Tuesday, November 19, 2024

India to send 5,000 extra troops to quell Manipur unrest

By AFP
November 19, 2024

People run past burning vehicles during a protest in November to condemn the alleged killing of women and children in Manipur - Copyright AFP/File -

India will deploy an extra 5,000 paramilitary troops to quell unrest in Manipur, authorities said Tuesday, a week after 16 people were killed in fresh clashes in the troubled state.

Manipur in India’s northeast has been rocked by periodic clashes for more than 18 months between the predominantly Hindu Meitei majority and the mainly Christian Kuki community, dividing the state into ethnic enclaves.

Ten Kuki militants were killed when they attempted to assault police last week, prompting the apparent reprisal killing of six Meitei civilians, whose bodies were found in Jiribam district days later.

New Delhi has “ordered 50 additional companies of paramilitary forces to go to Manipur”, a government source in New Delhi with knowledge of the matter told AFP on condition of anonymity, as they were not authorised to speak with media.

Each company of the Central Armed Police Forces (CAPF), a paramilitary unit overseen by the home ministry and responsible for internal security, has 100 troops.

The Business Standard newspaper reported that the additional forces would be deployed in the state by the end of the week.

India already has thousands of troops attempting to keep the peace in the conflict that has killed at least 200 people since it began 18 months ago.

Manipur has been subject to periodic internet shutdowns and curfews since the violence began last year.

Both were reimposed in the state capital Imphal on Saturday after the discovery of the six bodies prompted violent protests by the Meitei community.

The ethnic strife has also displaced tens of thousands of people in the state, which borders war-torn Myanmar.

Incensed crowds in the city had attempted to storm the homes of several local politicians.

Local media reports said several homes of lawmakers from Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP), which governs the state, were damaged in arson attacks during the unrest.

Long-standing tensions between the Meitei and Kuki communities revolve around competition for land and jobs.

Rights groups have accused local leaders of exacerbating ethnic divisions for political gain.

Tractor-driving French farmers protest EU-Mercosur deal

PETITE BOURGEOIS LANDOWNERS REVOLT


By AFP
November 18, 2024

French farmers staged a new wave of action to protest the adoption of a trade pact between the European Union and four South American countries - Copyright Lehtikuva/AFP Heikki Saukkomaa

French farmers launched Monday a new wave of action to protest the adoption of a trade pact between the European Union and four South American countries they fear would threaten their livelihoods.

Paris is leading resistance against ratification of the trade agreement with the Mercosur bloc of Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay that would create the world’s largest free trade zone.

On Sunday, French President Emmanuel Macron defended France’s resistance to the proposed blockbuster deal as he visited Argentine’s Javier Milei, ahead of a G20 summit in Rio de Janeiro. He said France would “continue to oppose” the trade deal.

On Monday, angry French farmers used tractors to block roads and erected wooden crosses during protests across the country, urging Macron and the government to do more.

“Stop the promises, start with actions”, read a sign unfurled along a road in the southeastern town of Le Cannet-des-Maures.

“Macron, your agriculture is dying and you are looking elsewhere,” read another banner.

Local farmers also placed a cross next to a mock-up gallows with a message reading “France’s agriculture in danger”.

In the eastern city of Lyon, farmers tore off municipals signs and deposited them at the stairs of a museum.

Yohann Barbe, spokesman for the FNSEA, France’s top farming union, speaking to broadcaster Europe 1, said that the scale of the protests was going “to be unprecedented”.

“Farmers are still just as irritated as ever by a government that is dragging its feet.”

The new wave of rallies came after farmers across Europe including France earlier this year mounted rolling protests over a long list of burdens they say are depressing revenue.

Life is hard for French farmers, who complain about excessive bureaucracy, low incomes, and poor harvests.

The proposed trade pact has provoked fresh anger because farmers fear any agreement would open European markets to cheaper meat and produce that are not forced to adhere to strict rules on pesticides, hormones, land use and environmental measures.

On Sunday, Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau warned farmers there would be “zero tolerance” in the event of “lasting” roadblocks.

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Indigenous Australian lawmaker who heckled King Charles censured


By AFP
November 17, 2024

Australian Senator Lidia Thorpe disrupting proceedings as Britain's King Charles attended a parliamentary reception in Canberra in October 
- Copyright POOL/AFP/File LUKAS COCH

Laura CHUNG

An Indigenous lawmaker was censured by Australia’s parliament Monday for heckling King Charles about the legacy of European settlement during his October visit to Canberra.

The censure carries no practical punishment but passed the Senate Monday with 46 votes in favour and 12 against.

During the king’s visit to parliament, independent senator Lidia Thorpe screamed: “This is not your land, you are not my king,” decrying what she said was a “genocide” of Indigenous Australians by European settlers.

She also turned her back on the king as dignitaries stood for the national anthem.

The censure motion condemned Thorpe’s actions as “disruptive and disrespectful”.

It also said the Senate no longer regarded it “appropriate” for Thorpe to be a member of any delegation “during the life of this parliament”.

A censure motion is a symbolic gesture when parliamentarians are dissatisfied with the behaviour of one of their own.

Thorpe — sporting a gold chain with ‘Not My King’ around her neck — said she did not “give a damn” about the censure and would most likely use the document as “kindling” later in the week.

She told national broadcaster ABC she would “do it again” if the monarch returned.

“I will resist colonisation in this country. I swear my allegiance to the real sovereigns of these lands: First Peoples are the real sovereigns,” she said.

Green Senator Mehreen Faruqi voted against Thorpe’s censure, saying the lawmaker was telling Australia’s history “the way she wants to”.

Thorpe is known for her attention-grabbing political stunts and fierce opposition to the monarchy.

When she was sworn into office in 2022, Thorpe raised her right fist as she begrudgingly swore to serve Queen Elizabeth II, who was then Australia’s head of state.

Australia was a British colony for more than 100 years, during which time thousands of Aboriginal Australians were killed and entire communities displaced.

The country gained de facto independence in 1901, but has never become a fully-fledged republic.

King Charles is the current head of state.

The issue of a republic reared its head during the king’s visit Down Under earlier this year, but the issue remains a political non-starter.

A recent poll showed about a third of Australians would like to ditch the monarchy, a third would keep it and a third are ambivalent.

In 1999, Australians narrowly voted against removing the queen, amid a row over whether her replacement would be chosen by members of parliament, not the public.



Thousands march to New Zealand’s parliament in Maori rights protest


By AFP
November 18, 2024

Copyright AFP Sanka Vidanagama

Booming Indigenous Maori “haka” chants rang out across New Zealand’s capital on Tuesday, as thousands rallied against a conservative proposal accused of stoking racial divisions.

An estimated 15,000 demonstrators poured into Wellington from all corners of the country, shutting down busy streets on the final stages of their “hikoi” protest march towards parliament.

Bare-chested men wearing traditional feather cloaks were joined by small children, the elderly and riders on horseback waving the red, white and black Maori flag.

Others with distinctive full-face Maori “moko” tattoos clutched ceremonial wooden weapons.

Protests have been swelling throughout New Zealand after a minor party in the conservative coalition government drafted a bill to redefine the founding Treaty of Waitangi.

Although the bill has almost no chance of passing, its mere introduction has stirred up an uncomfortable reckoning on race relations.

Many critics see it as an attempt to abolish government programs for Maori citizens, who remain far more likely to live in poverty, die early, and languish in prison.

“It’s not the best way to have a conversation. We will not accept unilateral change to a treaty that involves two parties,” said Ngira Simmonds, a key advisor to New Zealand’s Maori queen.

“There is a better way,” he told AFP after travelling to Wellington to take part in the protest.

“We remain hopeful that politicians will understand and heed that call.”

The bill was introduced to parliament by the libertarian ACT Party last week.


– Deep divisions –


ACT Party leader David Seymour has characterised it as an attempt to end special treatment for the country’s 900,000-strong Maori population.

But proceedings were derailed when 22-year-old Maori Party MP Hana-Rawhiti Maipi-Clarke took to her feet in the chamber, ripped the bill in half, and launched into a haka.

Former conservative prime minister Jenny Shipley said the proposal threatened to “divide New Zealand in a way that I haven’t lived through in my adult life”.

Although incumbent Prime Minister Christopher Luxon has pledged the bill will not pass into law, he has been condemned for even allowing it to be debated in parliament.

Seen as the country’s founding document, the Treaty of Waitangi was signed in 1840 to bring peace between 540 Maori chiefs and colonising British forces.

Its principles today underpin efforts to foster partnership between Indigenous and non-Indigenous New Zealanders and protect the interests of the Maori community.

The anniversary of the treaty’s signing remains a national holiday.


STALINISM REDUX

Hong Kong court jails 45 democracy campaigners on subversion charges

By AFP
November 18, 2024

Police keep watch outside the West Kowloon Magistrates' Court in Hong Kong during the sentencing of the city's most prominent democracy campaigners - Copyright AFP Peter PARKS

A Hong Kong court on Tuesday jailed all 45 defendants convicted in the city’s largest trial under its sweeping national security law, with “mastermind” Benny Tai receiving the longest sentence of 10 years.

Tai’s jail term is the longest yet handed out under the law, which was imposed by Beijing in 2020 to quash dissent after massive, sometimes violent pro-democracy protests the year before.

The group, which included figures from across Hong Kong’s once-diverse political spectrum, was charged with subversion after they held an informal poll in 2020 as part of a strategy to win a pro-democracy electoral majority.

Along with Tai, pro-democracy politicians Au Nok-hin, Andrew Chiu, Ben Chung and Australian citizen Gordon Ng were singled out as organisers and received sentences of up to seven years and three months.

Australia’s government said it was “gravely concerned” by the sentencing.

The other forty received terms beginning from four years and two months.

After Tai, the second longest sentence was handed to young activist Owen Chow, at seven years and nine months, with the court saying he “took a more proactive role in the scheme than other defendants”.

“Long Hair” Leung Kwok-hung, the 68-year-old co-founder of the city’s last standing opposition party the League of Social Democrats, received a term of six years and nine months.

– ‘ Refused to be tamed’ –

His wife and LSD leader Chan Po-ying told AFP outside the courtroom that the term was “within our expectations”.

“It is what it is — no matter (whether) I laugh or I cry so I choose to laugh a bit,” she said.

Leticia Wong, a former district councillor for a since-disbanded pro-democracy party who attended the sentencing, told AFP that she found the terms were “encouraging people to plead guilty and testify against their peers”.

“For those who refused to be tamed, punishment is obviously heavier,” Wong said.

Western countries and international rights groups have condemned the trial as evidence of Hong Kong’s increased authoritarianism.

China and Hong Kong say the security law restored order following the 2019 protests, and have warned against “interference” from other countries.

Forty-seven people were initially charged after they were arrested in January 2021, making this case the largest by number of defendants.

Thirty-one pleaded guilty, and 16 stood a 118-day trial last year, with 14 convicted and two acquitted in May.

– ‘Constitutional crisis’ –


The aim of the election primary, which took place in July 2020, was to pick a cross-party shortlist of pro-democracy candidates to increase their electoral prospects.

If a majority was achieved, the plan was to force the government to meet the 2019 protesters’ demands — including universal suffrage — by threatening to indiscriminately veto the budget.

Three senior judges handpicked by the government to try security cases said the group would have caused a “constitutional crisis”.

Anna Kwok, executive director of the Washington-based Hong Kong Democracy Council, condemned the sentencing as “an attack on the essence of Hong Kong – one that yearns for freedom, democracy and the right to political expression”.
















Acquitted ‘Hong Kong 47’ defendant sees freedom as responsibility


By AFP
November 19, 2024

Pro-democracy activist Lee Yue-Shun, one of only two to walk away from the high-profile security case, attended the trial every day in carefully coordinated outfits -

 Copyright AFP ISAAC LAWRENCE

Xinqi SU

As the massive trial of the “Hong Kong 47” democracy campaigners ended on Tuesday, an acquitted member of the group watched from the sidelines and felt the weight of his freedom upon him.

Former district councillor and street dancer Lee Yue-shun is one of only two people to have walked away from a national security law trial.

On Tuesday, 45 of his co-defendants were handed prison terms of up to 10 years for subversion.

It is Hong Kong’s largest prosecution under its 2020 security law, imposed by Beijing after huge, sometimes violent pro-democracy protests the year before.

“I find the situation (of being acquitted) quite hard to understand,” Lee told AFP in a series of interviews ahead of the sentencing.

“I think (the acquittal) gave me more responsibility — how can I make better use of the freedom I have not lost,” the 31-year-old added.

On Tuesday, Lee arrived outside court at 4 am (2000 GMT) to try and get a public seat.

“I come here today mainly (out of) a duty to show my concern for this important court case as a citizen,” he told AFP.

“I also want more people to notice the development and the conclusion of the case.”



– ‘Intention to subvert’ –



The 47 were charged after holding an unofficial election primary in July 2020, in a bid to make a shortlist aimed at gaining a pro-democracy majority in the legislature.

If victorious, they planned to force the government to meet the 2019 protesters’ demands — including universal suffrage — by threatening vetoes of the city budget.

Judges ruled they would have created “a constitutional crisis”, and 45 were convicted of subversion.

But Lee and another defendant, veteran lawyer Lawrence Lau, were acquitted.

Judges said they could not be sure Lee “was a party to the Scheme” nor that he “had the intention to subvert”.

Until the duo’s release in May, national security cases prosecuted under the 2020 law had a 100 percent conviction rate.

While Hong Kong’s legislature has been purged of opposition and scores of civil society groups have shuttered since the law’s passage, authorities maintain it restored order and stability after months of unrest.

“We have lost a lot of freedoms… All I can say is that the acquittal means I lost one less,” Lee said.



– Social justice vision –



Lee jokingly referred to himself as “a loser” — he struggled at school and failed to get into university first time round.

“But Hong Kong gave me a vision,” he said, and he decided to pursue a career as a social worker.

He first dipped his toes into politics as a student, working as a campaign helper for a pro-democracy party.

Lee soon caught the party’s eye as a candidate to attract young voters, and ran for district council at the height of the 2019 protests.

He was put forward in the election primary almost at the last minute.

He lost, but at dawn on January 6, 2021, was woken up by banging on his door.

It was the national security police.

“I couldn’t make sense of it at that time. I asked if many people were arrested. They said yes,” Lee recalled.



– ‘Come what may’ –



Lee was luckier than the others — he was granted bail after two weeks, whereas most of the 47 have been detained since that day.

Even so, stringent bail conditions kept him “trapped” in Hong Kong for nearly 1,200 days.

His passport was seized, and he was banned from speaking publicly in any way deemed to endanger national security.

“Over these three years — which I would describe as a test — I had been emphasising this: I would not let my life be destroyed,” Lee said.

“Until the last moment before the ruling, I had been thinking: ‘Come what may, there are still things I want to carry on’.”

Lee threw himself into street dance and boxing, and appeared at every trial day in carefully coordinated outfits.

He also completed a law programme, with his final thesis analysing the conspiracy charge in common law — using his own case as an example.

Two weeks after his acquittal, Lee retrieved his passport from the court, and in early July, he renewed his social worker licence.

“I will now make more active and better use of this basic right (of movement) to further develop myself… to encourage more and different people here,” he said.

Written By AFP

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.





Law and disorder as Thai police station comes under monkey attack

By AFP
November 18, 2024

The human inhabitants of Lopburi have long suffered from a growing and aggressive monkey population - Copyright AFP Abdul Goni

Police in central Thailand said they barricaded themselves into their own station over the weekend, after a menacing mob of 200 escaped monkeys ran riot on the town.

The human inhabitants of Lopburi have long suffered from a growing and aggressive monkey population and authorities have built special enclosures to contain groups of the unruly residents.

But on Saturday around 200 of the primates broke out and rampaged through town, with one posse descending on a local police station.

“We’ve had to make sure doors and windows are closed to prevent them from entering the building for food,” police captain Somchai Seedee told AFP on Monday.

He was concerned the marauders could destroy property including police documents, he added.

Traffic cops and officers on guard duty were being called in to fend off the visitors, the Lopburi police said on Facebook on Sunday.

Around a dozen of the intruders were still perched proudly on the roof of the police station on Monday, photos from local media showed.

Down in the streets, hapless police and local authorities were working to round up rogue individuals, luring them away from residential areas with food.

While Thailand is an overwhelmingly Buddhist nation, it has long assimilated Hindu traditions and lore from its pre-Buddhist era.

As a result monkeys are afforded a special place in Thai hearts thanks to the heroic Hindu monkey god Hanuman, who helped Rama rescue his beloved wife Sita from the clutches of an evil demon king.

Thousands of the fearless primates rule the streets around the Pra Prang Sam Yod temple in the centre of Lopburi.

The town has been laying on an annual feast of fruit for its population of macaques since the late 1980s, part religious tradition and part tourist attraction.

But their growing numbers, vandalism and mob fights have made an uneasy coexistence with their human neighbours almost intolerable.

Lopburi authorities have tried quelling instances of human-macaque clashes with sterilisation and relocation programs.




Future generations may lose jobs due to their typing speed

Traditional keyboarding was required for 63.3 percent of all workers In 2019

By Dr. Tim Sandle
DIGITAL JOURNAL
November 19, 2024

Chinese regulators have scrambled to keep up with the country's voracious appetite for video games, which have been blamed for social ills including online addiction - © AFP/File Mohd RASFAN

As typing becomes less common amongst Gen Z device users, and schools fail to bridge the gap with typing classes, recruiters warn that young workers could enter the market under skilled.

Part of the reason typing skills have dropped is due to the high reliance by younger people on mobile devices. Trends suggest that Gen Z smartphone use rises 82 percent while other devices are used less. This compares to 72 percent for Generation Y/Millenials, 66 percent for Generation X, and 43 percent for Boomers.

This means less time spent on other devices, like laptops and desktops. One skill that is a particular risk to this trend is typing.

Commenting on this trend for Digital Journal is John Michaloudis, a technology expert who runs the online training platform MyExcelOnline: “Typing skills are becoming much rarer amongst Gen Z device users, and this is simply because they spend a lot more of their time using digital keyboards than real ones. A big part of this is down to the death of typing classes in schools, as well.”

“Typing may not be considered a high-level skill and, what’s more, it’s something that others, such as millennials, learned naturally as they got acclimated to digital technology,” adds Michaloudis. “However, that’s no longer the case as much. So, if you don’t have formal training, and you don’t have people learning independently, it’s natural these skills will fade away.”

This does not mean that typing is any less vital in the workplace. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, traditional keyboarding was required for 63.3 percent of all workers. In 2019.

For those seeking to improve their typing skills, they can:

Practice with Online Tools: Utilize platforms like TypingClub or Keybr to practice typing through engaging exercises and track progress.

Touch Typing Programs: Enroll in touch typing courses designed to increase speed and accuracy by teaching typing without looking at the keyboard.

Use Online Typing Games: Websites like “TypeRacer” offer fun ways to enhance accuracy and speed.

Daily Practice: Dedicate a specific amount of time each day to type consistently, focusing on both speed and reducing errors.

Set Achievable Goals: Break down typing improvement into manageable targets, such as increasing words per minute (WPM) by 5 every month. This provides motivation and a clear path to improvement.




U.S. to call for Google to sell Chrome browser: report


By AFP
November 18, 2024

Photo illustration: — © Digital Journal

The U.S. will urge a judge to make Google-parent company Alphabet sell its widely used Chrome browser in a major antitrust crackdown on the internet giant, according to a media report Monday.

Antitrust officials with the US Department of Justice declined to comment on a Bloomberg report that they will ask for a sell-off of Chrome and a shake-up of other aspects of Google’s business in court Wednesday.

Justice officials in October said they would demand that Google make profound changes to how it does business — even considering the possibility of a breakup — after the tech juggernaut was found to be running an illegal monopoly.

The government said in a court filing that it was considering options that included “structural” changes, which could see them asking for a divestment of its smartphone Android operating system or its Chrome browser.

Calling for the breakup of Google would mark a profound change by the US government’s reglators, which have largely left tech giants alone since failing to break up Microsoft two decades ago.

Google dismissed the idea at the time as “radical.”

Adam Kovacevich, chief executive of industry trade group Chamber of Progress, released a statement arguing that what justice officials reportedly want is “fantastical” and defies legal standards, instead calling for narrowly tailored remedies.


Google Chrome is the most popular internet browser in the world, making the internet giant a part of everyday life for people around the globe – Copyright AFP KIMIHIRO HOSHINO

Determining how to address Google’s wrongs is the next stage of a landmark antitrust trial that saw the company in August ruled a monopoly by US District Court Judge Amit Mehta.

Requiring Google to make its search data available to rivals was also on the table.

Regardless of Judge Mehta’s eventual decision, Google is expected to appeal the ruling, potentially prolonging the process for years and possibly reaching the US Supreme Court.

The trial, which concluded last year, scrutinized Google’s confidential agreements with smartphone manufacturers, including Apple.

These deals involve substantial payments to secure Google’s search engine as the default option on browsers, iPhones and other devices.

The judge determined that this arrangement provided Google with unparalleled access to user data, enabling it to develop its search engine into a globally dominant platform.

From this position, Google expanded its tech empire to include the Chrome browser, Maps and the Android smartphone operating system.

According to the judgment, Google controlled 90 percent of the US online search market in 2020, with an even higher share, 95 percent, on mobile devices.

Remedies being sought will include imposing measures curbing Google artificial intelligence from tapping into website data and barring the Android mobile operating system from being bundled with the company’s other offerings, according to the report.
S.Africa offers a lesson on how not to shut down a coal plant


By AFP
November 18, 2024

Before it turned off the switches in October 2022, the plant fed 121 megawatts into South Africa's grid - Copyright AFP PAUL BOTES

Zama LUTHULI

The cold corridors of South Africa’s once-mighty Komati coal-fired power plant have been quiet since its shutdown in 2022 in what was trumpeted as a pioneering project in the world’s transition to green energy.

Two years later, plans to repurpose the country’s oldest coal power plant have amounted to little in a process that offers caution and lessons for countries intending to reduce their reliance on fossil fuels and switch to renewables.

Jobs have been lost and construction for wind and solar energy generation has yet to start, with only a few small green projects under way.

“We cannot construct anything. We cannot remove anything from the site,” acting general manager Theven Pillay told AFP at the 63-year-old plant embedded in the coal belt in Mpumalanga province, where the air hangs thick with smog.

Poor planning and delays in paperwork to authorise the full decommissioning of the plant have been the main culprits for the standstill, he said. “We should have done things earlier. So we would consider it is not a success.”

Before it turned off the switches in October 2022, the plant fed 121 megawatts into South Africa’s chronically undersupplied and erratic electricity grid.

The transition plan — which won $497 million in funding from the World Bank — envisions the generation of 150 megawatts via solar and 70 megawatts from wind, with capacity for 150 megawatts of battery storage.

Workers are to be reskilled and the plant’s infrastructure, including its massive cooling towers, repurposed.

But much of this is still a long way off. “They effectively just shut down the coal plant and left the people to deal with the outcomes,” said deputy energy and electricity minister Samantha Graham.



– Disgruntled –



Coal provides 80 percent of South Africa’s power and the country is among the world’s top 12 largest greenhouse gas emitters. Coal is also a bedrock of its economy, employing around 90,000 people.

South Africa was the first country in the world to form a Just Energy Transition Partnership (JETP) with international funders to move off dirty power generation, already receiving $13.6 billion in total in grants and loans, Neil Cole of the JETP presidential committee told AFP.

Komati is the first coal plant scheduled for decommissioning, with five of the remaining 14 ones meant to follow by 2030.

It had directly employed 393 people, the state energy firm Eskom that owns the plant told AFP. Only 162 remain on site as others volunteered for transfer or accepted payouts.

The plant had been the main provider of employment in the small town, where the quiet streets are pitted with chunks of coal. Today, several houses are vacant as workers from other provinces headed home after losing their jobs.

“Our jobs ending traumatised us a lot as a community,” said Sizwe Shandu, 35, who had been contracted as a boilermaker at the plant since 2008.

The shutdown had been unexpected and left his family scrambling to make ends meet, he said. With South Africa’s unemployment rate topping 32 percent, Shandu now relies on government social grants to buy food and electricity.

Pillay admitted that many people in the town of Komati had a “disgruntled view” of the transition. One of the mistakes was that coal jobs were closed before new jobs were created, he said. People from the town did not always have the skills required for the emerging jobs.

Eskom has said it plans to eventually create 363 permanent jobs and 2,733 temporary jobs at Komati.

One of the green projects under way combines raising fish alongside vegetable patches supported by solar panels.

Seven people, from a planned 21, have been trained to work on the aquaponics scheme, including Bheki Nkabinde, 37.

“Eskom has helped me big time in terms of getting this opportunity because now I’ve got an income, I can be able to support my family,” he told AFP, as he walked among his spinach, tomatoes, parsley and spring onions.

The facility is also turning invasive plants into pellets that are an alternative fuel to coal and assembling mobile micro power grids fixed to containers. A coal milling workshop has been turned into a welding training room.

– Mistakes and lessons –


The missteps at Komati are lessons for other coal-fired power plants marked for shutdown, Pillay said. For example, some now plan to start up green energy projects parallel to the phasing out of fumes.

But the country is “not going to be pushed into making a decision around how quickly or how slowly we do the Just Energy Transition based on international expectations”, said Graham.

South Africa has seven percent renewable energy in its mix, up from one percent a decade ago, she said. And it will continue mining and exporting coal, with Eskom estimating that there are almost 200 years of supply still in the ground.

The goal is to have a “good energy mix that’s sustainable and stable”, Graham said.

Since South Africa’s JETP was announced, Indonesia, Vietnam and Senegal have struck similar deals, but there has been little progress towards actually closing coal plants under the mechanism.

Among the criticisms is that it offers largely market-rate lending terms, raising the threat of debt repayment problems for recipients.

 

Leaner large language models could enable efficient local use on phones and laptops


Princeton University, Engineering School





Large language models (LLMs) are increasingly automating tasks like translation, text classification and customer service. But tapping into an LLM’s power typically requires users to send their requests to a centralized server — a process that’s expensive, energy-intensive and often slow.

Now, researchers have introduced a technique for compressing an LLM’s reams of data, which could increase privacy, save energy and lower costs.

The new algorithm, developed by engineers at Princeton and Stanford Engineering, works by trimming redundancies and reducing the precision of an LLM’s layers of information. This type of leaner LLM could be stored and accessed locally on a device like a phone or laptop and could provide performance nearly as accurate and nuanced as an uncompressed version.

“Any time you can reduce the computational complexity, storage and bandwidth requirements of using AI models, you can enable AI on devices and systems that otherwise couldn’t handle such compute- and memory-intensive tasks,” said study coauthor Andrea Goldsmith, dean of Princeton’s School of Engineering and Applied Science and Arthur LeGrand Doty Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering.

“When you use ChatGPT, whatever request you give it goes to the back-end servers of OpenAI, which process all of that data, and that is very expensive,” said coauthor Rajarshi Saha, a Stanford Engineering Ph.D. student. “So, you want to be able to do this LLM inference using consumer GPUs [graphics processing units], and the way to do that is by compressing these LLMs.” Saha’s graduate work is coadvised by Goldsmith and coauthor Mert Pilanci, an assistant professor at Stanford Engineering.

The researchers will present their new algorithm CALDERA, which stands for Calibration Aware Low precision DEcomposition with low Rank Adaptation, at the Conference on Neural Information Processing Systems (NeurIPS) in December. Saha and colleagues began this compression research not with LLMs themselves, but with the large collections of information that are used to train LLMs and other complex AI models, such as those used for image classification. This technique, a forerunner to the new LLM compression approach, was published in 2023.

Training data sets and AI models are both composed of matrices, or grids of numbers that are used to store data. In the case of LLMs, these are called weight matrices, which are numerical representations of word patterns learned from large swaths of text.

“We proposed a generic algorithm for compressing large data sets or large matrices,” said Saha. “And then we realized that nowadays, it’s not just the data sets that are large, but the models being deployed are also getting large. So, we could also use our algorithm to compress these models.”

While the team’s algorithm is not the first to compress LLMs, its novelty lies in an innovative combination of two properties, one called “low-precision,” the other “low-rank.” As digital computers store and process information as bits (zeros and ones), “low-precision” representation reduces the number of bits, speeding up storage and processing while improving energy efficiency. On the other hand, “low-rank” refers to reducing redundancies in the LLM weight matrices.

“Using both of these properties together, we are able to get much more compression than either of these techniques can achieve individually,” said Saha.

The team tested their technique using Llama 2 and Llama 3, open-source large language models released by Meta AI, and found that their method, which used low-rank and low-precision components in tandem with each other, can be used to improve other methods which use just low-precision. The improvement can be up to 5%, which is significant for metrics that measure uncertainty in predicting word sequences.

They evaluated the performance of the compressed language models using several sets of benchmark tasks for LLMs. The tasks included determining the logical order of two statements, or answering questions involving physical reasoning, such as how to separate an egg white from a yolk or how to make a cup of tea.

“I think it’s encouraging and a bit surprising that we were able to get such good performance in this compression scheme,” said Goldsmith, who moved to Princeton from Stanford Engineering in 2020. “By taking advantage of the weight matrix rather than just using a generic compression algorithm for the bits that are representing the weight matrix, we were able to do much better.”

Using an LLM compressed in this way could be suitable for situations that don’t require the highest possible precision. Moreover, the ability to fine-tune compressed LLMs on edge devices like a smartphone or laptop enhances privacy by allowing organizations and individuals to adapt models to their specific needs without sharing sensitive data with third-party providers. This reduces the risk of data breaches or unauthorized access to confidential information during the training process. To enable this, the LLMs must initially be compressed enough to fit on consumer-grade GPUs.

Saha also cautioned that running LLMs on a smartphone or laptop could hog the device’s memory for a period of time. “You won’t be happy if you are running an LLM and your phone drains out of charge in an hour,” said Saha. Low-precision computation can help reduce power consumption, he added. “But I wouldn’t say that there’s one single technique that solves all the problems. What we propose in this paper is one technique that is used in combination with techniques proposed in prior works. And I think this combination will enable us to use LLMs on mobile devices more efficiently and get more accurate results.”

The paper, “Compressing Large Language Models using Low Rank and Low Precision Decomposition,” will be presented at the Conference on Neural Information Processing Systems (NeurIPS) in December 2024. In addition to Goldsmith, Saha and Pilanci, coauthors include Stanford Engineering researchers Naomi Sagan and Varun Srivastava. This work was supported in part by the U.S. National Science Foundation, the U.S. Army Research Office, and the Office of Naval Research.

Asking ChatGPT vs Googling: Can AI chatbots boost human creativity?

The Conversation
November 18, 2024

Image via TippaPatt/Shutterstock.

Think back to a time when you needed a quick answer, maybe for a recipe or a DIY project. A few years ago, most people’s first instinct was to “Google it.” Today, however, many people are more likely to reach for ChatGPT, OpenAI’s conversational AI, which is changing the way people look for information.

Rather than simply providing lists of websites, ChatGPT gives more direct, conversational responses. But can ChatGPT do more than just answer straightforward questions? Can it actually help people be more creative?

I study new technologies and consumer interaction with social media. My colleague Byung Lee and I set out to explore this question: Can ChatGPT genuinely assist people in creatively solving problems, and does it perform better at this than traditional search engines like Google?


Across a series of experiments in a study published in the journal Nature Human Behavour, we found that ChatGPT does boost creativity, especially in everyday, practical tasks. Here’s what we learned about how this technology is changing the way people solve problems, brainstorm ideas and think creatively.

ChatGPT and creative tasks

Imagine you’re searching for a creative gift idea for a teenage niece. Previously, you might have googled “creative gifts for teens” and then browsed articles until something clicked. Now, if you ask ChatGPT, it generates a direct response based on its analysis of patterns across the web. It might suggest a custom DIY project or a unique experience, crafting the idea in real time.

To explore whether ChatGPT surpasses Google in creative thinking tasks, we conducted five experiments where participants tackled various creative tasks. For example, we randomly assigned participants to either use ChatGPT for assistance, use Google search, or generate ideas on their own. Once the ideas were collected, external judges, unaware of the participants’ assigned conditions, rated each idea for creativity. We averaged the judges’ scores to provide an overall creativity rating.

One task involved brainstorming ways to repurpose everyday items, such as turning an old tennis racket and a garden hose into something new. Another asked participants to design an innovative dining table. The goal was to test whether ChatGPT could help people come up with more creative solutions compared with using a web search engine or just their own imagination.


ChatGPT did well with the task of suggesting creative ideas for reusing household items. Simon Ritzmann/DigitalVision via Getty Images

The results were clear: Judges rated ideas generated with ChatGPT’s assistance as more creative than those generated with Google searches or without any assistance. Interestingly, ideas generated with ChatGPT – even without any human modification – scored higher in creativity than those generated with Google.

One notable finding was ChatGPT’s ability to generate incrementally creative ideas: those that improve or build on what already exists. While truly radical ideas might still be challenging for AI, ChatGPT excelled at suggesting practical yet innovative approaches. In the toy-design experiment, for example, participants using ChatGPT came up with imaginative designs, such as turning a leftover fan and a paper bag into a wind-powered craft.

Limits of AI creativity

ChatGPT’s strength lies in its ability to combine unrelated concepts into a cohesive response. Unlike Google, which requires users to sift through links and piece together information, ChatGPT offers an integrated answer that helps users articulate and refine ideas in a polished format. This makes ChatGPT promising as a creativity tool, especially for tasks that connect disparate ideas or generate new concepts.

It’s important to note, however, that ChatGPT doesn’t generate truly novel ideas. It recognizes and combines linguistic patterns from its training data, subsequently generating outputs with the most probable sequences based on its training. If you’re looking for a way to make an existing idea better or adapt it in a new way, ChatGPT can be a helpful resource. For something groundbreaking, though, human ingenuity and imagination are still essential.

Additionally, while ChatGPT can generate creative suggestions, these aren’t always practical or scalable without expert input. Steps such as screening, feasibility checks, fact-checking and market validation require human expertise. Given that ChatGPT’s responses may reflect biases in its training data, people should exercise caution in sensitive contexts such as those involving race or gender.

We also tested whether ChatGPT could assist with tasks often seen as requiring empathy, such as repurposing items cherished by a loved one. Surprisingly, ChatGPT enhanced creativity even in these scenarios, generating ideas that users found relevant and thoughtful. This result challenges the belief that AI cannot assist with emotionally driven tasks

Future of AI and creativity

As ChatGPT and similar AI tools become more accessible, they open up new possibilities for creative tasks. Whether in the workplace or at home, AI could assist in brainstorming, problem-solving and enhancing creative projects. However, our research also points to the need for caution: While ChatGPT can augment human creativity, it doesn’t replace the unique human capacity for truly radical, out-of-the-box thinking.

This shift from Googling to asking ChatGPT represents more than just a new way to access information. It marks a transformation in how people collaborate with technology to think, create and innovate.

Jaeyeon Chung, Assistant Professor of Business, Rice University


This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.