Smaller reactors may still have a big nuclear waste problem

The US needs to figure out what to do about its radioactive garbage.

Smaller reactors may still have a big nuclear waste problem

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Lindsay Krall decided to study nuclear waste out of a love for the arcane. Figuring how to bury radioactive atoms isn’t exactly simple—it takes a blend of particle physics, careful geology and engineering, and a high tolerance for reams of regulations. But the trickiest ingredient of all is time. Nuclear waste from today’s reactors will take thousands of years to become something safer to handle. So any solution can’t require too much stewardship. It’s gotta just work, and keep working for generations. By then, the utility that split those atoms won’t exist, nor will the company that designed the reactor. Who knows? Maybe the United States won’t exist either.

Right now, the US doesn’t have such a plan. That’s been the case since 2011, when regulators facing stiff local opposition pulled the plug on a decades-long effort to store waste underneath Yucca Mountain in Nevada, stranding $44 billion in federal funds meant for the job. Since then, the nuclear industry has done a good job of storing its waste on a temporary basis, which is part of the reason Congress has shown little interest in working out a solution for future generations. Long-term thinking isn’t their strong suit. “It’s been a complete institutional failure in the US,” Krall says.

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Erosita: Russland will deutsches Teleskop ohne Erlaubnis nutzen

Nach dem russischen Angriff auf die Ukraine schaltete das Max-Planck-Institut sein Teleskop Erosita ab – Russland will es jetzt gegen den Willen Deutschlands nutzen. (DLR, Satelliten)

Nach dem russischen Angriff auf die Ukraine schaltete das Max-Planck-Institut sein Teleskop Erosita ab - Russland will es jetzt gegen den Willen Deutschlands nutzen. (DLR, Satelliten)

Wie blutige Ölpolitik und Klimakriege die Zukunft verbrennen

Umweltschützer Nnimmo Bassey über die Plünderung Afrikas, Unterdrückung von Protesten und die Verbrennung eines Kontinents für Profite (Teil 1)

Umweltschützer Nnimmo Bassey über die Plünderung Afrikas, Unterdrückung von Protesten und die Verbrennung eines Kontinents für Profite (Teil 1)

The Super73 R Series e-bike is expensive, heavy, and extremely fun

Is it a motorcycle? A dirt bike? An e-bike? Whatever category you choose, it’s fun.

The Super73 R Series e-bike is expensive, heavy, and extremely fun

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Without a doubt, the Super73 R Series Brooklyn is the worst bicycle I've ever ridden. It's too small for many adults, it forces you into an awful riding position, it's unconscionably heavy, and it offers a grand total of one gear.

Riding it was also far and away the most fun I've had on an electric bike yet.

All that weight gets you a robust, dual-suspension frame and fat tires that swallow the bumps and cut confident turns on all sorts of surfaces. And it gets you a powerful motor that lets you blast away from stops despite the bike's weight. You also get a huge battery that supposedly offers a range of over 120 km when the bike is in "eco" mode—a mode nobody will ever use because it's far too much fun to rocket around with the electrical assist maxed out.

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9-Euro-Ticket: Per ICE wenigstens schneller aus dem Funkloch

Ich wollte mit vier Regionalbahnen und dem 9-Euro-Ticket in acht Stunden von Berlin nach Hessen fahren. Und habe in Potsdam aufgegeben. Ein Erfahrungsbericht von Lennart Mühlenmeier (Deutsche Bahn, Internet)

Ich wollte mit vier Regionalbahnen und dem 9-Euro-Ticket in acht Stunden von Berlin nach Hessen fahren. Und habe in Potsdam aufgegeben. Ein Erfahrungsbericht von Lennart Mühlenmeier (Deutsche Bahn, Internet)

Warum die Opec+ keineswegs gescheitert ist

Saudi-Außenminister ist mit russischen Amtskollegen zusammengekommen. Treffen spielt in der westlichen Presse kaum eine Rolle. Sollte es aber

Saudi-Außenminister ist mit russischen Amtskollegen zusammengekommen. Treffen spielt in der westlichen Presse kaum eine Rolle. Sollte es aber

Reddit Warns U.S. That Upload Filters Threaten Free Expression and Creativity

Reddit has warned the U.S. Copyright Office that upload filters would harm free expression and creativity. The U.S. is considering whether to make technical protection measures mandatory for certain online services but according to Reddit and other stakeholders such as Google, the EFF, Wikipedia, and the BSA, this is a bad idea.

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

reddit logoFor several years, U.S. lawmakers have considered options to update the DMCA so it can more effectively deal with today’s online copyright issues.

Many proposals have come and gone, without resulting in any significant legislative update. That could change in the near future.

Following repeated nudges from Senators Thom Tillis and Patrick Leahy, the U.S. Copyright Office started looking into automated tools that online services can deploy to ensure that pirated content can’t be easily reuploaded.

Mandatory Technical Protection Tools

This “takedown and staydown’ approach would rely on Standard Technical Measures (STMs), a range of tools that includes upload filters. This is a sensitive topic as became clear from the massive response to a public consultation published earlier this year.

A few weeks ago the Copyright Office launched a follow-up consultation. This time, it asked the public whether it’s wise to make certain anti-piracy tools mandatory under the DMCA. This is what’s currently being proposed in the SMART Copyright Act of 2022.

As expected, the consultation triggered a wide variety of responses. Several copyright holder groups are backing a proposal to make protection measures mandatory but most of the online services and platforms that would be required to filter content are fiercely opposed.

Reddit Warns Against Filters

As one of the most popular user-submitted content sites on the internet today, Reddit falls in the latter camp. The company says that mandatory filters would severely harm free expression and creativity.

“Filtering technologies and STMs ill-suited to the variety of content on Reddit would limit the vitality of some of our platform’s most active communities,” Reddit informs the Copyright Office.

Reddit hosts thousands of large and vibrant communities that are centered around a wide range of topics. Many of these use copyrighted content in a fair use context, ranging from memes, through news and commentary, to research.

Trying to automatically filter out potentially infringing content will simply create a mess, Reddit’s submission points out.

“Filtering technologies have difficulty merely identifying copyrighted material, let alone assessing the specific context the content was found. They cannot make nuanced judgments about fair use or transformative works.”

Overblocking and False Positives

Reddit fears that automated filters will lead to false positives and overblocking, which will directly harm free expression on the platform. These major drawbacks for the public at large trump any benefits rightsholders may see, Reddit warns.

“As a result, standardized measures are likely to remove non-infringing content and suffer from false positives. Worse, these over-removals would strike at the heart of the transformative user-generated content that makes Reddit communities unique.

“That is a severe, unnecessary, and unacceptable cost to the free expression of our users and the communities they build,” Reddit adds.

The social community platform is not alone in its criticism. Other organizations also point out that mandatory protection measures will likely do more harm than good. These include Amazon, the EFF, Google, Wikipedia, the BSA, US Telecom, and many others.

Content-ID Doesn’t Work (for everyone)

Some of the respondents agree that it may make sense for some services to use upload filters. Google, for example, stresses that it has developed a wide range of custom anti-piracy measures, including YouTube’s Content ID system.

However, these solutions may not work for other platforms so making a specific solution mandatory is not advised.

“Because there is such a broad and diverse set of OSPs of all different sizes and types, a one-size-fits-all approach will not work and would stifle further innovation in this space,” Google notes.

This point is also made by Reddit, which stresses that a Content ID style system won’t work on all platforms. In fact, it is far from flawless on YouTube’s own service.

“Despite being crafted internally for YouTube’s specific purposes, complaints abound about the unfairness of the program from user advocacy groups regarding the rate of false positives. Content ID has even been weaponized by bad actors to remove videos that provide newsworthy, non-infringing content of vital civic importance,” Reddit notes.

All in all, Reddit urges the Copyright Office to keep these and other concerns in mind while it considers the best path forward.

“When technology and the law leave room for creativity, they allow people to create wonderful things and build positive communities. When they restrict that creativity, it becomes that much harder for people to unite to build fun, enriching communities,” Reddit concludes.

Ps. On a personal note, TorrentFreak recently learned that all torrentfreak.com articles are automatically marked as spam by Reddit. Needless to say, this doesn’t help to facilitate free expression. Unfortunately, our requests for a comment on this ‘filtering’ have gone unanswered.

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.