As millions of Americans gather together with loved ones to celebrate the Christmas holiday and ring in the new year, hundreds of thousands of American men and women in uniform will mark the holidays away from family in decidedly less festive corners of the world.Β
As of June, 165,830Β U.S. service members were on deployment across the Middle East, Indo-Pacific region and Europe. That figure has likely ticked higher amid recent unrest across the Middle East, and it doesnβt include service members working at U.S. bases over the holidays and civilian personnel on overseas contracts.
Hereβs a look at where service members will spend the holidays on deployment across the world:Β
Around 43,000 troops are stationed across the Middle East as of October, an increase from the usual 34,000 amid the recent unrest and outbreak of war between Israel and Iranian proxy forces Hamas and Hezbollah.Β
The Pentagon announced in October it would be moving troops into Cyprus to prepare for escalating unrest in Lebanon. And last week the Pentagon divulged that some 2,100 troops were in Syria β not the 900 they had long claimed. Another 1,000 troops are in Iraq carrying out missions to thwart ISIS.Β
U.S. forces are stationed across Europe to support NATO forces and deter any potential Russian aggression.Β
Major areas of deployment include Germany (34,894), Italy (12,319) and the United Kingdom (10,180).
Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin thanked U.S. troops for serving over the holiday season in a Christmas message.Β
"We know firsthand the holidays can be especially hard if you're far away from your loved ones. So for our troops stationed around the globe, we deeply appreciate your sacrifice," he said. "We know that your families serve too, and our military families are the foundation of America's strength."
Hello! Here's a holiday gift: an episode of the 404 Media Podcast that was previously only for paying subscribers! It gives a lot more context on the how and why we cover AI they way we do. Here's the original description of the episode:
We got a lot of, let's say, feedback, with some of our recent stories on artificial intelligence. One was about people using Bing's AI to create images of cartoon characters flying a plane into a pair of skyscrapers. Another was about 4chan using the same tech to quickly generate racist images. Here, we use that dialogue as a springboard to chat about why we cover AI the way we do, the purpose of journalism, and how that relates to AI and tech overall. This was fun, and let us know what you think. Definitely happy to do more of these sorts of discussions for our subscribers in the future.
Listen to the weekly podcast onΒ Apple Podcasts,Β Spotify, orΒ YouTube. Become a paid subscriber for access to this episode's bonus content and to power our journalism.Β If you become a paid subscriber, check your inbox for an email from our podcast host Transistor for a link to the subscribers-only version! You can also add that subscribers feed to your podcast app of choice and never miss an episode that way. The email should also contain the subscribers-only unlisted YouTube link for the extended video version too. It will also be in the show notes in your podcast player.
AI slop has consumed Facebook, is running Wikipedia editors ragged, is rapidly destroying Google search, probably put an extra finger on the scales of election influence, is confusing and annoying crafters, steals endlessly from authors, is on its way to demolish YouTube comment sections, and will probably end up in a movie theater near you sooner than you think. But if youβre streaming Christmas music today, did something seem a little off to you? If so, thereβs a very good chance youβve been listening to AI-generated carol-slop.
As spotted by video game developer Karbonic, YouTube compilation videos are sneaking AI generated songs into their mixes.Β
The example they posted, βBest of 1950s to 1970s Christmas Carols ~ vintage christmas songs that will melt your heart π πββοΈ,β has more than five million views and more than 2,000 comments. A ton of the comments appear to be engagement-farming bots, saying things like βI'm looking forward to Christmas 2024, is anyone else like me?β but many seem human. βIt takes me back to my childhood and I realize how wonderful life was before worries about money and so many futile things that dont matter,β one person wrote. Another commented, βMissingΒ memories of my youth. But, grateful for the blessings in my life. Merry Christmas and God bless you.β€βΒ
If I put this on in the background while doing something else, I might not think anything of it. But there are points in the one hour 18 minute video that give it away as AI: βO Little Town of Bethlehem,β around the 36:55 mark, is the lyrics of that song but the melody of βSilent Night.β If you compare it to an actual recording of Nat King Cole singing βO Little Town,β the difference is even more obvious. Once you start noticing the warped tunes, theyβre hard to un-hear. βOh Holy Nightβ is listed in the video as being by βNei Diamond,β who as far as I can tell doesnβt exist, or is a typo of Neil Diamond, who is definitely not the singer in the song on this compilation. βThe First Noel,β attributed here to Nat King Cole, is either an undiscovered recording where Nat and the choir run some really wild riffs, or is AI.Β
I wonβt list every tell in this video, but there are many and they give me the heebie jeebies. Other videos in this channel, Holiday Serenade Library, seem to be pulling the same grift, sometimes with AI-generated video of people blurring around outdoor markets, Santa with a burning sleigh and reindeer on fire, or children with weird mustaches skipping through the snow.
A quick search around the internet to see if anyone else has encountered other holiday-flavored AI slop turned up a recent Reddit thread where people were complaining about seemingly fabricated Spotify artists haunting retail workers during an already agonizing season. They list Dean Snowfield, North Star Notesmiths, Sleighbelle, Frosty Nights, The Humbugs, Snowdrift Sleighs, and Daniel & The Holly Jollies as artists on Spotify that have snuck into Christmas playlists but have little to no trace of a career outside of the streaming platform. Some of them, like several of Dean Snowfieldβs songs, sound like midi mixes with a stilted voice singing the lyrics. These artists make it onto huge, popular playlists like βOld Christmas Musicβ alongside real songs. Itβs honestly hard to tell whether these artists are AI-generated or just mass produced. But their Spotify artist bios often have the same exact text, or follow this pattern:Β
βDean Snowfield are songwriters, artists, and musicians who have combined forces to release holiday themed cover songs on their independent record label, distributed by Warner Music's ADA. In November and December, their βA Nostalgic Noelβ sampler managed to generate over 8,000,000 streams across Spotify and Apple Music. As a collective of artists, Sleighbelle have a great deal of respect for the original songwriters and producers who created these beloved holiday classics, and ask that you support them by streaming their original versions. Without songwriters like Edward Polo, George Wyle, Huge Martin, and Ralph Blane, we wouldn't have this music to interpret and cover. Thanks for listening to our labor of love, and make sure to follow us on our socials. - Dean SnowfieldβΒ
They didnβt just appear this year: Third Bridge Creative, a music creative agency, noticed these artists dwelling in the uncanny valley last Christmas, too. βIs it a coincidence that each of their top songs match up with the respective iconic Christmas hits? Why would I βimmerse [my]self in the enchanting world of Christmas music with Dean Snowfieldβsβ low-key creepy Nostalgic Noel when I can put on The Dean Martin Christmas Album instead?,β they wrote.
These artists are still massively popular on Spotify, with hundreds of thousands of listeners each. The North Star Notesmiths and Dean Snowfield have a very similar male singerβs voice on several songs. Frosty Nights and Daniel & The Holly Jollies also sound awfully alike. Theyβre all signed by Warner Musicβs ADA label, according to their Spotify biosβthe βlabel services arm of Warner Music Group, breaking brand new artists and supporting industry legends,β according to the labelβs siteβso Iβve reached out to Warner Music to ask what is going on here and will update if I hear back. Spotify also did not respond to a request for comment.Β
Again, itβs still not clear whether these artists are AI-generated or human, but a lot of people seem to think thereβs something amiss. To make it all a little weirder, after I emailed ADA for comment, Dean Snowfield commented on one of my Instagram posts and said βCongrats on the book release!β I hadnβt interacted with, or found a way to reach out to, Snowfield at all prior to his comment. Snowfieldβs Instagram account is private, and he keeps rejecting my requests to follow it. He has 36 followers and 3 posts.Β
In the meantime, stay vigilant out there and Merry Christmas from a real human.
The media, our social media feeds and our most pessimistic friends fill us with doom and gloom stories.Β But by many measures, there's never been a better time to be alive in America.Β
Why it matters: Yes, bad people are always doing bad things for bad reasons. It's called life. This column focuses on the Good Stuff: the undeniable trends that reveal a distinct edge for America, young people and this moment.
When your boozy uncle goes dark today, remind him and others:
There's no better place to start a business and rise to unthinkable heights doing what you choose to do. We have the best hospitals, colleges and technology centers.
You can think, say and worship as you please without fear of imprisonment.Β Faith might be fading, but the ability to practice it is unfettered.
The United States has the world's strongest military. We enjoy peace with our neighbors and the protection of the Atlantic and Pacific oceans.Β Our military is both the most feared β and most sought-after by other nations for assistance.
We're blessed with abundant natural resources β we can produce enough energy from the ground and skies to power ourselves for generations.Β In just eight years, the U.S. "has rocketed from barely selling any gas overseas to becoming the world's No. 1 supplier" β bolstering the economy and strengthening American influence abroad. (N.Y. Times)
We're still the place where people want to risk their lives to come live, work and raise a family.
The greatest inventions come from magical animal spirits of American capitalism, freedom and entrepreneurial zest β hardwired into our souls and our national story.Β We enjoy a massive early lead to build the next great technology: generative artificial intelligence.
And Jim's favorite: Most people are normal. They don't watch cable food fights, or dunk on people on X, or say or do nasty things to others. They work hard, volunteer, help you shovel in a storm.
The bottom line: We're blessed, this and every holiday season, to have smart, engaged, thoughtful readers who trust us β and remind us when we fall short.Β Enjoy your family. Enjoy the holidays. Enjoy America.
The political action-thriller starring Gabriel Basso welcomes Brittany Snow and many new conspiracies, as seen in the extended preview of the upcoming episodes
Suspected Idaho murderer Bryan Kohberger could have had more practice than anyone thought before he allegedly killed 4 University of Idaho students ... turns out he was under investigation for a home invasion that had many of the markings of theβ¦