White principal goes on a racist Tirade calling out all the ungrateful dumbass Black kids….. black teachers co-sign him

General Mills

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That's rare, especially at higher end private schools. I went to private school my whole life and they would swiftly expel classmates who were acting up.
Me too. Went to a Private small school and they were quick to expel any kid that was not with the program.

Generally also since parents were paying a hefty amount each month they were quick to keep the kids in line also.

I was playing class clown one day in class and they called my parents…. I STILL remember that ass whipping. :mjcry: My parents was tagging each other in and taking turns

M-_SMa.gif
 

lib123

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Me too. Went to a Private small school and they were quick to expel any kid that was not with the program.

Generally also since parents were paying a hefty amount each month they were quick to keep the kids in line also.

I was playing class clown one day in class and they called my parents…. I STILL remember that ass whipping. :mjcry: My parents was tagging each other in and taking turns

M-_SMa.gif

Yeah I had several teachers who left the public school system because they were tired of dealing with unruly students and apathetic parents.
 

NobodyReally

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Yeah that happens but that's not the norm. There are select private schools that cater to those types of students but most don't. Private schools by and large are way less accepting of nonsense. Hence why you haven't seen any mass shootings at private schools.

I disagree. My class valedictorian was a known cokehead. He went to Harvard. Our salutatorian had weekly sex parties at her house and crashed her mom's mercedes driving without a license. Yale. So many people who know rich kids have these stories. They do great on tests and have the grades, but let's not act like their parents are some moral authority. There's also the issue of PR. Rich private schools have PR firms and lawyers to keep them out of the press. Have you ever noticed that some schools, teachers, and students can get arrested, charged, and/or convicted and you never see their picture in the paper or on the internet? That's not an accident. There are things you can do, paperwork you can file to keep your picture, name, and video out of the press. Of course you have to have enough money to hire the right kind of lawyers and PR who know how to navigate that, but it skews public perception about who is committing crime and who isn't. It's not in the best interest of these schools to publicize the problems they have, it hurts their ability to fundraise and get sponsorship, so they have a team ready to squash any press about it.
 

Sunalmighty

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This isn't true. People who have attended private schools can tell you countless stories about rich privileged kids who did drugs, came to class drunk, cursed out teachers, and pulled federally prosecutable pranks, only to get a slap on the wrist when Daddy and Mommy threatened to sue or pull donor contributions.
:laugh:
 

lib123

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I disagree. My class valedictorian was a known cokehead. He went to Harvard. Our salutatorian had weekly sex parties at her house and crashed her mom's mercedes driving without a license. Yale. So many people who know rich kids have these stories. They do great on tests and have the grades, but let's not act like their parents are some moral authority. There's also the issue of PR. Rich private schools have PR firms and lawyers to keep them out of the press. Have you ever noticed that some schools, teachers, and students can get arrested, charged, and/or convicted and you never see their picture in the paper or on the internet? That's not an accident. There are things you can do, paperwork you can file to keep your picture, name, and video out of the press. Of course you have to have enough money to hire the right kind of lawyers and PR who know how to navigate that, but it skews public perception about who is committing crime and who isn't. It's not in the best interest of these schools to publicize the problems they have, it hurts their ability to fundraise and get sponsorship, so they have a team ready to squash any press about it.

Trust me I’m very familiar with all of this. The convo is about how students behave in class. Most rich kids who do drugs and sell drugs (people don’t know this but this is very common at elite boarding schools, the show Power didn’t make this up out of nothing) are still well behaved in class for the most part. Just like a lot of wealthy businessmen have wild personal lives, they still carry themselves with decorum in business settings.
 

Nabs

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We might need another thread for this update:


Baltimore County principal’s racist comments faked by AI, experts say


Experts in detecting audio and video fakes say there is overwhelming evidence that the recording of a Baltimore County principal making racist and antisemitic comments is AI-generated.

The two experts — the director of a university media forensics lab and the CEO of an artificial intelligence detection firm that has worked with companies like Visa and Microsoft — say the audio has the hallmarks of a fake.

The audio circulated on social media in January, purporting to be of Pikesville High School principal Eric Eiswert making derogatory comments about students and staff. In the clip, the speaker refers to “ungrateful Black kids who can’t test their way out of a paper bag.” Outrage swirled and prompted a Baltimore County Public Schools investigation that has dragged on for nearly two months with no news on its outcome.

Eiswert has always maintained the audio was fake. Known as deepfakes, audio and video created using artificial intelligence have been used to spread misinformation about public figures like President Biden, but the use of the technology to harm the reputation of a local figure, like a school principal, is unusual.

Audio has ‘hallmarks’ of AI​

Siwei Lyu, director of a media forensics lab at the University at Buffalo, said the audio is not particularly sophisticated. Lyu has developed technologies at the State University of New York for spotting audio and images created using artificial intelligence.

This audio is “not a challenging case for the algorithms. I believe someone just made this using an AI voice generator,” Lyu said, adding that he doesn’t believe the person who made it put a lot of effort into the task. Online voice generator tools, like one from Eleven Labs, are available to anyone and advertise their ability to instantly create audio that’s indistinguishable from human speech.

There is, however, clear evidence the audio was manipulated, Lyu said.

“There is some signs of editing, like putting different pieces together,” he said. “This has the sound features of AI generation. The tone is a little flat.”

AI-generated voices tend to have unusually clean background sounds, or a lack of consistent breathing sounds or pauses, Lyu said.

In recent months, universities and companies have been using artificial intelligence to create methods of detecting deepfakes in ways the human ear can’t. Their methods have been getting better with time. Lyu has created the DeepFake-o-meter platform, for example.

Lyu, who has researched digital media forensics, computer vision and machine learning, said his team put the audio through several recent deepfake audio detection methods — three that their lab created, and two that others created. In four cases, the audio was deemed AI-generated with 99% surety, and in the other case with 74% certainty.

The less-certain detection method, Lyu said, identifies “vocoder artifacts,” or evidence of a step that converts a synthesized voice into audio. He said it’s a less reliable way to detect deepfakes than others.

Reality Defender has created its own methods, which Ben Colman, the CEO and co-founder, said could be done with 99% accuracy. The company has worked with governments and companies, including Visa, Microsoft and NBC, to detect images, text or audio deepfakes.

Colman’s team also deemed the Eiswert audio almost certainly AI-generated.

“Our platform not only found it was likely manipulated, but our team looked into it and found it has the hallmarks of AI-generated audio that was then recorded from speaker to another device, likely to mask its generative nature,” said Colman in a statement.

“Separately from the results on it being AI, the audio clearly has several moments where there’s an absence of sound,” Coleman said. “There are clear, sudden and incredibly short stops between bits of dialogue that indicate the absence of sound, which itself indicates some level of file manipulation.”
 

3rdWorld

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We might need another thread for this update:


Baltimore County principal’s racist comments faked by AI, experts say


Experts in detecting audio and video fakes say there is overwhelming evidence that the recording of a Baltimore County principal making racist and antisemitic comments is AI-generated.

The two experts — the director of a university media forensics lab and the CEO of an artificial intelligence detection firm that has worked with companies like Visa and Microsoft — say the audio has the hallmarks of a fake.

The audio circulated on social media in January, purporting to be of Pikesville High School principal Eric Eiswert making derogatory comments about students and staff. In the clip, the speaker refers to “ungrateful Black kids who can’t test their way out of a paper bag.” Outrage swirled and prompted a Baltimore County Public Schools investigation that has dragged on for nearly two months with no news on its outcome.

Eiswert has always maintained the audio was fake. Known as deepfakes, audio and video created using artificial intelligence have been used to spread misinformation about public figures like President Biden, but the use of the technology to harm the reputation of a local figure, like a school principal, is unusual.

Audio has ‘hallmarks’ of AI​

Siwei Lyu, director of a media forensics lab at the University at Buffalo, said the audio is not particularly sophisticated. Lyu has developed technologies at the State University of New York for spotting audio and images created using artificial intelligence.

This audio is “not a challenging case for the algorithms. I believe someone just made this using an AI voice generator,” Lyu said, adding that he doesn’t believe the person who made it put a lot of effort into the task. Online voice generator tools, like one from Eleven Labs, are available to anyone and advertise their ability to instantly create audio that’s indistinguishable from human speech.

There is, however, clear evidence the audio was manipulated, Lyu said.

“There is some signs of editing, like putting different pieces together,” he said. “This has the sound features of AI generation. The tone is a little flat.”

AI-generated voices tend to have unusually clean background sounds, or a lack of consistent breathing sounds or pauses, Lyu said.

In recent months, universities and companies have been using artificial intelligence to create methods of detecting deepfakes in ways the human ear can’t. Their methods have been getting better with time. Lyu has created the DeepFake-o-meter platform, for example.

Lyu, who has researched digital media forensics, computer vision and machine learning, said his team put the audio through several recent deepfake audio detection methods — three that their lab created, and two that others created. In four cases, the audio was deemed AI-generated with 99% surety, and in the other case with 74% certainty.

The less-certain detection method, Lyu said, identifies “vocoder artifacts,” or evidence of a step that converts a synthesized voice into audio. He said it’s a less reliable way to detect deepfakes than others.

Reality Defender has created its own methods, which Ben Colman, the CEO and co-founder, said could be done with 99% accuracy. The company has worked with governments and companies, including Visa, Microsoft and NBC, to detect images, text or audio deepfakes.

Colman’s team also deemed the Eiswert audio almost certainly AI-generated.

“Our platform not only found it was likely manipulated, but our team looked into it and found it has the hallmarks of AI-generated audio that was then recorded from speaker to another device, likely to mask its generative nature,” said Colman in a statement.

“Separately from the results on it being AI, the audio clearly has several moments where there’s an absence of sound,” Coleman said. “There are clear, sudden and incredibly short stops between bits of dialogue that indicate the absence of sound, which itself indicates some level of file manipulation.”

I still need someone to explain to me the purpose and merits of being able to fake people's voices and features..
 

Wildin

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The absolute worst part of this are black educators defending this racist...
I always laugh.

On the internet everyone is "xxx" I don't believe none of them until I see proof.

Mfs be saying "I worked at that hospital for 10 years" the. You check their post history they are asking about getting a job or finishing school or saying they did something completely different.

Mfs on Twitter talking about "as a pharmacist people used to come and buy medicine they didn't need and just lie and we had to give it to them!". 4 years later "I finally quit working at Walgreens as a manager because of theft! We couldn't do anything about it and now they don't even get charged!"

Dude wasn't a pharmacist but a clerk, selling Advil, bandaids any any other over the counter remedy.
 

3rdWorld

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Do you really need an explanation why someone would want to fake the voice of notable people, such as politicians and business leaders?

Criminals on the dark web, of course not..but not when this shyt is being legitimatly being publicy traded.
 
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