SMMRY.ai

TL;D[R|W|L] Made Easy!

Welcome to SMMRY.AI, the AI-powered summarizer that helps you cut through the clutter and get straight to the point.

We generate accurate and concise summaries that capture the essence of the original content. So whether you’re short on time or just want the highlights, SMMRY.AI has you covered.

Try us out today and see for yourself how much time you can save (and how much more informed you’ll be).

Check out the latest from Astral Codex Ten, Stratechery, Peter Zeihan, Slow Boring, Noahpinion.

We’re adding more content every day. Tweet at us with your requests, bug reports, and suggestions!

Latest stories

February 2, 2023 [Heather Cox Richardson, Letters from an American]

F

• The Republican-controlled House of Representatives voted along party lines to remove Representative Ilhan Omar (D-MN) from her seat on the House Committee on Foreign Affairs.
• Earlier, House speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) used his own discretion to remove Democratic California representatives Adam Schiff and Eric Swalwell from the House Select Committee on Intelligence.
• The Democrats removed Gosar and Greene—both members of the far-right group—after they threatened violence against their Democratic colleagues, while Republicans removed Schiff and Swalwell over make-believe dangers and now have removed Omar allegedly over policy differences.
• McCarthy catered to far-right members in order to get the votes to become speaker; now he is giving those members what they want in order to keep them from ousting him and to get them on board for imperative legislation.
• The power the far-right representatives are getting is making them a force distinct from the rest of the Republican Party.
• Republicans in the 1980s made a deliberate decision to court voters with religion, racism, and sexism in order to hold onto power.
• The Republicans have created a group of voters and their representatives who are openly white supremacists and who believe that any attempt to use the government to hold the economic playing field level is socialism.
• The House voted to condemn socialism—another attempt to appease that far right—while Republicans then chided those Democrats who refused to vote in favor of that condemnation.
• Former president Trump “retruthed” the words of a person who warned that he and “80,000,000” were willing to fight for Trump and were “Locked and LOADED.”
• Some of the far-right group are wearing AR-15 pins, but have not, so far, introduced any gun bills.

Published February 3, 2023
Visit Letters from an American to read Heather Cox Richardson’s original post February 2, 2023

Material Processing: The Redheaded Stepchild [Peter Zeihan, Zeihan on Geopolitics]

M

Processing is an energyintensive process which is usually done in multiple steps and in different facilities.
China is the largest producer of raw and finished steel due to subsidies and lowinterest loans.
• There are already plenty of social and technological anti-bot filters, and fear of backlash will limit adoption.
Russia imports raw materials, uses their cheap power and coal to process and exports the valueadded materials.
The world is facing a crisis due to the economic, demographic and security issues in China and Russia.
We need to prepare for a system where materials from these two countries face a significant decrease in production.
• It suggests that chatbots could be used to trick people into believing they are talking to a real person.
February 17th webinar explores the economic implications of the Ukraine war and Russian minerals processing.

Published February 3, 2023
Visit YouTube to watch Peter Zeihan’s original vlog Material Processing: The Redheaded Stepchild

Chartbook #193 Indian nation-building, Modi and the Adani crisis

C

• The Adani business empire has been rocked by global developments in the last week, including continuing losses on the market, the cancelation of the share sale, and moves by foreign investors to clarify their exposure to Adani.
• Mihir Sharma argues that Adani is a “national champion” and that the real fear is that they cannot do what they say they will.
• Arvind Subramanian and Ashoka Mody provide critical perspectives on India’s growth outlook.
• India’s digital infrastructure, known as the “India Stack”, has enabled the incorporation of hundreds of millions of people into the governmental machinery of the Indian state and a national market.
• India’s energy system has been heavily dependent on coal, but PM Modi has committed India to decarbonization by 2070.
• Both the Ambani and Adani groups have seized on the new agenda, promising to make India a hydrogen champion and “indigenising the entire supply chain”.
• Nation-building is the key boast of the Adani group, and it is that model that is at stake in this crisis.

Published February 3, 2023
Visit Chartbook to read Adam Tooze’s original post Chartbook #193 Indian nation-building, Modi and the Adani crisis

Mostly Skeptical Thoughts On The Chatbot Propaganda Apocalypse [Scott Alexander, Astral Codex Ten]

M

• People worry about chatbot propaganda, but Alex Berenson already writes arguments against COVID vaccines and is much better than chatbots.
• Philosophy Bear discusses a broader chatbot propaganda apocalypse, which can be divided into two scenarios: Medium Bad and Very Bad.
• There are already plenty of social and technological anti-bot filters, and fear of backlash will limit adoption.
• Propagandabots spreading disinformation is probably the opposite of what people should worry about, and realistically most bots will be used for crypto scams.
• Bots will crowd out other bots, and most slots will be filled by bots promoting non-political topics.
• The article discusses the potential implications of using evil chatbots for malicious purposes.
• It suggests that chatbots could be used to trick people into believing they are talking to a real person.
• The author expresses concern that chatbots could decrease serendipitous friendship and make people more reluctant to open new conversations or start new friendships.
• The author predicts that in 2030, fewer than 10% of people will have had a good friend for more than a month who turned out to be a chatbot.
• The author also predicts that in 2030, the majority of the top 10 blogs in Substack’s Politics category will be written by humans.

Published February 2, 2023
Visit Astral Codex Ten to read Scott Alexander’s original post Mostly Skeptical Thoughts On The Chatbot Propaganda Apocalypse

 

An Interview with Eric Seufert About Meta’s Earnings and the Google-DOJ Case [Ben Thompson, Stratechery]

A

• Eric Seufert discussed Meta’s earnings and the Google-DOJ case.
• Meta’s earnings showed a decrease in revenue but a skyrocketing stock price.
• Seufert discussed the importance of increasing impressions and the corresponding decrease in price, as it crowds out competitors and provides more room to grow.
• He also discussed the four ways to increase ad revenue for an ad platform: increasing ad load, increasing reach, increasing the value generated by ads, and increasing time spent on site.
• Facebook has managed to increase engagement and ad load, and has introduced new ad placements to increase the value generated by ads.
• Increased ad load on Reels is justified, as it had no ads before.
• Facebook has created new ad formats, such as click-to-messaging, which have the potential to convert better than other ad formats.
• AI and machine learning are being used to automate the process of managing campaigns, eliminating human error and inefficiency.
• The black box automation suite, Advantage Plus, is used to test different permutations of audiences and creative to find the right mix.
• The application of AI and machine learning is more compelling from the advertising side than the consumer side.
• Generative AI can be used to create assets and interpret what works and what doesn’t.
• The end game is for Facebook to integrate these tools and do it for the advertiser.
• The duopoly of Google and Facebook is over, as brand advertising is moving onto the web from TV in a meaningful way.
Amazon is the one big exception, and ATT has been an accelerant for their ad business.
• Apple and Amazon are capturing direct response budget that has fled from Facebook.
• Facebook is trying to recapture some of those dollars by improving efficiency and engagement, and taking more of the human element away.
• Facebook reintroduced 28-day click attribution reporting, which is modeled, in order to comply with ATT.
• SKAdNetwork 4.0 is more signal, and the biggest platforms will benefit most from it.
• Apple may be shooting themselves in the foot with ATT, as they benefit from in-app purchases.
• ATT has caused a difficult transition for mobile gaming, but Apple may start providing better measurements and signals to help developers.
• Facebook’s earnings results validate the ATT Recession thesis, with revenue down 4% year-over-year.
• Recent decisions in Europe have been problematic for ad targeting, with Meta not allowed to use a contractual basis to get user agreement for ads, WhatsApp not allowed to use first party data for general analytics and security, and Voodoo Games not allowed to use the IDFV.
• The European Union is not likely to allow companies to offer services on terms they don’t want, and this could lead to decreased monetization in Europe.
• Activists and special interests may prevent the right thing from being done, preventing the use of AI technologies.
• The DOJ’s case against Google is that it used its end-to-end ownership of the ad tech stack to suppress competition and prevent other companies from being able to compete.
• The DOJ’s argument is flawed because it portrays supply as chasing demand, when in reality, it is the other way around.
• The DOJ’s chief harm demonstration is that publishers made more money than they should have, which is the only part in the stack where there is arguably lock-in.
• The counterfactual is not that advertisers would have gotten more margin on their ad spend, but that they would have been starved from incremental conversions if Google had not made this available at all.
• The remedy proposed by the DOJ is to split off the exchange and the publisher tool, which highlights the weakness in the case itself because Google Ads are first and foremost for Google Properties.
• Facebook is building up customer engagement to attract advertisers.
• Google divesting Google Ad Manager and AdX could lead to lower prices for publishers and higher prices for advertisers.
• Google is acting as a market maker, pricing long-tail traffic that would otherwise go unsold.
• Google’s data gives them an advantage in pricing, and they may be keeping the third-party ad business alive for the data rather than the revenue.
• Stricter privacy regulations benefit larger companies with more signal.
• Advertisers choose Google because they have no choice, but if Google had been more transparent about their practices, they may not be in as much trouble.

Published February 2, 2023
Visit Stratechery to read Ben Thompson’s original post An Interview with Eric Seufert About Meta’s Earnings and the Google-DOJ Case

TikTok’s CoreCore and the Federal Reserve [kyla scanlon, Kyla’s Newsletter]

T

• The article discusses the current balancing act of the Federal Reserve and the 6 things they must pay attention to.
• It also looks at the trend of corecore on TikTok, which is a reflection of the Internet on the Internet and a message against capitalism and income inequality.
• The Fed is charged with creating aspects of financial nihilism right now, and is looking at wages, labor market, and economic growth to slow inflation.
• Data points show a slowdown in manufacturing, labor market, and wages, but no recessionary warning signals.
• The Fed wants the market to take it seriously, but markets often lose the plot.
• The article concludes that people are the economy, and the Fed is paying attention to the right things.

Published February 2, 2023
Visit Kyla’s Newsletter to read kyla scanlon’s original post TikTok’s CoreCore and the Federal Reserve

Why the College Board watered-down its new course on Black history [Tesnim Zekeria, Popular Information]

W

• The College Board released a revised framework for its new Advanced Placement (AP) course for African American Studies on February 1, 2021.
• The revisions address nearly all of the objections raised by Florida Governor Ron DeSantis (R) and other right-wing critics, including the removal of lessons on Black Lives Matter, the case for reparations, and queer studies.
• The College Board insists that any suggestion that politics played a role in the revisions is “a gross misrepresentation of the content of the course and the process by which it was developed.”
• In 2019, the College Board made over $1.1 billion dollars in revenue, and its CEO, David Coleman, took home more than $2.5 million in compensation in 2020.
• Nearly 600 African American Studies faculty from colleges and universities across the country signed a letter protesting DeSantis’ ban of the course in Florida, calling it “censorship and a frontal attack on academic freedom.”

Published February 2, 2023
Visit Popular Information to read Tesnim Zekeria’s original post Why the College Board watered-down its new course on Black history

Americans have been gaining weight for as long as records exist [Matthew Yglesias, Slow Boring]

A

• Obesity has been a growing problem since the late 19th century, not just since 1980.
• The population aging has a mechanical impact on average obesity that is unrelated to changes in diet and nutrition.
• The average Americans’ weight change since the 1980s is startling, but the data suggests a much more boring story about a long-term increase in average weight punctuated by the Great Depression and World War II.
• Food insecurity was incredibly common for most of human history, but now spending on groceries has plummeted as a share of household spending.
• Food is also better across many dimensions of betterness, from ultra-processed junk food to home cooking.
• The downside to living in a society with a great deal of material abundance is that it is much less common to need to choose between going hungry and eating something you don’t like.

Published February 2, 2023
Visit Slow Boring to read Matthew Yglesias’s original post Americans have been gaining weight for as long as records exist

From the Archive: Do I Need a $1,700 Robot Bassinet? [Emily Oster, ParentData]

F

• The SNOO is a robot bassinet intended to improve infant sleep from birth to six months.
• It works by swaddling the baby and using white noise and rocking that is responsive to their movement.
• 78% of Amazon ratings are 5 stars, and 47% of people in an Instagram poll said it worked for them.
• There is one abstract published in the journal Sleep in 2020 that suggests SNOO users have babies who sleep for longer periods and for a longer total duration, as well as with fewer night wakings.
• A randomized controlled trial found that at six months, those with the SNOO reported sleeping significantly longer (about 40 minutes).
• The SNOO is expensive, but there are ways to lower the cost, such as renting, buying used, or chipping in with friends.

Published February 2, 2023
Visit ParentData to read Emily Oster’s original post From the Archive: Do I Need a $1,700 Robot Bassinet?

February 1, 2023 [Heather Cox Richardson, Letters from an American]

F

• On February 1, 1862, Julia Ward Howe published her famous poem “Battle Hymn of the Republic” in the Atlantic Monthly, which became the anthem of the Union during the Civil War.
• On February 1, 1865, President Abraham Lincoln signed the Joint Resolution of Congress passing the Thirteenth Amendment, which abolished slavery in the United States.
• On February 1, 1960, four Black students from North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University sat down at the F.W. Woolworth Company department store lunch counter in Greensboro, North Carolina, to protest segregation.
• This sparked a sit-in movement that spread across the South and eventually led to the desegregation of public spaces.
• On February 1, 2023, Tyre Nichols’s family laid their 29-year-old son to rest in Memphis, Tennessee, after he was severely beaten by police officers.
• The College Board also released the official curriculum for a new Advanced Placement course in African American Studies, which had been stripped of information about Black feminism, the queer experience, incarceration, and the Black Lives Matter movement.

Published February 2, 2023
Visit Letters from an American to read Heather Cox Richardson’s original post February 1, 2023

SMMRY.ai TL;D[R|W|L] Made Easy!
Please Signup
    Strength: Very Weak
     
    Powered by ARMember
      (Unlicensed)

    Follow SMMRY.AI on Twitter


    All Tags

    Advertising AI Amazon Antitrust Apple Art Arts & Culture Asia Autobiography Biden Big Tech Budget Deficit Celebrities ChatGPT China Chips Christmas Climate Change Community Congress Covid Crime Criminal Justice Crypto Culture Wars DEI Democrats Demographics DeSantis Economic Development Education (College/University) Education (K-12) Elections Elon Musk Energy Environment Espionage Europe Federal Reserve Florida Free Speech Gender Geopolitics Germany Global Economics Globalization Google Government Health History Housing Market Immigration India Inequality Inflation Infrastructure Innovation Intel Labor Market Law Legal LGBTQ Macroeconomics Media Medicine Mental Health Meta Microsoft Military Movies & TV Music News Roundup NFL Oceans OpenAI Parenting Pregnancy Psychology Public Health Race Recession Religion Renewables Republicans Research Russia Science Social Media Software Space Sports State law Supreme Court Trump Twitter Ukraine US Business US Economy US Politics US Taxes