Dwayne Johnson Showed Up At The Capitol And You Already Know What People Said
Posted in: Today's Chili“The Rock” caused recent Republican chaos to go viral on social media.
“The Rock” caused recent Republican chaos to go viral on social media.
Christopher A. Wray didn’t hesitate in correcting Greene, who made a string of bizarre remarks at a hearing on Wednesday.
Workers at Sega of America are accusing the video game company of “bad faith bargaining with workers” for its plan to lay off dozens of temporary workers. The publisher known for franchises that include Sonic the Hedgehog and Yakuza is now facing an unfair labor practice complaint filed by the Communications Workers of America (CWA). In April, 200 people in various departments across the company overwhelmingly voted in favor of unionization and formed the Allied Employees Guild Improving Sega (AEGIS-CWA) under the CWA. Now, Sega allegedly intends to lay off 80 of those unionized workers.
In its complaint, the CWA explained that it’s been in bargaining with Sega since September. On November 6, Sega apparently presented the organization with a proposal to phase out of all its temporary employees by taking their work offshore to the company’s offices in Europe and Japan by February 2024. Those temporary employees make up 40 percent of the union’s bargaining unit and mostly work in quality assurance and localization, which the group describes as “critical to Sega’s success.”
The afternoon after their meeting, the CWA said Sega presented its proposal to the affected employees through captive audience meetings. “We believe this is a clear case of bad faith bargaining,” the CWA wrote in its complaint, since Sega dealt directly with the union members and “violated status quo” by telling them they’re losing their jobs.
“Sega will not be allowed to get away with this unlawful behavior,” Elise Willacker, Senior QA Tester Temp, said in a statement. “We call on the company to make all temporary employees permanent and return to the bargaining table in good faith. There is no other just alternative.” As Kotaku notes, the organization’s complaint is now in the hands of the National Labor Relations Board, but it may take a while to resolve and may not prevent the layoffs from taking place.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/sega-faces-unfair-labor-practice-complaint-for-planned-mass-layoff-of-union-members-073046095.html?src=rss
The late-night host offers the former president a backhanded defense.
Workers at Sega of America are accusing the video game company of “bad faith bargaining with workers” for its plan to lay off dozens of temporary workers. The publisher known for franchises that include Sonic the Hedgehog and Yakuza is now facing an unfair labor practice complaint filed by the Communications Workers of America (CWA). In April, 200 people in various departments across the company overwhelmingly voted in favor of unionization and formed the Allied Employees Guild Improving Sega (AEGIS-CWA) under the CWA. Now, Sega allegedly intends to lay off 80 of those unionized workers.
In its complaint, the CWA explained that it’s been in bargaining with Sega since September. On November 6, Sega apparently presented the organization with a proposal to phase out of all its temporary employees by taking their work offshore to the company’s offices in Europe and Japan by February 2024. Those temporary employees make up 40 percent of the union’s bargaining unit and mostly work in quality assurance and localization, which the group describes as “critical to Sega’s success.”
The afternoon after their meeting, the CWA said Sega presented its proposal to the affected employees through captive audience meetings. “We believe this is a clear case of bad faith bargaining,” the CWA wrote in its complaint, since Sega dealt directly with the union members and “violated status quo” by telling them they’re losing their jobs.
“Sega will not be allowed to get away with this unlawful behavior,” Elise Willacker, Senior QA Tester Temp, said in a statement. “We call on the company to make all temporary employees permanent and return to the bargaining table in good faith. There is no other just alternative.” As Kotaku notes, the organization’s complaint is now in the hands of the National Labor Relations Board, but it may take a while to resolve and may not prevent the layoffs from taking place.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/sega-faces-unfair-labor-practice-complaint-for-planned-mass-layoff-of-union-members-073046095.html?src=rss
The late-night host offers the former president a backhanded defense.
Less than two years after it launched, Donald Trump’s social media site, Truth Social, might be headed for the internet graveyard. New federal filings show that Truth, like a lot of Trump businesses, has lost massive amounts of money ($73 million, in this case) and is drifting, slowly, toward insolvency. The site’s…
In September, Google opened its AI-powered search experience to teens in the US, giving them access to richer results with additional information and links. Now, the company has also given teens in most countries around the world access to its Bard AI chatbot, as long as their language is set to English and they meet the minimum age needed to be able to manage their own Google account. Take note that the minimum age requirement differs across countries, but it’s anywhere from 13 to 16 years old.
Google says teens can ask Bard for writing tips, such as how to write a class president speech, for suggestions on what universities to apply to, as well as for help on coming up with science fair project ideas. In other words, questions kids their age are likely to Google. The company is also adding a math learning experience, so teen users can type in a math question or upload a photo of it, and the chatbot can show them its step-by-step solution.
Similar to when it opened Search Generative Experience (SGE) to minors, Google says it put “appropriate safeguards” in place. The company trained Bard to recognize inappropriate content for younger users, so that it wouldn’t return any illegal or age-gated responses.
In addition, Bard will automatically run its double-check response feature when a teen user asks their first fact-based question, because they might not be aware of a common phenomenon called “hallucination” in LLMs. When a generative AI chatbot is hallucinating, it means it’s giving nonsensical and inaccurate responses. Google says it will soon run double-check, which means returning Google results for a question, for all new Bard users in the future. For teens, it will keep recommending the use of double-check even after their first question “to help them develop information literacy and critical thinking skills.”
Finally, Google has designed an onboarding process especially for younger teens, including showing them the video embedded below.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/google-is-giving-teens-around-the-world-access-to-its-bard-ai-chatbot-061452172.html?src=rss
The Senate met into the night to pass the bill, which heads to President Joe Biden’s desk.
Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson confirms the live-action Moana is his next project. Cobra Kai brings back a familiar name for its final season. Plus, a new look at the anime adaptation of Go! Go! Loser Ranger!. To me, my spoilers!