Tumgik
#Lethal Company Employee Cosplay
cosplayclans · 7 months
Video
youtube
Lethal Company Employee Cosplay Costumes Display
4 notes · View notes
justabeewithapen · 8 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
I cooked frankly
197 notes · View notes
beepbeepdespair · 9 months
Text
wait. could the lethal company employees be the answer to my 'i want to cosplay at a con but i don't know what i'm doing with wigs or makeup' problem.... we might be onto something here
10 notes · View notes
mcrcosplay · 6 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
My tripod's angle made the helmet look weird BUT!!! Guess who forgot to post on tumblr again!!! (This time with bonus video content!!!) I was really hoping to get this done way sooner but, winter weather lmao. I'm not gonna have a chance to wear it for a few months but I am very happy with how it turned out. It feels a little weird doing a non-tokusatsu cosplay but it's the same ilk. From the way I knew I was doing the straps I decided against a vip employee badge, and left some things feeling a little jank on purpose because well, it's lethal company. The helmet like the rest of mine was 3D printed, dude was selling the model for 4$ and shut his etsy down shortly after but I think it turned out good! I couldn't get a blue tint on the oustisde of the visor to look good but, what'cha gonna do.
136 notes · View notes
halfusek · 3 months
Text
Tumblr media
hi!!! i'm going to this year's japan expo :D
i will be dressed as a lethal company employee and im gonna have an inscryption card style badge with my fursona :3
i'm going on saturday (13th july) with a couple of friends @waruihoshi @sky-lia and @rinkopatateneko who made the stickers that you can see in the background of the photo :]
feel free to come say hi if you're also there!! :D
i KNOW i have some frenchies following me, come on now, some of you have gotta be there as well 👀
maybe if i feel brave enough im gonna post some cosplay photos later lol
btw the inscryption card actually is a commission done by the talented Foxitel from twitter :D
30 notes · View notes
theliterateape · 3 years
Text
The Regret Soup of Temper Lost and Reason Found
by Don Hall
Despite the ongoing parade of grown people acting like angry children in 2021 America, I'd like to hope that with age comes some modicum of temperance.
As I sit in the desert sun smoking Captain Black Cherry pipe tobacco and sipping on a Modelo, I drift into that perilous territory of regretful nostalgia. I remember those many times when, in an effort to exert control of a situation, I lost my ever-loving shit and resembled nothing less than a random Wal Mart customer throwing a tantrum at an insult or request to follow the rules in place.
It's a bit embarrassing to think of the occasions in my youth (and, in some cases, well beyond what any normal standard of youth could entail) when I lost control, screaming and thumping and doing my damnedest to intimidate someone enough to simply have them acquiesce to my demands. Tantrum-throwing is an art-form and I was a master at it.
The times they be a changing. 
I'm no longer angry. I mean, pretty much at all. Either I wised up, find myself lacking the energy to become outraged, or am truly embracing my More Spock, Less Kirk mantra. Whichever the case the rage has all but subsided completely. That's good for me because so many others are in full-on battle mode at the drop of a hat and these days that can equal serious injury or death.
About 30 murders nationwide have been attributed to incidents that started with road rage. More than 12,500 injuries to driver violence, out of 10,000 car accidents since 2007. Of the deaths related to road rage, most have been considered deliberate murders.
SOURCE
Anger, frustration, and other mental stress can trigger abnormal heart rhythms that may lead to sudden death, new research shows. In the first study of its kind, a group of researchers has demonstrated that mental stress alone can provoke these dangerous heart rhythms.
SOURCE
Although anger can be channelled constructively, it seems clear that aggressive behaviour can compound. Aggressive actions most often increase the likelihood of further aggression, and enacted aggression does not reduce aggressive impulses.
Violence and aggression beyond a mild degree almost always involve additional factors. A tendency towards impulsivity and keeping company with delinquent peers are risk factors.
SOURCE
When I see a woman screaming at a convenience store employee because he refuses to sell her a case of Miller Lite until she puts on a mask, I start to judge. And then I remember that time when members of an improv group I was in decided to complain about the lack of audience to a point that I threw a bar stool across the room.
When I watch a video of a man so angry that the McDonald's he goes to consistently puts onions on his "made-to-order" hamburger that he starts pulling cash registers off the counter and smashing them, I think What a fucking asshole. Then I recall that one time when I jumped on top of the hood of a Subaru because he was banging into the back of my car in his own moment of pique due to my shitty parking.
When I hear about Frederick Joseph routinely provoking white people with his camera and charges of racism (including a woman putting her feet up on a plane and a drunk woman telling him to 'stay in his hood') I think that the only difference between him and the people he films is who is doing the filming. The idea that Joseph has never lost his temper in public would indicate a level of maturity that his ongoing obsession with garnering social status by instigating incidents does not support.
"Say it one more time and I'll kick your ass!"
The nerds were a little drunk on wine coolers and false bravado so I knew there would be no such ass-kicking in the near future. Having been a few bar fights in my day, I knew the louder the bark, the less vicious the bite.
It was an odd thing to get so ginned up about.
I had been invited to a party by a theater friend. I wanted to get out, thought I might meet a girl, and the prospect of free booze was always a winning strategy for me in those days.
The party was full-on nerd. There was a party-wide game of Vampire going on. Cosplay Nosferatu everywhere, pretending be the sexy creatures of the night in clothing that was perhaps a bit too tight and made many of the dudes in tow look like overstuffed sausages with capes and slicked back hair.
The thing I said that got me in trouble came when I encountered three incels arguing the merits of Star Wars. I love Star Wars but I'm not speaking in Wookie any time soon. At one point in the heated discussion over the feasibility of the Millennium Falcon to go into hyper-drive with a broken something one of the nerds looks at me. "You joining in or just lurking?"
"Oh. Just listening. When it comes to Star Wars, I think I was Lucas's audience of choice. I was twelve years old when it hit the theaters and the whole franchise is just a space opera written for twelve year olds."
It was as if I had shat right there in their punch bowl.
There was no parking lot melee. The thing that perplexes me is how angry the subject matter spun everyone up. Sure, it's a movie that has crossed cultural boundaries and inspired billions to "use the Force," a tale of heroism at a time when we desperately need heroes, a milestone. But it's just a movie, right?
You'll discover that losing your temper is just that—a loss.
We've been this angry as a nation before. We've been this divided. The margins of society have been at war this aggressively many times. 1984. 1968. 1933. This partisan divide we all bemoan as if the failure of democracy is at hand is overstated and old hat. What's different is the speed and frequency at which we communicate this sense of cultural outrage. What's new is a series of social media algorithms designed to push the outrage to the front over anything else.
These algorithms intentionally exaggerate the reasons for the anger. The media, in a complete paralysis on how to deal with Twitter, reports news that 10,000 retweeted some hyperbole about police racism or vaccine authoritarianism as if 10,000 was a serious number. So we spend more of our time dwelling on our frustration and our anger sits ready, at a moment's notice, to explode.
Like a section of society bracing for a fight all the time, spurred on by our smartphones, we lose our shit more often without a single thought to what the expression of that anger will actually accomplish. All practicality is tossed out the window in order to exact revenge upon the microaggression or the guy who cut you off in traffic.
When my mother—a kind and loving soul, the type of person who goes out of her way to show generosity to anyone in need—expresses that she hates Donald Trump or any supporter of him, I am alarmed. Hatehas never been in her vocabulary but she says it without a thought these days. When ordinary people routinely use social media to wish rape, mayhem, and death on strangers they encounter online with the same casual nature one might merely flip someone off, we're in trouble.
1
Limit Your Presence on Every Social Media Platform
Sure, I was a belligerent manchild in my earlier days without the internet but I can also say without contradiction that worst threat I ever threw out in those spewing babyman incidents was an ass-whopping. No guns. No threats of lethal violence. No wishes of rape. No desire to get someone fired.
Add the secret sauce of hour by hour contact with assholes is not the desirable behavior. We already know that Instagram fucks up young girls, that TikTok is more addictive than sugar, that Faceborg is more like a hostile foreign nation than a communication platform.
It's unreasonable to get you to eliminate these outlets because they’re ingrained at this point but you can moderate your presence.
2
Stop Doomscrolling
We already know how fucking skewed and biased almost all media is today so give them less of your attention. Less swimming in the putrid pond of how awful the world is and more time focusing on what's right in front of you.
3
Examine the Pragmatics of Losing Your Temper
You'll discover that losing your temper is just that—a loss. And you will lose far more than your temper in the equation. Practice patience rather than a need for vengeance. Be less judgmental and more understanding.
If that all sounds a bit too kumbaya, try this—grow the fuck up. As a former raging shitass, a recovering rage-aholic, I had to grow up and become more rational and less emotional. If a hardcore RageBaby like myself can grow up, so can you and you’ll regret less in life if you start now.
Yes. I'm saying to suppress some of your emotions. At least in the Wal Mart or a nerd party.
0 notes
shirlleycoyle · 4 years
Text
Gun Detection AI is Being Trained With Homemade ‘Active Shooter’ Videos
In Huntsville, Alabama, there is a room with green walls and a green ceiling. Dangling down the center is a fishing line attached to a motor mounted to the ceiling, which moves a procession of guns tied to the translucent line.
The staff at Arcarithm bought each of the 10 best-selling firearm models in the U.S.: Rugers, Glocks, Sig Sauers. Pistols and long guns are dangled from the line. The motor rotates them around the room, helping a camera mounted to a mobile platform photograph them from multiple angles. “It’s just like a movie set,” said Arcarithm president and CEO Randy E. Riley.
This process creates about 5,000 images of each gun floating ethereally. Arcarithm’s computer programmers then replace the green backdrop with different environments, like fields, forests, and city streets. They add rain or snow or fog or sun. A program then randomly distorts the images. The result is 30,000 to 50,000 images of the same gun, from multiple angles, in different synthetic settings and of varying degrees of visibility.
The point of creating this vast portfolio of digital gun art is to feed an algorithm made to detect a firearm as soon as a security camera catches it being drawn by synthetically creating tens of thousands of ways each gun may appear. Arcarithm is one of several companies developing automated active shooter detection technology in the hopes of selling it to schools, hotels, entertainment venues and the owners of any location that could be the site of one of America’s 15,000 annual gun murders and 29,000 gun injuries.
Among the other sellers are Omnilert, a longtime vendor of safety notification software, and newcomers ZeroEyes, Defendry, and Athena Securities. Some cities employ a surveillance system of acoustic sensors to instantly detect gunshots. These companies promise to do one better and save precious minutes by alerting police or security personnel before the first shot is fired.
They are all maneuvering around a problem: Algorithms, at their most basic level, collect data that is categorized, so they can independently determine if something new is of that category. In the tech industry, it’s generally believed that more data means a sharper algorithm. For companies that want to detect gunmen, therein lies one dilemma.
Tumblr media
Screenshot from a promotional video for Omnilert's Gun Detect software
Visual detection machine learning has been developed for a wide range of uses, including diagnosing medical conditions and identifying pedestrians in a roadway. Researchers behind those efforts have access to nearly limitless pictures of tumors and inflammation and videos of joggers or dog walkers.
However, due to sensitivity, little footage from the start of shootings is readily available, certainly not enough to program a system that is supposed to differentiate a gun from a cell phone or a hairbrush reliably hundreds or thousands of times a day. Such footage is scrubbed from all but the darkest corners of the internet. There’s no inventory of it on Roboflow, Amazon Mechanical Turk, and other libraries of images for machine learning (though Roboflow does have a supply of still photos of guns).
The reliability of gun detection systems is of serious consequence to the people they monitor. This year, the Lockport City School District, in Upstate New York, implemented an algorithmic system to recognize faces and detect weapons. The technology misidentified black children at a higher rate, and emails between employees of its creator, ST Technologies, show the Canadian company was struggling to stop the system from mistaking broom handles for guns after it was implemented.
“I have concerns about the reliability of the object detection system and that system misidentifying a student holding a baseball bat and [police] will go and harass that student with a baseball bat,” said Daniel Lawrence, a researcher at the Urban Institute’s Justice Policy Center, who has studied technology in crime detection.
Alternatively, Lawrence said, police tend to take these alerts less seriously if they are always detecting low-priority activity or making false positives. “Everything depends on accuracy,” he said.
To train a computer program to recognize a gun as soon as it’s drawn—and then to test that program—companies have to get creative. And a bit weird.
Arcarithm, founded as a military and security contractor by three former Lockheed Martin employees, started by programming cameras to detect drones overhead. A client challenged them to come up with a system to detect guns. “If we can do drones, we can do anything,” said Riley, “so we spent the next ten years trying to tell if a guy has a gun or a broom and it turns out we can.”
Theoretically, the vast array of distortions and alterations in images feeding Arcarithm’s algorithm would account for ways a gun is obscured in real footage—by hands, by climate, or by distance. Through seeing so many common guns so many ways, the algorithm would supposedly become so familiar with guns, it could spot one instantly.
To test if their algorithm responds to the intended stimuli, Arcarithm staffers have staged armed invasions of their own headquarters using airsoft guns, which use condensed gas to shoot tiny, non-lethal plastic pellets. They’ve also taken to a nearby field to record themselves. It is programmers and desk employees cosplaying as criminals or militiamen. “All the guys are doing it,” said Riley. “They usually work on the development end.” He adds that they warn the sheriff’s department, which usually sends an observer.
Arcarithm has not found any buyers outside the U.S. military, which seeks an alert system for armed people coming towards a base. Riley said he has approached the operator of a theme park and a school system near Huntsville.
Of the other U.S. companies selling gun detection technology, Athena did not respond to an interview request from Motherboard, and seems to have pivoted to making a dubiously marketed technology that monitors people’s temperature amidst the COVID-19 pandemic. A spokesperson for ZeroEyes said its technology is proprietary so they would not discuss it. A representative for Defendry said the company declined because it did not want its name in an article published by VICE Media.
Omnilert has supplied notification systems, mainly to colleges and universities, since 2003, and unveiled its Gun Detect software in October.
CEO Dave Fraser describes a kitchen sink approach to the data-to-feed-the-algorithm problem. His company has used technology made to produce video games to create CGI simulations of the first moments of hold-ups and shooting sprees. They’ve trained the algorithm on Hollywood movies (he named John Wick). And there is also what Fraser dubbed “pajama videos,” homemade clips of employees walking around with guns (real and toy) recorded in their homes during the COVID-19 remote work months. He’s also outsourced the task to a few video content creators.
“We’ve built up an internet database of ourselves and our contractors brandishing guns,” said Fraser. “We have thousands of hours of data we created and we own.” Homemade videos are used to both feed and test the algorithm.
The videos fill up the company Slack channel, he said. And programmers and other desk employees are tasked with creating them.
Even their public director of marketing, Elizabeth Venafro, has contributed self-filmed clips of herself marching through her home toting a toy rifle, which “felt very weird, as a non-gun-owner,” she said.
Tumblr media
A graphic demonstrating Arcarithm's Exigent-GR gun detection system
Experts in academia say that machine learning can now identify objects, even from a distance, but the process hinges on sufficient data.
“Today, we are much better than we were five years ago,” Ali Farhadi, an associate professor at the University of Washington working in computer vision and machine learning, told Motherboard. “We can detect objects fairly reliably.” Each year, smaller and more specialized objects are detectable and computer scientists can program algorithms to identify the body motions and context around them. “Not only can we see scissors but we know how people act when they are cutting things,” he said.
Visual identification requires a vast amount of varied data. Even differences in the sun path between the northern and southern hemispheres and subtle differences in background scenery can cause the program to be less effective, he said. “You want something that works as well in American cities as Indian cities,” said Farhadi. It’s even best to get footage from the types of cameras one expects to be in the field obtaining the feed, he said.
Karthik Ramani, a professor in mechanical engineering at Purdue University, completed a project that trained computer learning to identify mechanical objects so as to help engineers find exact matches and replacements. Machine learning is capable of identifying detailed objects, he said, but synthetic data is no replacement for the thing.
In CGI-created images, “I was seeing a loss of energy,” said Ramani. “You don’t get the real-world noise and reflections and metals are shiny and things can get confused. As humans, we see this and we get used to it. The machine doesn’t know these things yet.”
Some false positives are inevitable, Fraser and Riley both conceded. But both claim the technology can give first responders a few precious minutes, or seconds, to save lives.
Lawrence, of the Urban Institute, said once any surveillance or analytic technology comes into the hands of police departments, it's inevitably used to target poor, minority areas. “It is over-applied in communities with persons of color,” he said. Such neighborhoods are disproportionately policed, and the use of technology like predictive policing is a major driver of those statistics, creating a feedback loop.
“This technology is very expensive and it makes no sense to have it applied to the entire city,” he said.
However, Lawrence does not think cities will buy gun detection software in the near future. The summer racial justice protests and the “defund the police” movement have caused cities to shrink from buying expensive, futuristic equipment for police purposes. “I think as a society, we are redefining what policing is and how much money should be allotted to what and how much money should go to the police,” he said. “I think we are on the precipice of using money to combat crime and the causes of crime in a different way.”
He thinks the buyers of the next generation of gun detection software will be private companies, but once a gun is thought to be detected, “the call will go to the police.”
It is widely acknowledged that the ubiquity of guns in the United States is one reason the number of police killings in the U.S. dwarf those of other countries. Police shootings of Black people sometimes begin with the excuse that the officer thought the person had a gun, including the deaths of Casey Goodman, Stephon Clark, Tamir Rice, and Amadou Diallo. During a traffic stop, Philando Castile informed an officer he possessed a legal gun and the cop immediately  opened fire.
Like many companies who make automated systems, Omnilert defends its gun-detection technology by noting that the final decision is made by a human being. “It could automatically lock the door on a suspect,” said Riley. “Now it’s up to the police to show up and see what this person does.”
As for a police overreaction, Fraser said, “It’s a possibility. We tend to look at this as ‘no technology is perfect.’ We tend to think it’s a positive to put this technology in our customer’s hands rather than have them rely on hearsay or gunshots when it’s too late.”
The possibility is enough for Meredith Whittaker, faculty director of the AI Now Institute at New York University, to reject the use of the technology outright. Whittaker and other AI ethicists and scholars have noted that all algorithmic systems contain bias, and this fundamental flaw can't simply be fixed with more data or a software update.
“They shouldn’t purchase anything like this,” she said of those who would buy gun-detection technology. “There is no dataset that would make this work. They are flawed, they are racist and they are being put into schools.” 
Gun Detection AI is Being Trained With Homemade ‘Active Shooter’ Videos syndicated from https://triviaqaweb.wordpress.com/feed/
0 notes
justabeewithapen · 8 months
Text
Tumblr media
Cosplay update!
24 notes · View notes
justabeewithapen · 8 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Finished my helmet <3
26 notes · View notes
cosplayclans · 7 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Lethal Company Employee Cosplay Costumes
3 notes · View notes