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"bridle" Definitions
  1. a set of leather bands, attached to reins, which is put around a horse’s head and used for controlling it
"bridle" Synonyms
lead strap rein tether leash line harness collar headstall noose halter hackamore jaquima restraining device chase-halter head collar cord rope chain restraint check curb restriction control deterrent trammels constraint limitation fetter hindrance circumscription impediment damper inhibition limit cramp stricture brake cable lace wire string guy hawser lacing choker stay tow towline piece of cordage topping lift wire rope thread strand headgear cap chapeau hat headdress headpiece lid headwear helmet beret bonnet tam tam o'shanter fez skullcap beanie small hat busby balaclava bearskin restrain contain constrain suppress inhibit repress regulate tame govern stifle subdue hold keep measure rule moderate arrest seethe bristle prickle see red become indignant get angry be infuriated take umbrage be maddened rear up take offense(US) take offence(UK) draw oneself up become annoyed be indignant be affronted be offended go crook raise your hackles get your dander up hinder impede hamper obstruct restrict trammel handicap encumber block stymie thwart retard prevent pace manage monitor administer adjust methodize overlook temper adapt guide organise(UK) organize(US) systematise(UK) fume explode flip become enraged go berserk rant and rave go mad blow up go bananas go wild flare up go ballistic hit the roof get mad go ape go into a rage saddle yoke muzzle couple hitch up put in harness strap up team forbear avoid refrain abstain eschew forego forgo withhold abjure desist cease decline shun belay escape evade omit take exception be aggrieved be upset take something amiss be put out be angry be annoyed take something personally be hurt be insulted be wounded be disgruntled be resentful be miffed get huffy More
"bridle" Antonyms
encouragement liberation freedom liberty incitement beginning release assistance independence enlargement continuation licence advantage go start allowance permission expansion agitation help hawser facilitation accessibility availability convenience limitlessness unlimitedness unrestrictedness boundlessness infiniteness infinitude eternity immeasurability immeasurableness inexhaustibility inexhaustibleness perpetuity sempiternity unboundedness centre(UK) center(US) inside interior middle opening lose aid allow assist encourage free incite liberate permit let go let loose set free facilitate promote forward advance loosen further intensify magnify boost increase strengthen heighten raise amplify augment enhance arouse reinforce extend deepen expand escalate intensate build up agitate awaken provoke waken stir up whip up acquit deliver disenthrall rescue save clear emancipate extricate rid unburden absolve discharge disengage disentangle disimprison dismiss disperse rush hurry hasten force pour on expedite quicken accelerate precipitate ease speed stimulate push be happy succumb to be overcome by be overwhelmed by be prey to fall prey to pick up submit to yield to exceed pass surpass break eclipse overstep transcend beat outstrip cap go above go beyond get out of control burst become violent cut loose yield surrender concede relent submit succumb acquiese buckle capitulate give bow give in give up cave in let out expel unleash emit unloose give off send out give out send forth drop fail to keep fail to retain suffer the loss of benefit profit improve progress drive power favor(US) build flourish better unhitch give free rein to

167 Sentences With "bridle"

How to use bridle in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "bridle" and check conjugation/comparative form for "bridle". Mastering all the usages of "bridle" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Many Americans would bridle at that kind of explicit rationing.
Holding the donkey's bridle, he insisted that I ride the animal.
"These neural networks that we're developing are kind agnostic," says Bridle.
Liberal-minded members of China's middle class bridle at that ideology.
Foreign governments tend to bridle at this extension of American authority.
It is designed to "bridle" the executive if he engages in excesses.
Mr Trump may bridle at his lack of control over dollar movements.
Like many reformist movements within Hinduism, Lingayats bridle at the caste system.
Harrigan painstakingly introduces them to equipment like a bridle and a saddle.
His boots slithered in the mud as he dragged at the bridle.
"The EU referendum has dominated things globally," said Cantor Fitzgerald analyst Asa Bridle.
His opponents bridle at the notion of paying taxes to help the FARC.
They must learn how to accept a bridle or a saddle and girth.
The narrator begins to bridle at Mitko's repeated requests for money and assistance.
"New Dark Age: Technology and the End of the Future" by James Bridle
James Bridle, a London-born artist, made a book out of his own data.
They sit on an English bridle leather hanger and come with a brass striker.  
LONDON — The artist James Bridle remembers the first time he heard of military drones.
Some Trump allies bridle at the amount of attention given to Bannon and Breitbart.
Baltimore's police bridle at the suggestion that they are to blame for the city's violence.
Devout Catholics bridle at the notion that an atheist ruling party should pick their clergy.
"It's basically a kind of neural network that can associate data and images," explains Bridle.
Fares Salim, 22, led a white mare out of her stall and held the bridle high.
Others bridle about the emphasis given to John Bolton's frequent appearances on the same cable network.
Many companies bridle at being held responsible for being the victims of crime or acts of war.
As Bridle and McAndrew both pointed out, it's hard to figure out the intent behind them, too.
If the reminder of colonialism makes ordinary Filipinos bridle, they do so less openly than their president.
Bridle has carved out a space for himself among those thinking 10–100 years in the future.
But he would bridle at "simplistic options" such as stepping up bombing and drone attacks against ISIS.
Most people would bridle at having to contribute to organizations they may not be interested in supporting.
"I've been fascinating by the history of computation for a long time," Bridle tells The Creators Project.
A deputy fell through the ice while trying to attach a rope to the exhausted horse's bridle.
Lens Security guards at the Grosvenor House Hotel in London didn't like the look of James Bridle.
"We took that tag and attached it to bridle leather" for a dog leash, Mr. Krakoff said.
White men bridle at the notion of being part of a tribe or engaging in identity politics.
"I was fascinated that someone born in the United Kingdom could have their citizenship removed," Mr. Bridle said.
Burberry moved upmarket under Bailey, emphasizing its British heritage and launching new leather goods like the Bridle bag.
The company's original raison d'être was the horse, for whom it made every accouterment, from bridle to saddle.
Election officials say the shift from paper ballots reduced fraud and votos de cabresto, or "bridle voting" (ie, coercion).
Many professors of religious studies bridle at the new field's orientation toward real-world application rather than pure scholarship.
Detailed elements, like the king's head and the rosettes of the bridle, were made with a three-dimensional printer.
Dear Diary: I was strolling along the Central Park bridle path near the reservoir on a beautiful Saturday afternoon.
Some Indonesians bridle at Australia's outsize influence over the island and at any hints of interference in Indonesian affairs.
As Mr. Bridle can attest firsthand, a person that may look suspicious to security personnel can be completely innocent.
Many doctors bridle at any criticism of their bedside manner, viewing it as something akin to "character assassination," Back said.
Earlier this month, journalist James Bridle launched a wide-reaching debate on the "industrialized nightmare production" of YouTube Kids videos.
Bridle is known for defining the "New Aesthetic," which (very loosely) involves our modern digital world overlapping the real one.
Consider also infamous torture devices, like the rack and Scolds Bridle, which also face scrutiny over their popularity and practicality.
Talented candidates will bridle their instincts long enough to ensure they're making good strategic decisions that help them win elections.
It takes little imagination to guess that many New Yorkers would bridle at handing essential public property to high bidders.
" Dowell spoke about "the battlefield of Armageddon, where the blood is going to run as deep as the horse's bridle.
But on approaching the work, "Homo Sacer," by the British artist and writer James Bridle, she instead issues bureaucratic sound bites.
Conservative politicians bridle at his attempts to atone for Japan's wartime behaviour, but his personal conduct makes him hard to criticise.
Dyed-in-the-wool greens who bridle at talk of "return on investment" or "cost-benefit analysis" need to grow up.
The goal is to bridle the bullish housing market and conserve the diverse social and cultural makeup of the city center.
Shervin Pishevar said he couldn't have sexually harassed someone because he was holding the bridle of a pony at a party, right?
While I wait for my second appointment to show up, I clean my horse's bridle and two of my pairs of boots.
Now Bridle is trying to build his own self-driving car, and made the sardonic artwork Autonomous Trap 001 in the process.
James Bridle: What you're looking at is a salt circle, a traditional form of protection—from within or without—in magical practice.
Anyone now might bridle at the claim those stories repeated that enslaving Africans was for their own good because it Christianized them.
But in his hand-wringing, Bridle sidestepped the inherent truth that these kinds of children's stories have always been kinda effed up.
As he walked around the hotel's exterior photographing its security cameras, Mr. Bridle — an artist and writer — looked, to them, undoubtedly suspect.
The Leicester installation was partly inspired by artist James Bridle who set up a a solitary space blanket in Ellinikon, Greece, in January.
Her first handbag collection, available in September, includes the Oxer satchel ($1,125), which is finished with brass hardware inspired by a horse's bridle.
You can clench and bridle, in the manner of an avant-gardist like Oliver Lake, using the horn to signify something like refusal.
"As soon as there's a person with a camera there's a target for people's interest and they start asking questions," Mr. Bridle said.
In 2014, the year Mr. Bridle was stopped by the Metropolitan Police, there were 245 million professionally installed surveillance cameras around the world.
The European Union, United States and rights groups have criticized the Turkish government for what they say is its attempt to bridle the press.
Strip a horse of its saddle, bridle, stirrups, and other human-wrested accoutrements, and the animal stands tall and free in its natural splendor.
The Vatican is fairly pragmatic about this, even though devout Catholics bridle at the fact that an atheist ruling party is picking their clergy.
The European Union, United States and rights groups have criticised the Turkish government for what they say is its attempt to bridle the press.
Weather patterns and voting data are used to explore neural networks in the Serpentine Gallery's latest Digital Commission, this time by artist James Bridle.
"If you imagine kind of a bridle and a bit, and they would take it off and use it as a weapon," he said.
Mr. Bridle's series, "Every CCTV Camera," encourages us to interrogate that vast network the same way Mr. Bridle himself was interrogated by the police.
"Surveillance is so often presented as inevitable, as something we have to do, as something that almost the technology itself demands," Mr. Bridle said.
But Bridle, who is not a typical tech journalist, described the problem in a riveting and compelling way that grabbed people's attention and went viral.
Many say they have little if any contact with their CSSA branches, and bridle at the suggestion that they might take political direction from them.
Russia will bridle at this, no doubt calling the threat of additional sanctions unfair, unbalanced, a violation of international law, a provocation, and so forth.
I've been thinking a lot about this important if long Medium post by James Bridle regarding the nonsensical and potentially damaging kids content on YouTube.
But let's get real: Is it only the abuses and arrogations that make us bridle when we look at him, or is there something more?
The doctor might be startled, might bridle, might have visions of a supposedly confidential discussion showing up on YouTube — or in a malpractice lawyer's files.
Ms Forrest introduces her book as a "wander down six bridle roads", each relating to a different way in which people have made use of horses.
Another has a luminous pink bridle, which it seems to take issue with, stopping and bucking as it rounds the bend before its rider steadies her.
Those feelings turned to dismay when Trump threw off his bridle during a pre-dawn tweeting session from his hotel room in Las Vegas last Friday.
"We're putting a bridle on the horse that has almost been out of control for the last two years," Housing Minister Simon Coveney told a news conference.
Building a rapport with customers helps Tractor Supply push its own brands like 4health premium dog and cat food and Bit & Bridle and Blue Mountain work clothes.
Understanding the function of Cloud Index's neural network—called deep convolutional generative adversarial network (DCGAN), described in early 2016 by machine learning researchers—is what interests Bridle.
It was also a paragon of how to engage with the work of great artists whose personal behaviors make us bridle: unflappably, with the sharpest tools. 237.
Girls with too loose a tongue could be required to wear a bridle, an iron helmet with a bar inserted into the mouth to prevent them from speaking.
The Rolex Central Park Horse Show is meant to bring horses back to a city and a park with bridle paths that were once frequently used for riding.
A small horse stable, two corrals and separate tack room are also on the grounds, which have direct access to the bridle and walking path along the canal.
As an artist, Mr. Bridle is interested in the relationship between the digital and physical world, in how the former changes the way we think about the latter.
Many Taiwanese, though, bridle at Beijing using its growing influence to isolate them from international participation, and to press them toward eventually accepting Chinese sovereignty over the island.
The Central Park Conservancy has raised "significant concerns" about the impact of the proposal, including the increased traffic from horses on park drives, the bridle path and transverse roads.
In a viral Medium post called "Something Is Wrong on the Internet" from earlier this month, writer James Bridle unpacked the strangeness and vastness of kids entertainment on YouTube.
We spoke to Bridle to learn more about the circumstances behind this vague photo series and better understand his apprehension and curiosity about the robot chauffeurs of the future.
The European Union, United States and rights groups have criticized Tayyip Erdogan for what they say is Ankara's attempts to bridle the press and curb criticism of the President.
Mark Warner, a Democrat of Virginia and chief sponsor of the banking bill, told the Wall Street Journal Thursday that he wished it did more to bridle the credit firms.
While Shia politicians accept devolution of services, like health and electricity, they bridle at provincial governors being allowed to raise their own security forces which might challenge the militias' presence.
Meanwhile, Mr Kurz should expect resistance from his own camp: ÖVP–aligned interest groups and the party's six state governors bridle at some of his talk of reform and transparency.
Most significantly, public opinion polls show that Russian aggression is fostering exactly what the Russians deny — a Ukrainian national identity, even among Russian-speaking Ukrainians who bridle at Russia's actions.
Further south, government-aligned southern separatists bridle at sharing power with a northern government, and have recently renewed clashes with the internationally recognized government of President Abdu Rabu Mansour Hadi.
Earlier this year, house craftsmen remounted an important octagonal emerald that could be traced to Catherine, Empress of Russia, who had it set in the brow band of her horse's bridle.
And given the content truly has such an empty message to impart it seems logical to read that as a warning about the incentive structures of the underlying medium, as Bridle does.
Bridle has spent the last decade making drones more relatable, uncovering the mysteries of weather prediction, and otherwise trying to elucidate the invisible technologies—usually military in origin—that rule our world.
But just a five-minute drive from downtown Ojai, the neighborhoods open up, and areas including East End, Persimmon Hill and Saddle Mountain Estates offer bridle trails, valley views and ample land.
Horses still have the right of way on roadways and there are more than 1,000 acres of protected land and more than 100 miles of bridle trails that wind through the area.
But the president has said multiple times that he is uneasy about depriving anybody of health insurance, and he may bridle if Democrats attack any Republican plan that may lead to that.
His team argued that the rapper needed the 4.4 meter-high walls for security concerns -- and to the chagrin of some neighbors in his Bridle Path hood ... he got the A-OK.
"There is always a danger of making the same mistakes but I don't think yields are above and beyond what they should be," Cantor Fitzgerald director of equity research Asa Bridle said.
Proponents of small-scale, low-impact NETs, such as changes to soil management on farms, though, bridle at being considered alongside what they see as high-tech hubris of the most disturbing kind.
Confined to their grandmother's house, the girls bridle against losing their freedoms in a story grounded in both laughter and tears, and in the resilient strength of these girls against soul-deadening strictures.
From 2012 to 2015, the British artist and writer James Bridle ran an Instagram account, also called "Dronestagram," which posted satellite photographs of locations bombed by military drones in Pakistan, Yemen, and Somalia.
Catalans bridle at the fiscal drag placed on them by the rest of Spain, but they are not alone; just last month, Italians in the richer north also voted to demand greater autonomy.
On Friday, another young horse threw his rider, lost his bridle and nearly lost his saddle, too, before outriders closed in and one grabbed hold of the horse's nose to slow him down.
He gained some posthumous attention in 2016 when the Toronto-based rapper Drake demolished a 1963 Murray house to build a 21,000-square-foot mansion in Toronto's upscale Bridle Path neighborhood, angering preservationists.
In Stanley Park, take Bridle Path up into the forest, stop where the path crosses Tatlow Walk and you will be in a stand of some of the tallest trees in the city.
Loren DeJonge Schulman, who worked 10 years at the Department of Defense and the National Security Council in the Obama administration, has vivid memories of watching men bridle as senior women challenged them.
Concerns about children's videos gained new force in the last two weeks after reports in BuzzFeed and the New York Times and an online essay by British writer James Bridle pointed out questionable clips.
Declaring the Premier League the best in the world inevitably suggests that all the others are in some way lacking, and it is natural that fans of those leagues should bridle at the suggestion.
He tracked them to where they were stabled and, at first light, crept past the guards to slip an Indian bridle on the best of them, a thoroughbred with a white blaze on its face.
It also risked angering many of the two countries' smaller European partners, who increasingly bridle against what they see as the imposition of German and French priorities, especially when it comes to budgets and migration.
Bridle emphatically cautioned that kids might start out enjoying cute rhyming songs about sleeping bunnies, but eventually the YouTube algorithm's iterative process leads them down a path to videos of superheroes beating each other up.
No governor would have dared talk that way when Mr. Moses was in his prime, holding as many as a dozen state and city offices simultaneously, impervious to every attempt to remove or bridle him.
In a picture posted to Flickr by artist James Bridle—known for coining the term, "New Aesthetic"—a car is sitting in the middle of a parking lot has been surrounded by a magic salt circle.
Bridle is already well-known for his creative critiques of modern technology, including the 2012 drone-tracking project Dronestagram, a salt circle that traps self-driving cars, and last year's influential essay about creepy YouTube kids' videos.
Before taking him for walks in his grosgrain-and-bridle-leather Pendleton National Park Collection collar-leash set, I apply sunscreen to his underparts, lest rays reflecting off the sidewalk burn him where the skin is thinnest.
Less-affluent Democrats bridle at how booming tech firms – such as Amazon, which announced new headquarters for New York and the Washington suburbs this week – widen income inequality and price the working-class residents out of their communities.
Related: Enter Restricted Government Areas in Virtual Reality James Bridle Takes Us "Under the Shadow of the Drone" This Artist Is Teaching Neural Networks to Make Abstract Art "Computer Thoughts" Projected onto a Giant Dome via Neural Network
James Bridle is an artist and technologist whose work addresses issues of privacy, surveillance, and security; he coined the term "New Aesthetic" to describe the way the visual language of technology has begun to seep into the physical world.
"It's human nature, not just Arab nature, to bridle when something that was once free or low cost suddenly costs more," said Chase Untermeyer, a former United States ambassador to Qatar, "even if the consumers can easily afford it."
Though Facebook should do much more to reject the lies and hate of its users, Mr. Zuckerberg is right to bridle at the notion that he should set himself up as the Grand Censor of American or global debate.
Meanwhile, the stock market has shown mounting disdain for the major players' prospects and shares, even in recent years of great sales and profit, as shareholders bridle at the thought of legacy costs, inefficient dealer networks and an uncertain regulatory future.
Looking at the ways machines have already began besting their human competitors, such as the AI that defeated chess Grandmaster Garry Kasparov, Bridle suggests a new path forward: "centaur chess", a kind of team-up between humans partnered with computers.
Horses could also be rented for upward of $55 an hour, to hoof it one block north and two blocks east from the Claremont stables, at 175 West 89th Street, to Central Park's four-and-a-quarter-mile bridle path.
But whether or not you bridle at being educated, you will learn — from, say, the "Mother Tongues and Queens" map (compiled with the Endangered Language Alliance) or a map that acts as a comprehensive guide to the city's history of riots.
Harwood: The reason I ask the question is I do think that some people in business bridle at the idea that Democrats in general, maybe President Obama in particular, people like you, begin with the presumption that people in business have bad motives.
The pre-eminence of the likes of Mr Altmaier in today's CDU speaks of how far the party has moved towards 1968 values—and helps to explain why Kohl-era traditionalists (especially in the CSU) bridle at the party's shifts under Mrs Merkel.
"It's unjust to simply put a politically correct bridle on someone and say, 'You've got to do a background check on everybody that ever tweets something out before you can ever agree with a single sentence that they might put out,'" King said.
Mr. Bridle found and downloaded the plans for a type of drone used by the United States Air Force and, using string and chalk, drew a full-size outline of the aircraft on the tarmac of the parking lot behind Bridle's London studio.
The first event, which was last September, generated more than 15 million views for the brand across social media platforms, with particularly strong subsequent sales in the immediately available military-infused outerwear and Bridle bags (now its third-best-selling style worldwide).
As artist and writer James Bridle pointed out in a Medium post earlier this week, countless YouTube channels have found success by using popular TV and movie characters—Spiderman, Elsa, Peppa Pig, Hulk, and so on—in videos that recycle popular kid-video tropes.
They bridle at policies imposed from Bangkok, which include sending civil servants from elsewhere in Thailand to run the local administration and a refusal to accord the local variant of the Malay language any official status, although it is the most common means of communication.
A twenty-foot-high bas-relief map on the front of the courthouse shows the county's historic sites, including the place where one of Coronado's men lost a bridle bit when they were looking for the rumored Cities of Gold in the vicinity in 1541.
You could see it in Nadège Vanhee-Cybulski of Hermès and her transubstantiation of the saddlemaker's apron into elegance via supple leather dresses and tunics that crisscrossed at the back, neat outerwear dangling bridle buckles and perforated cargo pants paired with cool knit tanks.
A long tradition of horseback riding is upheld by the Greenwich Riding and Trails Association, which oversees the many miles of bridle trails in the area — a responsibility that includes prevailing upon individual homeowners to observe the custom of allowing riders to cross their property.
On horseback, I can escape the suburban sprawl of the San Fernando Valley and disappear into the miles of bridle trails in the park, spotting wildlife along the way, and even riding out to the Hollywood Sign for an overlook across the entire city of Los Angeles.
The news conference, they said, was Mr. Trump's best effort at spitting the bit out of his mouth and escaping the bridle of the West Wing, where he views his only way to communicate his side of any argument is his 140-character limited Twitter feed.
"We are collectively working on behalf of everyone in the sport — grooms, hot walkers, jockeys, exercise riders, starters, trainers, owners, track managers and every horse wearing a bridle and a saddle — to reform and improve racing every day," the Stronach Group said in a statement on Sunday.
Out in the footpaths, the hedgerows and bridle paths, you've seen their work — an explosion of pheasant and nildro feathers, all along the dark ground; a tiny dead mouse, flattened near a gate; and the dead mole, a baby with its little pale flippers upturned, flashing toward the sky.
In Holiday magazine, Miller wrote about his first job delivering bread for the local bakery for $4 a week, rising before the sun and riding his bike down Ocean Parkway, a wide, six-lane boulevard that had its own bridle path, used by people from the riding academy near Prospect Park.
But made of water and abrasion resistant Rugged Twill and Bridle Leather, it can stand up to the abuse of rain, snow, dirt – you name it, Filson premium quality and craftsmanship means this duffel will sustain a lifetime of being thrown in the back of a truck and still look great.
"Tightening of financial conditions is doing part of the work that I thought we were going to have to do with policy to bridle the economy and move it back down to a sustainable pace of growth," Daly told reporters after a talk at the Bay Area Council Economic Institute.
For proof that the internet has physical form on earth, some look to artists like Trevor Paglen, who SCUBA dives to the intercontinental internet cables, or James Bridle, who traces the outlines of drones in public spaces, but this rainbow-crying unicorn candle is really all the evidence we need.
But not until I'd wandered back through the ridiculously picture-perfect village of Dulwich, its park set with bowling greens, duck ponds and bridle paths, and, more to the point, its to-die-for real estate: Victorians and Edwardians, cottages and rowhouses, all of it flower-dotted and envy-inducing.
It is possible because the Clinton family has been in the White House and cozy with the rich and close to the summit of a discredited political establishment for a quarter-century now and, to people who want change or bridle at dynastic privilege, that makes Hillary Clinton an unattractive candidate.
"It's up to each of us in the industry to always bridle our enthusiasm for all things quantum with the pragmatism of plotting out the potential unintentional implications of the technologies we create," William Hurley, CEO and founder of quantum computing startup Strangeworks not involved in this current effort, told Gizmodo.
Bridle wasn't the first person to point out that there are some fucked-up videos on YouTube aimed at kids — the Outline had written about deranged ripoffs of popular characters, and just a week before Bridle's Medium post in November, the New York Times wrote about YouTube's lack of moderation for its kids app.
"Some leaders, such as U.S. President Donald Trump, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, and Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, bridle at the same body of international human rights law that China undermines, galvanizing their publics by shadow boxing with the `globalists' who dare suggest that governments everywhere should be bound by the same standards," Roth said.
"We are collectively working on behalf of everyone in the sport — grooms, hot walkers, jockeys, exercise riders, starters, trainers, owners, track managers and every horse wearing a bridle and a saddle — to reform and improve racing every day," said the Stronach Group, the track's owner; the Thoroughbred Owners of California; and California Thoroughbred Trainers.
In Bavaria, a border state, voters bridle at what the CSU calls "asylum tourists": migrants who under the EU's Dublin regime should be processed in the countries where they first arrive, like Italy and Greece, but come to Germany and thanks to foot-dragging are not sent back within the six months allowed by the regulations.
"Whether it's people trading on the stock market, FB arranging the newsfeed, Google predicting your behavior online, surveillance agencies monitoring you, or self-driving cars, the promise of all these technologies is that if we gather enough information of the world then we can build some perfect model that will allow us to predict and control it," says Bridle.
The world's attention was arguably first drawn to the rabbit hole of these kinds of stories after last year's massively viral Medium post "Something is wrong on the internet," in which its author, James Bridle, made a classic "think of the children" argument that YouTube videos for kids are tailored to lead to bizarre, distorted, dark, and violent ends.
" As in VanderMeer's real-life encounter, the beast suddenly turns from the group and disappears into the swampland, and the novel's narrator notes its strange posture, "its head willfully pulled to the left as if there were an invisible bridle" and its expression "somehow contorted, as if the beast was dealing with an extreme of inner torment.
" Here's what Bridle wrote on his blog: "A single technology ... its consecutive and multiple appearances at times of stress and trial: at the dawn of the space age, in orbit and on other planets, at the scene of athletic feats of endurance, in defense and offense in the mountains of the Hindu Kush, on the beaches of the European archipelago.
In " New Dark Age: Technology and the End of the Future ," James Bridle describes the black-box quality of the machine-learning algorithms that have rapidly become capable of everything from "predictive policing" to "dreaming" surreal images of dogs and beating the world's greatest masters of chess and Go. Based on ever-evolving neural networks of extraordinary complexity, these algorithms are already well beyond mortal accounting.
Editors: Susannah Locke, Eliza Barclay, Laura McGann, Jen Trolio; Project manager: Susannah Locke; Special thanks: Javier Zarracina, Amanda Northrop; Images (from top): "Washington Crossing the Delaware" by Emanuel Gottlieb Leutze, "Children Playing on the Beach" by Mary Cassatt, "The Scream" by Edvard Munch, Leutze again, "The Bridle Path, White Mountains" by Winslow Homer, and "Still Life, Drapery, Pitcher, and Fruit Bowl" by Paul Cézanne.

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