Oversight Explorer Logo

House Oversight Document Explorer

Search and explore committee documents

Documents tagged "Self"

Found 5 documents with this tag

DOJ-OGR-00006817.jpg

The image is a photograph of a printed document with a pale beige background. At the top right corner of the page, there's a small watermark or mark that reads "15237-08" followed by "Page 36" indicating the page number. The text on the document appears to be from an academic paper or formal report discussing topics related to human behavior and psychology, as indicated by phrases such as "the concept of self-esteem" and a section titled "Self-Esteem." However, due to the resolution and angle of the photograph, much of the text is not clearly legible. The document seems to be professionally printed with a formal layout typical for academic or professional materials.

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_029448.txt

This document discusses the concept of self-deception and its potential impact on leaders like President Barack Obama. It highlights that even intelligent individuals can fall prey to self-deception, which can have far-reaching consequences. The author points out two mistakes made by Obama in his early presidency, one with immediate negative effects and another that took eight years to mature. The text emphasizes the importance of recognizing and overcoming self-deception to make sound decisions as a leader.

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_029447.txt

The email discusses three short pieces, which could be amusing for Jeffrey Epstein. It also mentions a House Oversight document and Robert Trivers' ongoing work on President Obama. The key topics seem to revolve around humor, amusement, and political content.

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_022407.txt

This document outlines the mission of an organization focused on empowering women in various career paths and stages of life through inspiration, guidance, and networking. The target audience includes millennial women, female professionals at middle management, and those seeking a transition to fulfill their potential. Seminars with women speakers from different industries are organized as well as TED Talks for Women in seminar format. Topics of interest include sexual harassment, negotiations, gender inequality, leadership skills, and communication challenges. The organization aims to measure success by the number of seminars conducted each year and the attendance rate. The first set of speakers includes Kathryn Ruemmler, an attorney who worked with President Barack Obama, and Helen Fisher, a biological anthropologist.

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_011284.txt

This document describes a scientific workshop that took place from February 24-26, 2017, focusing on challenges of artificial intelligence and envisioning and addressing adverse outcomes. The workshop was organized by the Origins Project and had multiple sessions with teams discussing topics such as AI in financial markets, democracy, information, and identity, war & peace, cybersecurity, unintended consequences of AI systems, deep long-term societal influences, and agency and disempowerment. The workshop aimed to identify key challenges ahead, including very costly outcomes, and to come up with potential solutions such as best practices, mechanism design, monitoring and regulatory activity. For instance, in the session on financial markets, the discussion revolved around the potential for AI-powered market manipulation and its consequences on market efficiency. The participants explored scenarios that might lead to costly outcomes and considered what could be done to counter this direction and maintain efficient functioning of financial markets. In summary, the document presents a scientific exploration of the challenges posed by artificial intelligence, with a focus on understanding potential adverse outcomes and identifying solutions to mitigate these risks.