got inspired by some questions from phd students the other day β and also really irritated by senior academics who seem to refuse to get the issues and continue to blame students; hope useful for you! π©·
olivia.science/cheating
@srhastraea
Cognitive psych interested in distributed cognition, memory, weird and non-weird beliefs, cognitive biases, conspiracy belief, misinformation, scientific vs lay cognition, climate change, open science, metascience, 4eCognition. From Aotearoa/New Zealand
got inspired by some questions from phd students the other day β and also really irritated by senior academics who seem to refuse to get the issues and continue to blame students; hope useful for you! π©·
olivia.science/cheating
Paper bag of feijoas from an Eastern Suburbs aunty via Roskill distribution hub
Socialist fruit season has begun
Hey all, I decided to write up some of my thoughts in more detail about why I don't vibe code, in case it's interesting to any of you
jacobharr.is/personal/i-d...
Grammarly is now an enemy of education
"Universities risk putting students in impossible positions where theyβre simultaneously told they can use a tool and that using certain functions of that tool constitutes cheating."
Seriously, ban it. It's no friend of education
wonkhe.com/wonk-corner/...
Over summer, I OIA'd every minister for their AI chat logs.
Here's what I found:
newsroom.co.nz/2026/03/06/h...
Staying off social media isnβt always a sign of a healthy social life
AN OPEN LETTER ABOUT THE FUTURE OF CRITIC TE ΔROHI.
Conservatives underestimate the environmental impact of sustainable behaviors compared to liberals
This paper argues that misinformation research needs to move beyond studies of a few wealthy countries and online samples to include diverse, real-world information environments worldwide in order to produce more accurate and effective insights. I agree!
misinforeview.hks.harvard.edu/article/towa...
New paper from team @aial.ie! aial.ie/research/gpa...
EU's AI Act Article 53(1)(d) is an obligation for GPAI model providers to publicly provide a 'summary' on their modelβs training data. The team assessed published summaries along 6 dimensions & found that all big providers failed on all 6.
1/
Well, well, well. Right-wing authoritarianism is linked to belief in the paranormal, independent of cognitive style www.psypost.org/right-wing-a...
Memo from NZ to Mark Carney, governor of Canada, northern USA
A sign at the supermarket advertising βWhole Raw Australian Bananaβ - as a βMeat and Seafood Dealβ - and you have to read the fine print to discover these are, in fact, prawns. Banana prawns I guessβ¦is that a thing??
Bananas defying categorisation, becoming ungovernableβ¦
Banana's Loose
Dire warning at the supermarket
Novels were compared to narcotics, and people pushing the moral panic wanted restrictions placed on who could purchase them. Reading was compared to gluttony and it was believed those who read novels were brain rotted, low IQ.
I hope he managed to mention flat whites, pavlova, Russell Crowe, Crowded House, and Phar Lap too.
'A bit embarrassing': Canada's PM praises Australia for first allowing women to vote
And, to their credit, ACT says something similar ... although there's a strong libertarian, 'free speech' vibe to their bit, and they can't resist comparing the proposal to North Korean etc approaches to regulating the internet.
The report's differing views section has this from the Greens:
Every university in the country is one of them!
The main recommendations Introduce under-16 age restriction for social media. Establish a national regulator for online safety. Ban βnudifyβ apps and non-consensual deepfake sexual imagery. Explore regulating online platformsβ algorithms and ways to evade restrictions, such as VPNs. Increase platformsβ liability for the content they host, and their platform design. Restrict online advertising of alcohol, tobacco, and gambling β to over-18s. Review laws, consider new offences and penalties associated with online harm. Invest in public campaigns or resources about online safety.
Banning VPNs is a joke policy that could not be taken seriously by anyone who has ever worked remotely for a medium or large organisation or one with a significant international presence
These are not serious people
www.thepost.co.nz/business/360...
I couldn't possibly comment ...
www.interest.co.nz/economy/1374...
We're filling the gap that was once a pillar of the previous science reform. What happened to it?
Need for Workforce Strategy as Job Losses Escalate
scientists.org.nz/news/13605014
NZ politicians from *all* parties should recognise that science is not something to 'conveniently' repackage to suit your governmentβs short-term goals, but a long-term driver of good for the country.
When you cut at it, you cut at *everyoneβs* longer-term future.
1/n
"symbiotic of a sense"??? π§
Well of course they were going to go after VPNs too: the whole point is to end your privacy online, not to take action that would actually protect people and democracy.
Banning VPNs is bizarre - I can't access my work admin systems from home without one (that is provided by my employer!). Makes me wonder where they are getting their advice from.
Good news: Scientists were wrong about how bad sea level rise is.
Bad news: Itβs even worse than we thought.
Well! I thought South Africa looked on to win the whole T20 World Cup, not just the semi. Never did I expect NZ to knock them out, let alone so clinically. Finn Allen, 100 off 33, fastest T20I century between two full member nations if you don't mind! Those were exhilarating highlights to wake up to
Trust me, you don't want to miss the incredible photos of these goobers: π§ͺ πͺΆ www.scientificamerican.com/article/kaka...