The Black Hole Information Paradox Comes to an EndWiredIn a landmark series of calculations, physicists have proved that black holes can shed information, which seems impossible by definition.
Jonas (./35438) :
C'est aussi pour ça qu'il ne faut jamais laisser rentrer ces quotas en France dans les offre adsl/fibre et qu'on se batte pour ce conquis que sont les offres illimitées.
The_CUrE (./35439) :
Bah oui mais c'est le contraire vers lequel on va se diriger
Students argue that the testing systems have made them afraid to click too much or rest their eyes for fear they’ll be branded as cheats. Some students also said they’ve wept with stress or urinated at their desks because they were forbidden from leaving their screens.Lisez l'article, c'est dingue et franchement digne d'un épisode de Black Mirror.
One system, Proctorio, uses gaze-detection, face-detection and computer-monitoring software to flag students for any “abnormal” head movement, mouse movement, eye wandering, computer window resizing, tab opening, scrolling, clicking, typing, and copies and pastes. A student can be flagged for finishing the test too quickly, or too slowly, clicking too much, or not enough.
If the camera sees someone else in the background, a student can be flagged for having “multiple faces detected.” If someone else takes the test on the same network — say, in a dorm building — it’s potential “exam collusion.” Room too noisy, Internet too spotty, camera on the fritz? Flag, flag, flag.
Hey @proctorio @artfulhacker How do you explain this?
— Erik Johnson (@ejohnson99) September 8, 2020
You have strings referencing
"A Proctorio agent will review and verify the test taker's room scan"
and
“live id check”
All while still saying that professors are the only ones who can access recordings and look at students?
Zerosquare (./35443) :Je pensais que c'était un service de proctologie, qui utilise la détection de gaz pour faire un diagnostic, mais quand j'ai lu la suite c'était pas aussi intéressant
Proctorio, uses gaze-detection
Same thing caused one of the first SR-71 losses.
The Americans learned that day that if two cables are exactly the same length and go to exactly the same spot they should not have exactly the same plug.
European "science". Welcome to the 1960s. You'll love the music too!
Unit tests pass, no integration tests pic.twitter.com/8geAsHgSBY
— Ryan Stortz (@withzombies) February 9, 2017