that relies on artificial intelligence to recognize food waste without any outside help.

The researchers intend to start a pilot program with their new smart compost bins next spring. They want the data to help inspire systemic changes to help reduce food waste in the future. But in the shorter term, they hope the measurements can help individuals make better choices to reduce food waste at home.

In 2016, Oregon became the first state to implement an automatic voter registration system. Since then, 20 others have followed the model of linking voter registration to getting a drivers license or registering a car. The change in Oregon has been significant: In the first year, the voter rolls swelled 14% and (as of 2017) voter turnout and diversity has increased.

But an analysis by researchers at Lewis and Clark College has flagged an unintended consequence of the particular way Oregon runs its motor-voter system: a roughly two-thirds drop in political party registration.

Oregon uses a back-end registration system, meaning individuals are automatically registered to vote through the state department of motor vehicles and then can opt out or join a political party through a form theyre sent via mail. Most motor-voter states use a front-end system where citizens can pick a party or opt out while theyre at the DMV.

The researchers found that the drop in registration affected all political parties similarly. One impact of the decline is that fewer new voters will be eligible to vote in primaries where party membership is required.

Read the study in the journal Electoral Studies here.

This photo from NASA Earth Observatory shows atmospheric dust over China. Researchers at Oregon State University found that 4.5% of the world's total annual carbon storage is driven by dust falling into the ocean and feeding the phytoplankton.

NASA Earth Observatory

The ocean is the largest carbon sink on the planet, absorbing more than 30% of our annual carbon emissions. One of the big drivers of ocean carbon storage is phytoplankton because like plants they use carbon dioxide to grow. When they die, they sink to the seafloor and store that carbon away safe and sound.

Like all plants, phytoplankton also need nutrients to thrive. A lot of these nutrients come from the ocean itself. But we now know that a significant amount of those nutrients comes from the land in the form of dust.

Researchers at Oregon State University, NASA Goddard and the University of Maryland, Baltimore County used satellite imagery to gauge phytoplankton health and abundance over time. They paired that with data about dust movement (from wind, storms, etc) and how much falls into the ocean.

They found 4.5% of the worlds total annual carbon storage is driven by dust falling into the ocean and feeding the phytoplankton. Thats a lot of carbon sequestration.

The researchers caution that one of the coming effects of climate change is a change in the atmosphere, which is expected to decrease its ability to transport dust.

Read the paper from the journal Science here.

Back in February, we told the story of researchers at Oregon Health and Science University who are doing amazing work in a field called biofabrication.

Now that lab has been awarded $1 million to equip their Knight Cancer Precision Biofabrication Hub in Portland. The funds will help the lab expand its work using 3D printers, with the aim of doing everything from healing major bone injuries, personalizing cancer treatments and even building full-sized functional organs for transplant.

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Four Card Men are Academic All-Americans – Stanford University … – Stanford Athletics

STANFORD, Calif. Stanford's four men's cross country/track and field Academic All-Americans combined for three NCAA championships in the 2022-23 academic year, nine All-America honors, two Pac-12 titles, and broke school records 17 times. Each also maintained cumulative grade-point averages above 3.50.

Junior distance runner Ky Robinson, fifth-year senior thrower Max McKhann, and junior horizontal jumper Kevin Yang were named to the first team Thursday by College Sports Communicators. Sophomore sprinter Udodi Onwuzurike was named to the second team.

Robinson was named USTFCCCA National Men's Outdoor Track Athlete of the Year after winning the 5,000 meters and 10,000 at the NCAA Championships, scoring 20 of Stanford's 44 points on the way to placing third as a team.

Robinson earned five All-America honors one in cross country and two each in indoor and outdoor track and now has nine altogether. Robinson was the West Region Men's Outdoor Track Athlete of the Year and a Bowerman award semifinalist. He broke school records indoors in the 3,000 and 5,000. The latter time of 13:11.53 is the fourth-fastest in collegiate indoor history and is a Stanford absolute record (including indoors and outdoors).

The Brisbane, Australia, native was 23rd at the World Cross Country Championships in February while competing for his home country on home soil. A management science and engineering major, Robinson maintained a 3.58 cumulative GPA through the winter quarter.

McKhann, a fifth-year senior, was a second-team indoor All-American in the 35-pound weight throw, earning his second All-America honor. McKhann rewrote the Stanford record book in that event, breaking or tying the school record in that event five times in 2023 and six times altogether. He graduates with the standard at 73-9 (22.48m) and also is No. 7 in the hammer throw on Stanford's all-timer performers' list.

The Dana Point native and economics major maintained a cumulative 3.51 GPA through the winter quarter.

Yang, a native of Roswell, Georgia, won the Pac-12 title in the triple jump, traveling 51-3 (15.64m) to win at Mt. San Antonio College. Yang moved up to No. 7 on Stanford's all-time outdoor performers' list and to No. 10 indoors. The junior maintained a cumulative GPA of 3.65 through winter quarter while majoring in computer science.

Onwuzurike was the Pac-12 Men's Track Athlete of the Year. The sophomore became the first male from Stanford to win an NCAA 200 title (or its' equivalent) since Clyde Jeffrey won the straight 220 yards in 1939. He also won the 200 and was second in the 100 at the Pac-12 Championships.

Onwuzurike, a sophomore, earned three first-team All-America honors placing fifth in the 200 indoors and sixth in the 100 outdoors, in addition to his outdoor 200 victory, at NCAA championship meets. He has five All-America honors altogether.

The native of West Bloomfield Township, Michigan, has broken school records 18 times, including 10 times in 2023. In collegiate history, he ranks No. 7 indoors in the 200 (20.17), No. 3 outdoors in the 200 (19.76), and No. 13 outdoors in the 100 (9.92). He holds school records indoors in the 60 (6.59) and 200, and outdoors in the 100, 200, and 4x100 relay (39.56).

Onwuzurike, who competes for Nigeria internationally, is No. 4 in African history in the outdoor 200, No. 3 in the indoor 200, and No. 11 in the outdoor 100. The 2021 world under-20 200 champ is expected to compete at the World Championships in Budapest, Hungary, in August.

Onwuzurike maintained a 3.51 cumulative GPA through the winter quarter.

The honors give Stanford cross country and track and field men 25 Academic All-America honors, earned by 21 individuals.

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2023 – Examining AI Through an Ethical Lens – The Seattle U … – The Seattle U Newsroom – News, stories and more

Seattle University is in a unique position to train new leaders to use technologies with ethics and discernment, said President Eduardo Pealver as he opened the Ethics and Tech Conference on artificial intelligence.

The focus of the conference, Will Intelligent Machines Prepare the Next Workforce? explored the role of AI in preparing workers for short- and long-term success, the implications for the shifting educational landscape and the impact on the workforce.

Convened by Seattle University with support from Microsoft, the conference brought hundreds of people to campus for discussions with industry leaders from the worlds of tech and academia. One of the presenters, Father Paolo Benanti traveled from Rome for the conference.

Fr. Benanti, the Rome Call for AI Ethics Advisor to Pope Francis and professor at Pontificia Universita Gregoriana, was also awarded the inaugural Excellence in Ethics award for his leadership on this important topic.

This award is established with support from Microsoft to recognize an individual or group who represent the mission of Seattle University and contribute in a leadership capacity to embody our statement where innovation meets humanity, said Amit Shukla, PhD, dean of the College of Science and Engineering. Fr. Benanti was awarded this inaugural SU Ethics Award for his work on Rome Call for AI Ethics. His leadership on this topic has enabled a global effort to focus on humanity as we engage with exponential growth in AI.

During his presentation, Fr. Benanti said, AI is the start of a new era for humanity. We will continue to shape the future, that is, the ethics of AI. (Listen to a KIRO radio interview with Fr. Benanti during his Seattle visit.)

In addition to Benanti, the at-capacity crowd heard from Blaise Aguera ya Arcas, vice president and fellow at Google Research and Lori Lewis, operations leader of the Technology Trust Ethics (TTE) team at Deloitte.

Lewis laid out five principles that must be in place for human and machines to collaborate fairly.

Additionally, Lewis discussed the skills workers will need for AI transformation including a fundamental knowledge of computer science, robotics, artificial intelligence and the ability to be super flexible.

Aguera ya Arcas explained how memory is what distinguishes humans from artificial intelligence: These models do not have long term memory. They live in continuous present tense. ... Memory keeps humans from being machine-like.

He added said that his senior colleagues at Google want government regulation of AI to be focused on goals and outcomes rather than specific technologies.

Following the individual presentations, Daniel Kluttz, director of Sensitive Uses in the Office of Responsible AI at Microsoft, moderated a roundtable discussion with all three speakers. Conference participants came from the tech industry and higher education, as well as business and community leaders.

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YouTube can remove Jordan Peterson, RFK Jr. interview, but should it? – Foundation for Individual Rights in Education

On June 18, psychologist and political commentator Jordan Peterson and 2024 Democratic presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. tweeted that YouTube removed an hour-and-a-half long conversation between them from Petersons channel.

Offering no explanation at the time of the takedown, a YouTube spokesperson claimed the next day the platform removed the video because it violated YouTubes vaccine misinformation policy. The source told CNN that YouTube does not allow content that alleges that vaccines cause chronic side effects, outside of rare side effects that are recognized by health authorities.

As a private company, YouTube is allowed to do this. Rightfully, those who manage the platform have no legal obligation to allow any particular content to remain there. And notably, YouTube doesnt even pay lip service to free speech in its policy commitments.

However, the conversation shouldnt end there. Just because censorial action is lawful doesnt necessarily mean its productive for public discourse. YouTube itself claims to have a responsibility to support an informed citizenry and foster healthy political discourse. But the way it conceives of carrying out this responsibility leaves a lot to be desired.

A subsection of the platforms Supporting Political Integrity webpage states:

[W]e remove policy-violative content, raise authoritative news sources, reduce the spread of election-related misinformation, and provide a range of resources for civics partners such as government officials, candidates, civics organizations, and political Creators to ensure a broad range of voices are heard.

But can supporting an informed citizenry, fostering healthy political discourse, and ensuring a broad range of voices are heard be squared with disallowing any perspective that differs from that of health authorities?

A healthy political discourse, as YouTube acknowledges, means ensuring a broad range of voices are heard. If a political candidate generating the support of more than 15% of Democrats, with a higher favorability rating than either major partys presumptive nominee, falls outside the acceptable range of voices that can be heard, YouTubes conception of broad seems conspicuously narrow.

Especially given that Kennedy is a major public figure, the public would be well served to have the opportunity to confront his claims concerning vaccines and other subjects. Thiscontributes to fostering an informed citizenry.

But YouTube doesnt give audiences that chance. Instead, it infantilizes viewers, treating them as if theyre incapable of hearing a given perspective without instantly onboarding it.

Fortunately, YouTube is not the sole arbiter of media content. Anyone interested may still watch the interview on Twitter or listen to it on podcast platforms. And, apparently, many are interested: Petersons and Kennedys tweets linking to the video have each garnered 4.2 million views and 4.6 million views, respectively.

This casts doubt on whether YouTubes decision to remove the interview is even strategically effective if it truly hopes to dissuade people from encountering harmful views.

Instead of playing content cop, YouTube should give its viewerbase the chance to heed the platforms own advice.

Kennedys detractors often describe him as a conspiracy theorist, and YouTubes policy states that it aims to combat harmful conspiracy theories. If this goal contributed to the platform removing the video, the action was particularly ill-conceived. Conspiracy theories often rest on notions of the existence of cabals of well-connected conspirators, wielding institutional power to stop average people from recognizing the truth. YouTube should critically consider whether a person prone to conspiratorial thinking would be more or less likely to believe a given theory after witnessing a powerful corporation censor someone who expresses it.

In less extreme terms, viewpoint-based censorship necessarily places a thumb on the scale for some viewpoints and against others. Even if its removed, we shouldnt be surprised if the weight swings back in the direction of the speech that was suppressed. And we shouldnt underestimate the power of the Streisand effect, peoples reactive desire to seek out information theyre not supposed to see.

FIRE is disturbed by calls for government action to force or pressure social media companies to censor.

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So, where does that leave us? How can we reliably identify misleading and deceptive information so as not to place our trust in it?

Ironically, some of the answers YouTube itself provides on its Media Literacy page arent half bad:

[W]e encourage you to ask yourself some questions before you believe everything you see online, says YouTuber Coyote Peterson in a clip representing the platform. Like, Why was this video made?, and, Who made it?, And How do I know the information is true? Where else can I check to make sure its right?

Remember, he says, you can always play detective and check more than one source.

Instead of playing content cop, YouTube should give its viewerbase the chance to heed the platforms own advice. Otherwise, its setting the precedent that it, not they, knows best whats true and whats false, whats harmful and whats helpful undermining its own assertion that we each should take it upon ourselves to examine media with a critical eye.

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