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joined 1 week ago
 

In a new study that monitored smartphone data, researchers found that teens (aged 13 to 18) spent an average of 1.5 hours each school day on their smartphones.

 

Massive industrial livestock financing sabotages major U.S. banks’ climate goals.

 

Society’s addiction to palm oil—the world’s most widely consumed vegetable oil—is killing critically endangered Sumatran elephants.

 

Many museums are reckoning with the colonial legacies of the human remains and cultural objects in their collections. Now anthropologists are advocating to pay similar respects to primates.

 

Dental researchers coated damaged cows’ teeth with an enamel binding peptide and soaked them in a mineral solution to reform their protective outer layer.

 

Chinese AI startup DeepSeek warned of “misunderstanding and confusion” over the firm and its service, saying misinformation was being spread about it, but it did not address an increasing number of bans by authorities around the world on its AI chatbot due to security concerns.

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submitted 15 hours ago* (last edited 3 hours ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

Article for people who can't visit the website.Republished here under their terms:

S&P says effects of Trump's tariff plans 'overwhelmingly negative'.

By Brett Rowland | The Center Square

The Capitol decorated from President Donald Trump's second inauguration on Monday, Jan. 20, 2025.Joint Congressional Committee on Inaugural Ceremonies

(The Center Square) – A credit-rating agency reported Thursday that President Donald Trump's proposed tariffs could slow economic growth, increase inflation and push up unemployment.

The S&P Global Ratings economics team, in its first high level estimates, found the potential effects of the tariffs were "overwhelmingly negative," according to the report.

S&P analysts said the tariffs could slow gross domestic product growth, boost unemployment and inflation. It noted that "the effects on the U.S. are smaller than for trading partners." Gross domestic product, or GDP, is a measure of economic output.

Trump proposed a 25% tariff on goods imported from Canada and Mexico, and an additional 10% tariff on goods imported from China. Last-minute negotiations ended with a one-month reprieve for both Mexico and Canada.

S&P noted the uncertainty around Trump's tariff plans creates problems for businesses and U.S. families.

"Uncertainty around the path of U.S. policy and its objectives is high, and confidence bands around our forecasts are correspondingly wide," according to the S&P report. "Moreover, the ongoing deal-making mode of the new administration risks complicating long-term decision making by both firms and households."

On Tuesday, Trump paused his plans for 25% tariffs on goods from Mexico and Canada while starting talks with China on a 10% additional tariff over fentanyl smuggling.

On Saturday, Trump ended decades of duty-free trade between the U.S., Mexico, and Canada with a 25% tariff on imported goods from the two countries, with a lower 10% tariff on Canadian energy resources. Trump initially said he'd keep the tariffs in place until the illegal fentanyl trade subsided. He also added a 10% tariff on imports from China over that country's role in producing the chemicals needed to make fentanyl, a powerful opioid blamed for the majority of U.S. overdose deaths.

Two days after imposing tariffs on U.S. neighbors, Trump relented after reaching temporary deals with Mexico and Canada. Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum said Mexico will immediately reinforce the border with 10,000 members of the National Guard in a move to stop drug trafficking. Drug trafficking that has been a problem for both the U.S. and Mexico for decades. Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau also promised to reinforce the northern U.S. border in exchange for a pause on tariffs.

China hit back earlier this week with limited tariffs on U.S. imports. The Customs Tariff Commission of the State Council of China put additional tariffs on some U.S. imports while filing a complaint with the World Trade Organization.

A credit-rating agency reported Thursday that President Donald Trump's proposed tariffs could slow economic growth, increase inflation and push up unemployment.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 week ago (1 children)

I saw a good amount of the posts here and they all are either about health or climate😅

I find the whole setup unfunctional in the long-term as at a certain stages this community might lean towards public health news only.

I just wanted a place to be able to post my “general news about the US” stuff, and it seemed like the consensus talking to people was that allowing political news also would basically mean it got taken over by politics, and then it’s 10% other US news but basically a politics place, of which there already are some good ones so why make another.

If that is the case then why don't you post at climate community and the public health community?

I am not arguing about the rule here, but I am suggesting combining efforts to not split the small community to even smaller communities, especially since those communities are not hosted on the main .world instance.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 week ago (5 children)

What do you mean exactly by federated in this context?

What is getting federated in your ideal scenario?

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 week ago (3 children)

I am confused, do you mean no news about anything involving Trump, Biden, USA goverment or congress?

Or do you mean any thing with political nature?

I am asking because it seems kind of weird really, but I would fully respect it, if that is the case.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

Here is a interesting quote from the article:

"How The Hell Is This So Much Cheaper?

That's a bloody good question, and because I'm me, I have a hypothesis: I do not believe that the companies making foundation models (such as OpenAI and Anthropic) have been incentivized to do more with less, and because their chummy relationships with hyperscalers were focused almost entirely on "make the biggest, most hugest models possible, using the biggest, most hugest chips," and because the absence of profitability didn’t stop them from raising more money, efficiency was never a major problem for them.

Let me put it in simpler terms: imagine living on $1,500 a month, and then imagine how you'd live on $150,000 a month, and you have to, Brewster's Millions style, spend as much of it as you can to complete the mission of "live your life." In the former example, your concern is survival — you have a limited amount of money and must make it go as far as possible, with real sacrifices to be made with every dollar you spend. In the latter, you're incentivized to splurge, to lean into excess, to pursue a vague remit of "living" your life. Your actions are dictated not by any existential threats — or indeed future planning — but by whatever you perceive to be an opportunity to "live."

OpenAI and Anthropic are emblematic of what happens when survival takes a backseat to “living.” They have been incentivized by frothy venture capital and public markets desperate for the next big growth market to build bigger models and sell even bigger dreams, like Dario Amodei of Anthropic saying that your AI "could surpass almost all humans at almost everything" "shortly after 2027." Both OpenAI and Anthropic have effectively lived their existence with the infinite money cheat from The Sims, with both companies bleeding billions of dollars a year after revenue and still operating as if the money will never run out. If they were worried about it, they would have certainly tried to do what DeepSeek has done, except they didn't have to, because both of them had endless cash and access to GPUs from either Microsoft, Amazon or Google.

OpenAI and Anthropic have never been made to sweat, receiving endless amounts of free marketing from a tech and business media happy to print whatever vapid bullshit they spout, raising money at will (Anthropic is currently raising another $2 billion, valuing the company at $60 billion), all off of a narrative of "we need more money than any company has ever needed before because the things we're doing have to cost this much.""

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 week ago

Ahh, how many zeros can you count?

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 week ago

💜Thank you.💜

[–] [email protected] 32 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (2 children)

I am super confused about the whole thing.

This is literally a perfect fit for this community.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Small note: Kiwi Browser is Android only.

[–] [email protected] -2 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (1 children)

As I said on my other comment:

Cromite, Brave(with privacy setup), DuckDuckGo browser, Vivaldi.

[–] [email protected] -3 points 1 week ago

Cromite, Brave(with privacy setup), DuckDuckGo browser or even Vivaldi might work out for your use case.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 1 week ago

My English communication skills sucks also. 😅

Hopefully, both of us improve. 😄

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