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Category: politics

Here is what it would take for me to join a No Kings rally (Opinion)

To all those who wrote me personally or sent a letter to the editor about my October 19th column, I’m glad you attended the No Kings rally. You’re right; the protest did succeed in providing participants a sense of community and a platform to voice concerns about Trump’s abuse of power.

49ers HC Kyle Shanahan Makes Admission on Brock Purdy’s Injury

The San Francisco 49ers have not had trouble winning without quarterback Brock Purdy, which is good since he may not be healthy any time soon. Niners coach Kyle Shanahan announced that Purdy may not be full strength for the rest of this season after he missed his fifth straight game, a 34-24 win over the [.] The post 49ers HC Kyle Shanahan Makes Admission on Brock Purdy’s Injury appeared first on Heavy Sports.

Vitalik Buterin Calls for “Open Source and Verifiable” Self-Driving Cars

The post Vitalik Buterin Calls for “Open Source and Verifiable” Self-Driving Cars appeared com. On November 2, Ethereum (ETH) co-founder Vitalik Buterin sent a short but pointed message into the tech ether: “We need open source and verifiable self-driving cars.” The tweet landed like a provocation and a challenge at once, a call for transparency in a field where code, models and sensor streams decide life-or-death outcomes, and where opaque, proprietary stacks have so far dominated the road. At first glance, the line reads like a principled manifesto: open source as a check against proprietary secrecy, and verifiability as a guardrail for trust and accountability. But there’s a deeper technical case folded into that phrase. Autonomous systems are not just software; they are sensor networks, machine-learning pipelines, communications infrastructures and legal constructs. Making them “verifiable” means building mechanisms to prove, to regulators, to courts, and to the public, that a vehicle was running a particular software version, that its decision-making process met a safety contract, or that a sensor reading was authentic and unaltered. Blockchain and modern cryptography offer practical ways to stitch those proofs together without turning every car into a streaming data breach. Immutable Ledger The simplest blockchain analogy is the immutable ledger. If a vehicle publishes cryptographic hashes of critical telemetry, software manifests, or signed attestations onto a permissioned ledger, investigators can later show that the evidence they examine matches what the car itself declared at the time. That is the idea behind several academic proposals and prototypes: fragmented ledgers for vehicle forensics, “vehicle passports” that anchor attestations off-chain while keeping proof on-chain, and permissioned blockchains that constrain who can write or read sensitive automotive records. Those systems aim to preserve privacy while maintaining tamper-evidence, a vital balance when the raw sensor logs from LIDAR, radar and cameras are privacy goldmines. But verifiability at the scale required by autonomous vehicles also.

‘Regretting You’ and ‘Black Phone 2’ neck-in-neck on slow Halloween box office weekend

The movie exhibition business is closing out one of its slowest Octobers in over 25 years with a sluggish Halloween weekend. Studios avoided opening any major new films with the holiday falling on a Friday. Instead, there were several re-releases including “Back to the Future,” which is celebrating its 40th anniversary, and the Netflix phenomenon [.].