Stories

A Hacker Used Claude To Score Free Tickets To Every Free Music Festival

Security researcher Ian Carroll used the AI tool Claude Opus 4.7 in April to discover a technique that allowed him full access to the systems of Front Gate Tickets, which handles ticketing for practically every major US music festival, from Lollapalooza and South by Southwest to Austin City Limits.  - Wired

New Seizures Of Looted Met Museum Art: Total Now $95M

Investigators since 2017 have seized more than 120 artifacts from the Met ranging in value from $20,000 to $26 million, plus hundreds of smaller items, such as rare pottery fragments, belt clasps, ax heads, safety pins and goddess figurines, according to an inventory by the office of Manhattan district attorney Alvin L. Bragg. - The New York Times

Tween Girls Read A Variety Of Books While Tween Boys Stick With Grade-School-Age Fiction: Study

“Among the boys aged 11 to 14 who were surveyed, eight of the 10 most read books were from Jeff Kinney’s Diary of a Wimpy Kid series. Girls’ reading was spread across a wider range of authors and genres including Alice Oseman’s Heartstopper ... and Suzanne Collins’s The Hunger Games.” - The Guardian

It’s Official: Canada Will Take Part In The Eurovision Song Contest

Now the next Céline Dion won’t have to pretend to be Swiss. - BBC

Ten Definitive Movies About America (As Per The New York Times)

“I asked 10 writers what films they would pick to define America and why. Their choices ranged from blockbusters to indies, homegrown comedies to enigmatic Italian drama, a recent best-picture Oscar nominee to a little-known debut — in short, movies as varied as the country itself.” (Dazed and Confused, eh?) - The New York Times

Royal Shakespeare Co. Staging Will Make Othello A Black Lesbian

The production, set in a dystopian future plagued by climate change, will star noted Black lesbian and three-time Olivier-winner Sharon D Clarke and will open in Stratford-upon-Avon next February. - Variety

Amazon Dropped The OpenAI/Sam Altman Movie. Now Another Distributor Has Picked It Up.

“Neon said Tuesday that it bought the film following a bidding process. Amazon dropped the nearly complete $40 million film, starring Andrew Garfield as Altman, earlier this month, a surprise move that came just months after Amazon announced a $50 billion investment in OpenAI.” - AP

Trump Administration Wiped All Mention Of Slavery From Two More Historic Sites In Philadelphia

In addition to the much-litigated case of the George Washington house site, all references to enslaved people were quietly removed from Independence Hall and from the wall panel text for the Thomas Jefferson portrait at the nearby Second Bank of the United States. - The Philadelphia Inquirer (MSN)

EU Is Finally Clarifying Rules For Carrying Musical Instruments On Planes

“Following nearly 15 years of lobbying by the International Federation of Musicians and Pearle* Live Performance Europe, the European Parliament and the Council have published a provisional agreement with revised rules, particularly concerning the rights for musical instruments onboard.” - The Strad

Despite “Billy Elliot,” Boys Studying Ballet In Britain Mostly Still Keep It Secret

The movie certainly helped over the 26 years since it was released: there are noticeably more boys in ballet classes than there used to be — especially where there are boys-only classes. But they still face trouble from peers at school. - The Sunday Times (UK)

Did Malta’s National Orchestra Receive Millions In Laundered Money?

The European Foundation for Support of Culture, set up in 2015 and based for several years at the Russian Cultural Centre in Valletta, gave more than €8 million to the Malta Philharmonic between 2018 and 2022, triggering a money-laundering investigation which was stonewalled by the orchestra and eventually faded away. - Times of Malta

General Custer And The Changing Cultural Record

Artists and writers have interpreted and reinterpreted George Armstrong Custer, who died in a storied battle that just had a major anniversary. - The New York Times

What I Learned About Myself Through Translating

“Translators like to say, we discover our authors,” writes translator and novelist Anton Hur. “But maybe we’re wrong. Maybe the books choose us.” - American Scholar

Why It’s So Difficult To Calculate Benefits And Costs Of Technology Innovation

When a tool reliably performs a cognitive operation, the internal capacity for that operation tends to weaken with disuse. People who know they can look up something on Google develop weaker memory for the information itself, and habitual GPS users show measurable decline in hippocampal-dependent spatial navigation. - Aeon

What American Classical Music Needs

Classical music in the United States is borrowed from Europe, and that borrowing was initially ambitious and impressive. An apex was attained around 1900. - The New York Times

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