School textbooks have always had their problems. Now imagine them changing their content for each different reader, and featuring small print telling children to consult other sources in case of inaccuracies, but the publisher takes no responsibility for those errors. That's AI in education.
07.03.2026 20:14
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A card with details of the OXFOS conference speaker's event.
Join us for a webinar on Cultivating #FAIRdata across the disciplines on Mar 5th with colleagues @fairsharing.bsky.social and @researchdataall.bsky.social #RDAambassadors @allysonlister.bsky.social and Daniel Manrique-Castano. #OxFOS26 @ox.ac.uk
β‘οΈ Register at go.glam.ox.ac.uk/OxFOS26_Regi...
03.03.2026 16:47
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Helsinki just went a full year without a single traffic death
The capital city is Finnishβed with car-related fatalities.
βHelsinki hasnβt registered a single traffic-related fatality in the past yearβ¦Citing data that shows the risk of pedestrian fatality is cut in half by reducing a carβs speed from 40 to 30km/hr, city officials imposed the lower limit in most of Helsinkiβs residential areas and city center in 2021.β
01.03.2026 04:01
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Einstein is an Al with a computer. He logs into Canvas every day, watches lectures, reads essays, writes papers, participates in discussions, and submits your homework β automatically.
There are many interesting and challenging questions about AI and education, but what to do about a student who makes use of this sort of service is really not one of them.
23.02.2026 16:17
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Screenshot reads:
She and other publishing specialists question whether LeapSpaceβs limited reach is worth the cost. Users will need either an institutional subscription (based in part on the institutionβs size and amount of research) or an individual one, which costs $32 a month. Many libraries are already struggling to afford existing subscriptions. And if users want to read the cited content, they will need a separate subscription to that contentβs publisherβakin to paying for multiple video-streaming services.
The inevitable next stage of academic publishers profiting from academics' work is here - scraping it for AI then charging subscriptions for access to the AI summaries, and then again for the citations. Academic content assetization as we called it in a recent paper. www.science.org/content/arti...
20.02.2026 21:28
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What happened to Science Goodreads and how do we rebuild it? A 65 million dollar question (at least) - CAIROS Blog
The story of the rise and fall of Mendeley
1/ Finally wrote up βThe Story of Mendeleyβ! Most people know the tool, few know about its rise and fall. The Mendeley story provides important clues for how to build self-sustaining AND non-extractive knowledge commons, which is why I think it deserves more attention π§΅
13.02.2026 20:55
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State of Open Data talk
Brian Nosek brings up something I've been thinking about.
Pre-AI - Benefits of data sharing often exceeded the costs (most people use your data for good)
Post-AI - People have real concerns about how their open data will be used for things they don't ethically agree with
11.02.2026 15:54
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Is the Group Chat coming back soon? Hope it isn't dropped forever :(
05.02.2026 17:34
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It's not unheard of to find errors in your data after publishing it. While it's not fun when this happens, this one-pager can help guide you through the process of updating data, code, and publications when errors are found.
osf.io/q4jre/files/...
26.01.2026 16:45
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Have you registered for Thursday's webinar? Huge interest in this one.
Still time to register.
26.01.2026 19:55
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Ex-Meta chief AI scientist Yann LeCun has Lunch with the FT and in one of those instances so rare that you know he didn't sign an NDA, says exactly why as.ft.com/r/e503690d-8...
02.01.2026 13:32
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THIS THIS THIS. ALL OF THIS
THIS is why faculty resist technological strategies for teaching. There is no engaging with Edtech without this context
30.12.2025 01:50
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When we say "no, everything hasn't been digitized," I need you to understand that we really mean is that virtually nothing has been digitized. This is because the realm of primary sources that historians use is incomprehensibly large.
22.12.2025 01:40
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"An academic discovers a paper attributed to him that does not exist has been cited 42 times" is a sentence with an actual referent in 2025.
19.12.2025 17:45
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One of the many reasons AI can't produce good writing is it can't hate its own writing. It can't think to itself "Maybe I'm illiterate" during the writing process. And that's essential
09.12.2025 20:45
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'Critical washing' is a very useful phrase I've just learned thanks to this paper. And while it relates to AI we can apply it in other areas. Key for me would be safety, wellbeing and mental distress in education settings where there's a huge amount of discussion and little comparative action.
19.11.2025 09:17
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How do I get people to understand that high quality data collected with intention and analyzed by experts have even more potential to revolutionize health care?
27.11.2025 07:11
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In light of record submission rates and a large volume of AI-generated slop, SocArXiv recently implemented a policy requiring ORCIDs linked in the OSF profile of submitting authors, and narrowing our focus to social science subjects. Today we are taking two more steps:
/1
27.11.2025 14:54
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take me seriously
23.10.2025 16:00
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OpenAI walks a tricky tightrope with GPT-5.1βs eight new personalities
New controls attempt to please critics on both sides with a balance between bland and habit-forming.
"[T]he root problem is arguably that #ChatGPT still pretends to be a personβa consistent entity that knows you... It assumes the mantle of human emotion and acts like it understands you and sympathizes with what youβre going through" arstechnica.com/ai/2025/11/o... #ethics #tech #design #business
15.11.2025 01:01
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The potential and limits of scrutiny in medical research
In a recent lecture Chris Whitty, Englandβs chief medical officer, talked about how setbacks driven by misinformation can be temporary and how evidence and data can rebuild confidence. He was speaking...
βLike misinformation, misconduct is nothing new. But itβs become easier for authors to execute it with the aid of artificial intelligence and βπ₯ππ₯ππ§ π’ππ‘π‘π¨,β while being harder for publishers to contend with, given the volume of potential misconduct casesβ¦β @bmj.com
15.11.2025 12:28
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If you ever wonder why your artist friend is so pissed off whenever they see AI slop used instead of real, human-created art, it's exactly what you think:
13.11.2025 21:31
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πΊ Tune in tonight!
Professor @niamhmcherry.bsky.social and Dr @deanphelan.bsky.social from UCD School of Geography feature in RTΓ Oneβs 10 Things to Know Aboutβ¦
Episode 1: βChangeβ
ποΈ Mon 10 Nov | 8:30 pm | RTΓ One & Player
Learn more about the CONUNDRUM project π bit.ly/3LyCGKc
10.11.2025 16:48
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Read about the resources created by the 'Implementing data evaluation at institutionsβ Working Group on the blog: makedatacount.org/read-our-blo...
10.11.2025 20:53
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