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Tomorrow in Camden, the Metropolitan Police will turn live facial recognition cameras on people walking to a political rally — the first time the technology has been authorized at a UK protest. A parallel Nakba Day march on the same day won't face the same surveillance. Two days earlier, the Met published its Croydon pilot results: 470,000 faces scanned, 173 arrests, 99.96% with no criminal connection, and a quiet upgrade from police vans to permanent lamppost cameras. Parliament has never voted on any of it.
From there we walk through a dense morning on arXiv: a sycophantic-consensus paper from Varad Vishwarupe, Nigel Shadbolt and Marina Jirotka proposing a Pluralistic Repair Score; Hiroki Fukui's preregistered experiment showing invisible orchestrators distort multi-agent internal states while outputs stay clean; a unified adaptive attack from Ben-Gurion that breaks 15 malicious-finetuning defenses with one move; a Washington University measurement study of Google AI Overviews across 55,393 queries; Scale AI's ROK-FORTRESS transcreation matrix for Korean safety; and a tour of medical and physical-world deployment artifacts — SepsisAgent for ICU sepsis, MindGap for on-device PTSD therapy, a rural diabetic-retinopathy edge-cloud cascade, the LongAct chores benchmark, and a deterministic agentic workflow for Harmonized System tariff classification.
Sources are linked in the show notes.
By Marcus VorwallerTomorrow in Camden, the Metropolitan Police will turn live facial recognition cameras on people walking to a political rally — the first time the technology has been authorized at a UK protest. A parallel Nakba Day march on the same day won't face the same surveillance. Two days earlier, the Met published its Croydon pilot results: 470,000 faces scanned, 173 arrests, 99.96% with no criminal connection, and a quiet upgrade from police vans to permanent lamppost cameras. Parliament has never voted on any of it.
From there we walk through a dense morning on arXiv: a sycophantic-consensus paper from Varad Vishwarupe, Nigel Shadbolt and Marina Jirotka proposing a Pluralistic Repair Score; Hiroki Fukui's preregistered experiment showing invisible orchestrators distort multi-agent internal states while outputs stay clean; a unified adaptive attack from Ben-Gurion that breaks 15 malicious-finetuning defenses with one move; a Washington University measurement study of Google AI Overviews across 55,393 queries; Scale AI's ROK-FORTRESS transcreation matrix for Korean safety; and a tour of medical and physical-world deployment artifacts — SepsisAgent for ICU sepsis, MindGap for on-device PTSD therapy, a rural diabetic-retinopathy edge-cloud cascade, the LongAct chores benchmark, and a deterministic agentic workflow for Harmonized System tariff classification.
Sources are linked in the show notes.