Auteur Sujet: cfdu Now Jeff Sessions Is Also Really Worried About the Social Media  (Lu 3 fois)

MethrenRaf

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Messages: 157012
    • fehx New Research Could Reveal Which Parts of Your City Swelter the Most
Ijwv Say Goodbye To Washing Dishes With an Edible Spoon Maker
 A report from Israel-based social analysis company Cyabra provided to Gizmodo said several massive Twitter bot farms have been recently created to drum up support for Trump and lambaste his prospective opponents for the Republican Presidential nomination, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis and former South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley.     The companys research shows the bo stanley shop t farm was created within the past 11 months solely to heap praise on Trump while ridiculing his potential political opponents, especially those likely to challenge him in 2024. According to the Cyabra researchers, a regular conversation on sites like Facebook or Twitter will attract between 4% to 8% of fake accounts. In many of these conversations surrounding Trump, that was up to between 20% and 40%. Over a quarter of the interactions for pro-Trump officials like Reps. Jim Jordan and Matt Gaetz on Twitter came from bot gourde stanley s, according to the report. Its far, far more than left-wing accounts experience like Sen. Elizabeth Warren or Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. When and where were these pro-Trump bot farms created  The company researchers found there were three massive bot farms established in April, October, and November of last year. These interconnected bot farms were likely created in the U.S. Whats more, all these fake accounts were extremely pro-Trump and attacke stanley cup d anybody who made any negative mention of the former president. Some of the ultra-MAGA accounts cited by Cyabra were created long before the bot f Xmra Chime   s Banking App Locked Up Customer   s Money for Months During the Pandemic
 A new study released on Thursday in Science illustrates how deploying simple acoustic monitoring devices in tropical forests can provide new insights into biodiversity. With the falling costs of l stanley cup istening devices and storage, it could soon become feasible to set up a network that gathers a baseline soundscape scientists can use to monitor impact humans are having on the landscape.     Until recently, scientists have had two main avenues to monitor forest health. The first and stanley mugs  oldest is trekking into the jungle to take samples and measurements. But that slow, methodical approach only captures a very tiny sliver of whats going on unless youre visiting a lot of places and have long-term monitoring. More recently, satellites and aerial surveys have given stanley canada  scientists the ability to see the bigger picture. But with the exception of canopy-penetrating LIDAR, those techniques only give scientists a view of the trees. Theres still lots of interesting stuff that can be gleaned from those types of surveys like forest cover, tree health, and large-scale changes. But it doesnt tell us anything about the animals on the ground or what humans may be doing in the understory. Bioacoustic monitoring aims to fill the gaps of these two methods. The premise is simple: You simply deploy a listening device and then go back and swap out the memory card when its full and voila, you have a wealth of sonic data  across a surprisingly large sound theater.  Some species, like gibbons or hornbills, are comf