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Updated 2024-11-22 22:17
Meta deflects child harm inquiry by pointing to Apple and Google app stores
As US Senate began looking at the firm's failures to shield children, it called for laws requiring parental approval of app downloadsMeta called on US lawmakers on Wednesday to regulate Google and Apple's app stores to better protect children, the same day that the Senate began investigating Meta's failures to shield children using its platforms.In a blogpost titled Parenting in a Digital World Is Hard. Congress Can Make It Easier, Antigone Davis, Meta's global head of safety, called for federal legislation that would mandate app stores to notify parents whenever a child between the age of 13 and 16 downloads an app, and would solicit the parents' approval. Children under 13 are already prohibited from creating accounts and downloading apps without a parent's go-ahead. Continue reading...
Atari 2600+ review – a perfect 1970s pop cultural relic
This painstaking reproduction of one of the earliest and most beloved games consoles is light on games, but heavy on nostalgic kickThe Atari 2600 is, for a certain generation of gamers, the most nostalgia-igniting console ever made. From its wood veneer fascia to its chunky carts and the legendary CX40 joystick, the machine evokes the very dawn of the games industry, before Sony, Microsoft or even Nintendo arrived to dominate it all. Even for those of us never fortunate enough to own one, the image of it was everywhere, from Grattan catalogues and comic book adverts, to TV programmes and movies such as ET, Electric Dreams and Gremlins. It was a machine that brought seminal arcade experiences to 30m homes around the world.Now it is back as the 2600+, in a mini format, with HDMI connectivity for modern TVs and a cartridge slot that will play not just newly manufactured carts, but most of the original 2600 and later 7800 titles. Perhaps even more than the mini consoles from Sega, Sony and Nintendo, it captures the technical and aesthetic features of the original machine. As well as two joystick ports (which allow you to plug in the original pads, if you have any that still work), the console has switches to select game difficulty, as well as reset and choose game modes, and you can opt between colour and black and white graphics - all features from the original 2600 models. You even get a reproduction of that wooden front panel. Fans of the original will get a rush of memories with every flick of the power switch and jab at the fire button. Continue reading...
AI is coming for our jobs! Could universal basic income be the solution?
Artificial intelligence will bring huge changes to the world of work - and dangers for society. Some think they can be solved by just handing everyone money. Is there a catch?The idea of a guaranteed income for all has been floating around for centuries, its popularity ebbing and flowing with the passing tide of current events. While it is still considered by many to be a radical concept, proponents of a universal basic income (UBI) no longer see it only as a solution to poverty but as the answer to some of the biggest threats faced by modern workers: wage inequality, job insecurity - and the looming possibility of AI-induced job losses.Elon Musk, at the recent Bletchley Park summit, said he believed no job is needed" due to the development of AI, and that a job can be for personal satisfaction". Economist and political theorist Karl Widerquist, professor of philosophy at Georgetown University-Qatar, sees it differently. Continue reading...
John Legend and Sia among singers to trial AI versions of voices with YouTube
Google-owned video platform opens up Dream Track experiment to produce 30-second soundtracksYouTube has teamed up with music artists including John Legend and Sia to offer AI-generated versions of their singing voices as soundtracks for creator videos.The Google-owned video platform is using a music generation model created by the search company's AI unit to produce the unique 30-second clips in a limited trial. Continue reading...
Best podcasts of the week: From Spice Girls to Sugababes, how Britain’s girlbands conquered the world
In this week's newsletter: The Saturdays' Mollie King explores the history of Britain's dominant female groups in Where It's At. Plus: five of the most underrated podcasts Don't get Hear Here delivered to your inbox? Sign up hereSpringleaf
Rishi Sunak’s AI plan has no teeth – and once again, big tech is ready to exploit that | Georg Riekeles and Max von Thun
Tech companies are pushing the idea that the only way to make AI safe is to leave them in control. Trusting them could lead to disasterThis month, the British prime minister, Rishi Sunak, convened government representatives, AI companies and experts at Bletchley Park - the historic home of Allied code-breaking during the second world war - to discuss how the much-hyped technology can be deployed safely.The summit has been rightly criticised on a number of grounds, including prioritising input from big tech over civil society voices, and fixating on far-fetched existential risks over tangible everyday harms. But the summit's biggest failure - itself a direct result of those biases - was that it had nothing meaningful to say about reining in the dominant corporations that pose the biggest threat to our safety.Georg Riekeles is associate director of the European Policy Centre, an independent thinktank based in Brussels. Max von Thun is director of Europe and transatlantic partnerships at the Open Markets Institute, an anti-monopoly thinktank
Meta allows Facebook and Instagram ads saying 2020 election was rigged
Policy was reportedly introduced quietly in 2022 after the US midterm primary elections, according to the WSJMeta is now allowing Facebook and Instagram to run political advertising saying the 2020 election was rigged.The policy was reportedly introduced quietly in 2022 after the US midterm primary elections, according to the Wall Street Journal, citing people familiar with the decision. The previous policy prevented Republican candidates from running ads arguing during that campaign that the 2020 election, which Donald Trump lost to Joe Biden, was stolen. Continue reading...
Pushing Buttons: How Grand Theft Auto 6 has been a decade in the making (so far)
In this week's newsletter: It has been a decade since Rockstar's last instalment of its close-to-the-bone satire of the US underworld. But will it have the same resonance in a post-truth world? Don't get Pushing Buttons delivered to your inbox? Sign up hereLast week, Rockstar revealed in a blogpost that the first trailer for Grand Theft Auto 6 would debut in early December. This sent everyone into paroxysms, particularly publisher Take-Two's shareholders, who enjoyed a nice little bump in their theoretical wealth. Meanwhile, delirious fans are attempting to use the moon to predict the game's release date.Let's remember that Rockstar hasn't actually revealed a game: it just announced the reveal of a game. But that game is Grand Theft Auto, so that was enough to make it the biggest news of the month. Continue reading...
Goodbye Omegle: how the anonymous chatroom traumatized our teen years
My generation became a target for abuse on the video-chat site - and our parents had no idea
From Sensible Soccer to Sociable Soccer: Jon Hare is back with a new football game
Hare's new opus Sociable Soccer 24 aims to bring the joys of arcade-style football games to a new generation of players and consolesFor a sports video game to have any sort of life even a couple of years after release is rare nowadays. But when I meet Jon Hare, the genial, garrulous co-founder of Britsoft powerhouse Sensible Software (and one of Norwich City's biggest fans) at Bafta in London, he invites me to a forthcoming event where enthusiasts will gather to play and celebrate his game Sensible Soccer - which was originally released for the Commodore Amiga in 1992.Sensible Soccer exerted tremendous influence at that time, helping to put football games on the map in an age before Fifa, and it has demonstrated unfeasible longevity. But Hare, now head of Tower Studios, is initially keen to talk about something else: the imminent release of his newest game, Sociable Soccer 24, out this week on PC and a little later on consoles. Continue reading...
Techscape: NFTs were meant to change everything – what happened?
In this week's newsletter: in early 2022 non-fungible tokens' were a supposedly revolutionary million-dollar asset. Now, they're practically worthless Don't get TechScape delivered to your inbox? Sign up hereA funny thing happened in Hong Kong earlier this month. Well, funny unless you were there.The annual ApeFest, where collectors of Bored Ape NFTs (remember them?) took place in Hong Kong (for the uninitiated, NFTs, or non-fungible tokens, can be linked to products like digital artworks and traded for cryptocurrencies on the open market). Nouveau-riche investors who got rich off the back of the revolutionary technology and investment products came together to party. Hard. Continue reading...
Nepal says it will ban TikTok, citing effect on ‘social harmony’
Minister for communications and information technology says the popular video-sharing platform disrupts family structures'Nepal has said it will ban TikTok, citing negative effects on the country's social harmony".The popular video-sharing platform, which has around a billion monthly users, has faced restrictions in many countries for alleged breaches of data rules and for the potentially harmful impact on youth of some content. Continue reading...
Bose QC Ultra earbuds review: top-class noise cancelling with audio upgrade
New immersive sound and better Bluetooth update for comfortable and popular earbudsBose's commuter favourite QuietComfort earbuds have been given an upgrade, setting the standard with best-in-class noise cancelling and new immersive audio features.Costing 300 (350/$300/A$450) the QC Ultra earbuds are 20 more than the excellent QC Earbuds II they effectively replace, rubbing shoulders with the best in the business from Sennheiser, Sony and Apple.Water resistance: sweat resistant (IPX4)Connectivity: Bluetooth 5.3 (SBC, AAC, aptX Adaptive)Battery life: 6 hours (up to 24 hours with case)Earbud dimensions: 17.2 x 30.5 x 22.4mmEarbud weight: 6.24g eachCharging case dimensions: 59.4 x 66.3 x 26.7mmCharging case weight: 59.8gCase charging: USB-C Continue reading...
How Chinese firm linked to repression of Uyghurs aids Israeli surveillance in West Bank
Cameras made by Hikvision, which is blacklisted in US, blanket the occupied West Bank, according to Amnesty InternationalIn the occupied Palestinian territories, there are cameras everywhere. In Silwan, in occupied East Jerusalem, residents say cameras were installed by Israeli police up and down their streets, peering into their homes. One resident named Sara said she and her family could be detected as if the cameras were just in our house ... we couldn't feel at home in our own house and had to be fully dressed all the time."Surveillance cameras now cover the Damascus Gate, the main entrance into the old city of Jerusalem and one of the only public areas for Palestinians to gather socially and hold demonstrations. It's at that gate that Palestinians are being watched and assessed at all times", according to an Amnesty International report, Automated Apartheid. These cameras have created a chilling effect on not just the ability to protest but also on the daily lives of Palestinians who live under occupation, according to Amnesty investigators. The organization had previously concluded that Israel has established a system of apartheid against Palestinians. Continue reading...
‘I just love how sisterly they are. I love the mischief’: William Lepper’s best phone picture
A meander through north-east London led the photographer to a fun, spontaneous moment of family bondingSome people need directions when you're taking their photo," William Lepper says. Some people just perform. Chani and Kamaria were definitely in the latter camp."Photographer Lepper was in his local area of Walthamstow, north-east London, on a sunny August afternoon this year, passing down Pretoria Avenue. He spotted Chani and her granddaughter, Kamaria, up ahead. Chani had just picked Kamaria up from nursery and was taking her to a cafe for lunch, but the pair had passed a friend along the way and stopped to chat. Continue reading...
Nvidia to release three new AI chips for China after US restrictions – report
Reports come weeks after US blocked Nvidia from selling two high-end AI chips and a top gaming chip to Chinese firmsNvidia is planning to release three new chips for China, according to local media reports, weeks after the US blocked it from selling two high-end artificial intelligence (AI) chips and one of its top gaming chips to Chinese firms.Nvidia could announce the chips - the HGX H20, L20 PCIe and L2 PCIe - as soon as 16 November, the Star Market Daily news outlet reported, citing people familiar with the matter Continue reading...
Like horses laid off by the car: BT tech chief’s AI job losses analogy draws anger
Harmeen Mehta criticised for equating human workers with beasts of burden' and denigrating right to strikeBT's technology chief, Harmeen Mehta, has suggested workers whose jobs are threatened by AI accept their fate as evolution", comparing them to horses replaced by the car.In an interview with the business website Raconteur, Mehta said: I dont know how horses felt when the car was invented, but they didn't complain that they were put out of a job; they didn't go on strike. Continue reading...
Apple suffers setback in fight against EU order to pay £11bn tax bill in Ireland
Top adviser to European court of justice says ruling three years ago in tech giant's favour should be set asideApple has suffered a setback in its battle against an order to pay an alleged 13bn (11.3bn) tax bill in Ireland, after one of the top advisers to the European court of justice (ECJ) said a ruling in the tech company's favour should be set side.It is the latest twist in a near 10-year saga over allegations that Apple received favourable tax status in Ireland which resulted in a 13bn benefit, in which the tech company sided with the Irish government in battling an order to pay up issued by Europe's competition watchdog. Continue reading...
Best podcasts of the week: Tales of transition, queer joy and more to mark Transgender Awareness Week
In this week's newsletter: Figures from Charlie Craggs to Mika Onyx celebrate the full spectrum of the trans experience in a new Anthem Talks series. Plus: five of the best podcasts about recent history Don't get Hear Here delivered to your inbox? Sign up hereAnthems Talks: Transgender Awareness Week
Apple iPhone 15 review: a few more pro features each year
USB-C, a faster chip, improved 48MP camera and dynamic island reach Apple's regular smartphone lineThe iPhone 15 continues Apple's slow trickling down of features previously reserved for its top Pro-line phones to other models. But even with the new dynamic island, improved camera, a faster chip and USB-C, the standard iPhone can't escape seeming just a little bit boring.The regular iPhone for 2023 gets a 50 price cut in the UK costing 799 (949/$799/A$1,499), although other regions aren't so lucky. That makes it about 200 cheaper than the similarly sized iPhone 15 Pro, with a plus-sized version also available for about 100 more. Continue reading...
Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3’s campaign is a queasy anachronism
Uninventive and a little uncomfortable, Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3's single-player is little more than a fairground ride - but will its players really care?Last year, Nintendo cancelled the rerelease of its war-themed strategy game Advance Wars. Russia's invasion of Ukraine several weeks earlier had made the timing feel tactless to the publisher, despite the game's sweetly cartoonish aesthetic. No such qualms for Activision, publisher of Modern Warfare 3, the latest entry to the 20-year-old Call of Duty series, which is released on 10 November. Less than a month after the beginning of the Israel-Hamas war, and with Russian troops still lodged in Ukrainian territory, the annual blockbuster arrives on shareholder-pleasing schedule, despite featuring several scenes of cinematically framed atrocity, such as the gory ransacking of a crowded football stadium by terrorists disguised as paramedics, and the hijacking and downing of a passenger jet bound for Sochi.While the series has often flitted between historical settings, including 1940s Europe and the buzzing, bloodied jungles of Vietnam, it is increasingly focused on contemporary battlefields, as the game's title suggests. As we switch perspectives between the captivating ensemble cast of international supersoldiers who comprise Task Force 141, we're treated to the latest technologies of elite soldiership. We hear a rodent squeal as a pair of night vision goggles spring to life, feel the kinetic tug of the ascender" tool as it bites a cable and hoists our character up a lift shaft, and marvel at the murderous silhouette of a hyper-evolved rifle, laden with a camera crew's worth of arcane attachments. Continue reading...
Pushing Buttons: Why Fortnite is suddenly the most popular game in the world once more
In this week's newsletter: Almost 45 million people returned to the battle royale for its throwback event. What does that say about Fortnite's grip on young gamers? Don't get Pushing Buttons delivered to your inbox? Sign up hereOver the weekend, almost 45 million people returned to Fortnite. The beginning of the battle royale shooter's's OG" event saw the map restored to its 2018 state, back before the entire in-game island was memorably sucked into a black hole. Those people played for a combined 102m hours in a single day, an all-time record, according to developer Epic Games. Not bad for a game that has been available for more than six years, and been a topic of playground conversation for half a decade.Firstly: 44.7 million people! That's 10 times the number who watched the premiere of The Last of Us, and more people than have ever bought a copy of To Kill a Mockingbird. It's reductive to look at video games purely through the lens of player numbers and revenue - to me it's the least interesting thing about them - but heck, what a number. Continue reading...
Melissa Kahraman: the 10 funniest things I have ever seen (on the internet)
The actor shares the clips and memes keeping her company at 2am - including two reality TV dons and a tiny house
Going ‘delulu’: being delusional is the new manifesting
The idea, according to TikTok, is to set wild expectations for yourself - and convince your mind to believe in themIn the 1950s, Norman Vincent Peale called it positive thinking". In the noughties, Oprah promoted it through her talkshow as manifesting". Just six or so months ago, TikTok dubbed it lucky girl syndrome".The belief that if you think it, it will come" has long been popular among the young and hopeful. Now it has another name: delulu - as in delusional. Continue reading...
Grand Theft Auto Six to be revealed in early December
A Bloomberg report gets out in front of the biggest video game announcement of the year, as Rockstar founder Sam Houser confirms that the first trailer for Rockstar's forthcoming game is imminentTake-Two and Rockstar Games are to officially announce the next instalment in its Grand Theft Auto series this week, according to a report from Bloomberg citing sources close to the game's development. Rockstar's founder Sam Houser has since confirmed that a trailer for the game will debut in December, coinciding with developer Rockstar's 25th anniversary.Much is already known about Grand Theft Auto Six due to an unprecedented leak in 2022, when hours' worth of in-progress game footage was stolen from Rockstar's servers, resulting in the conviction of two British teenagers. The developer had previously confirmed in February 2022 that work on the game was well underway". The game is set in Vice City, a fictional Miami last seen in 2006's GTA: Vice City Stories, and will feature the series' first female protagonist. Continue reading...
No, Tom Holland shouldn’t play Link: what’s your dream cast for The Legend of Zelda film?
When the new Zelda film was announced, fans immediately began debating who should play Ganon, Zelda and Sidon. Here is one big fan's dream castThe Legend of Zelda, one of the most successful and beloved gaming franchises of all time, is being made into a live-action film - and with such iconic characters as Link, Princess Zelda, the demonic Ganon and that one superhot half-fish prince everyone was in love earlier in the year, it's no wonder that the internet has absolutely exploded with people suggesting which actors should play them.So, we here at the Guardian thought we would put together our own dream cast for the upcoming flick. (And don't worry, we didn't quickly decide Tom Holland should play Link like the rest of the world.) Continue reading...
The Legend of Zelda: live-action movie in the works, Nintendo announces
Maze Runner director Wes Ball will direct film of beloved game franchise, which follows the hero Link on his quest to save Princess ZeldaA live-action film based on the hit game franchise The Legend of Zelda is in development, gaming giant Nintendo confirmed on Wednesday.The film will be directed by Wes Ball, who directed The Maze Runner series and the upcoming Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes. It will co-financed by Nintendo and Sony Pictures Entertainment. Continue reading...
Ex-Meta employee says his warnings of Instagram’s harm to teens were ignored
Arturo Bejar told Congress that he saw first-hand how the social media giant was not protecting his child from harassmentOn the same day whistleblower Frances Haugen was testifying before Congress about the harms of Facebook and Instagram to children in the fall of 2021, a former engineering director at the social media giant who had rejoined the company as a consultant sent an alarming email to Mark Zuckerberg about the same topic.Arturo Bejar, known for his expertise on curbing online harassment, recounted to the Meta CEO of his own daughter's troubling experiences with Instagram. But he said his concerns and warnings went unheeded. And on Tuesday, it was Bejar's turn to testify to Congress. Continue reading...
TechScape: Why Sunak’s ‘vanity jamboree’ on AI safety was actually … a success
Against the odds, world leaders agreed on a landmark declaration to bring stronger oversight to AI. Plus, Sam Bankman-Fried's very bad week Don't get TechScape delivered to your inbox? Sign up hereFor Max Tegmark, last week's artificial intelligence summit at Bletchley Park was an emotional moment. The MIT professor and AI researcher was behind a letter this year calling for a pause in development of advanced systems. It didn't happen, but it was a crucial contribution to the political and academic momentum that resulted in the Bletchley gathering.[The summit] has actually made me more optimistic. It really has superseded my expectations," he told me. I've been working for about 10 years, hoping that one day there would be an international summit on AI safety. Seeing it happen with my own eyes - and done so surprisingly well - was very moving."Five takeaways from the summit.Sister newsletter First Edition runs through what we learned about the dangers of AI.The great powers signed up to Sunak's meetup - while jostling for position.Zoe Williams is very good on the problem with tech bro philanthropy.It's not AI but the tech giants that control it that need reining in, writes John Naughton.AI pioneer Fei-Fei Li: I'm more concerned about the risks that are here and now."Sunak's summit trades in Silicon Valley celebrity and lays bare the UK's Brexit dilemmas, argues Rafael Behr. Continue reading...
Power up: will Chinese financing be the saviour of the Japanese video game industry?
Japan is seen as the home of games, but the sector is struggling - and China is poaching its talent. It's a power shift that may change the gaming landscape for goodIn September, a quarter of a million people journeyed through Japan's punishing late-summer heat to the cavernous expanse of the Makuhari Messe convention centre in the industrial hinterlands east of Tokyo. They came for the 27th Tokyo Game Show, which was back in full ostentatious form this year after a pandemic hiatus and a timorous return in 2022. Most came hoping for the chance to play one of the hundreds of as-yet-unreleased video games on display within the show's 11 hangars. Others hoped to broker deals to have their video game published, or to publish someone else's.To step through the front doors was to enter a scene of roaring overstimulation. A babble of tens of thousands of voices clashed with a competing timpani of video game trailers. Queues for some games were closed just 10 minutes after the show opened, having passed their maximum occupancy. All around were competing visions of the future of video games: traditional troll-battling fantasies; competitive shooting games in which the weapons shoot streams of candy-coloured bath bubbles; virtual reality racers played out from within hi-tech helmets; artificial reality dioramas layered atop the world as seen through a smartphone's camera lens; games filled with supporting characters whose dialogue was written and recorded by AI. (One booth offered a dozen books and manuals on ChatGPT and how it might revolutionise - or rather, cut costs for - the industry.) Continue reading...
Katie Hopkins and Tommy Robinson thank Elon Musk for reinstating them on X
Former Daily Mail columnist and far-right agitator show their gratitude after rejoining social media platformThe former Daily Mail columnist Katie Hopkins and the far-right agitator Tommy Robinson have thanked Elon Musk for reinstating their accounts on X after being banned for hateful conduct".Hopkins, who found fame as a candidate on BBC's The Apprentice, was suspended permanently in 2020 on the platform, then known as Twitter. Continue reading...
Was crypto on trial with Sam Bankman-Fried?
Binance and Coinbase are under investigation - but bitcoin was trading at highest value in a year as FTX founder convicted of fraudAs the trial of the former crypto star and FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried began last month, headlines declared cryptocurrency was on trial too.But when Bankman-Fried was found guilty on seven counts of wire fraud and money-laundering conspiracy on Thursday evening, after less than five hours of jury deliberations, bitcoin was trading at its highest price in a year. Continue reading...
Is AI regulation really possible? | Fiona Katauskas
Try these top tips Continue reading...
Frog Detective: The Entire Mystery review – whimsical whodunnits
Worm Club; PlayStation 4/5, Nintendo Switch, Xbox One
‘AI can teach us a lot’: scientists say cats’ expressions richer than imagined and aim to translate them
Artificial intelligence being used to unpick meanings behind vocal and physical cues of host of creaturesIf an unexpected meow, peculiar pose, or unusual twitch of the whiskers leaves you puzzling over what your cat is trying to tell you, artificial intelligence may soon be able to translate.Scientists are turning to new technology to unpick the meanings behind the vocal and physical cues of a host of animals. Continue reading...
WhatsApp’s AI shows gun-wielding children when prompted with ‘Palestine’
By contrast, prompts for Israeli' do not generate images of people wielding guns, even in response to a prompt for Israel army'A WhatsApp feature that generates images in response to users' searches returns a picture of a gun or a boy with a gun when prompted with the terms Palestinian", Palestine" or Muslim boy Palestinian", the Guardian has learned.The search results varied when tested by different users, but the Guardian verified through screenshots and its own tests that various stickers portraying guns surfaced for these three search results. Prompts for Israeli boy" generated cartoons of children playing soccer and reading. In response to a prompt for Israel army" the AI created drawings of soldiers smiling and praying, no guns involved. Continue reading...
The great powers signed up to Sunak’s AI summit – while jostling for position
Even China is part of the UK's Bletchley declaration' - but Britain is not the only country ambitious to lead on the issueSitting in a purpose-built hut in the grounds of the historic Bletchley Park country estate, British officials believed they had pulled off a diplomatic coup.On stage in front of them was the UK's technology secretary, Michelle Donelan, and behind her were high-level representatives from the US and China, together for the first time to discuss the international regulation of artificial intelligence. Continue reading...
Jusant review – a skyscraping climbing game with the gift of perspective
PlayStation 5 (version tested), Xbox Series X/S, PC; Don't Nod
Ilya: The AI scientist shaping the world
Ilya Sutskever, one of the leading AI scientists behind ChatGPT, reflects on his founding vision and values. In conversations with the film-maker Tonje Hessen Schei as he was developing the chat language model between 2016 and 2019, he describes his personal philosophy and makes startling predictions for a technology already shaping our world. Reflecting on his ideas today, amid a global debate over safety and regulation, we consider the opportunities as well as the consequences of AI technology. Ilya discusses his ultimate goal of artificial general intelligence (AGI), a computer system that can do any job or task that a human does, but better', and questions whether the AGI arms race will be good or bad for humanity.These filmed interviews with Ilya Sustkever are part of a feature length documentary on artificial intelligence, called iHumanIlya Continue reading...
‘It’s not clear we can control it’: what they said at the Bletchley Park AI summit
Elon Musk, the world's richest man; Mustafa Suleyman, co-founder of DeepMind; and King Charles among those weighing inThe global AI safety summit opened at Bletchley Park on Wednesday with a landmark declaration from countries including the UK, US, EU and China that the technology poses a potentially catastrophic risk to humanity.The so-called Bletchley declaration said: There is potential for serious, even catastrophic, harm, either deliberate or unintentional, stemming from the most significant capabilities of these AI models." Continue reading...
The Guardian view on AI regulation: the threat is too grave for Sunak’s light-touch approach | Editorial
The PM's fear of stifling innovation makes him too hesitant to deal with problems that Washington and Brussels are already addressingThe challenge of regulating artificial intelligence is sometimes compared to the management of nuclear energy: there are valuable civil applications alongside terrifying military ones, and a credible risk of existential calamity if it all goes wrong. But nuclear weapons are expensive and hard to acquire. By contrast, AI can distribute awesome power at relatively low cost. This adds unprecedented complexity to the task facing attenders at an AI safety summit that Rishi Sunak is hosting this week at Bletchley Park.The prime minister wants to position the UK as a global leader in the field. It is a creditable diplomatic endeavour, partly vindicated by the Bletchley declaration" in which 28 countries agree to a sustained global dialogue on managing emerging AI risks. Significantly, both the US and China have signed. Continue reading...
Thirsty Suitors – emotional combat that’s equal parts funny, horny and heartfelt
PC, PlayStation 4/5, Xbox, Nintendo Switch; Outerloop Games/Annapurna Interactive
Kamala Harris to call for urgent action on AI threat to democracy and privacy
US vice-president to say short-term problems with technology as pressing as existential ones, before UK summit
My Airbnb host threw me out on the street at midnight
My possessions were dumped outside and there was no way I could get helpOn the last night of my stay in a Washington DC Airbnb, I returned late to find all my possessions - including my passport - dumped in the street outside the apartment in carrier bags. Eerily, the apartment had been cleaned. The host arrived and told me I had to leave since someone else had booked that night. By then it was midnight. I showed my booking confirmation stating checkout was 11am the following morning, and she looked sheepish. No guest materialised, since the host had clearly muddled her dates, and I was allowed to stay the night.I tried to contact Airbnb and discovered that, in an emergency, you are given just three options: phone the police, contact your host, or ask your host for a partial refund. There is no phone number to call - instead, you can only request a callback. It didn't call me until 3am (when, mercifully, I had made it to bed). It had been told by the host I had refused" to check out. I had to remind Airbnb of my booking dates. Continue reading...
Rishi Sunak’s vanity jamboree on AI safety lays bare the UK’s Brexit dilemmas | Rafael Behr
At a table where democratic accountability should dominate, a diminished nation is trading in Silicon Valley celebrityWho is the more trustworthy custodian of machines capable of diverting the course of human civilisation: Elon Musk or the Chinese Communist party? Will it be the billionaire megalomaniac tycoon who meddles in international crises as if they were video games loaded on to his personal propaganda console? Or the authoritarian superpower that likes digital technology best when it enables more efficient and ruthless social engineering and political repression?Neither is the answer - and thankfully, other options are available. But asking the question in starkly polarised terms illuminates the challenge posed by artificial intelligence that is evolving faster than any effort to bring it under responsible supervision.Rafael Behr is a Guardian columnist Continue reading...
‘AI’ named most notable word of 2023 by Collins dictionary
Chosen from a list that includes greedflation', nepo baby' and deinfluencing', use of term has quadrupled this yearThe technology that is set to dominate the future - for good or ill - is now the word of the year. AI" has been named the most notable word of 2023 by the dictionary publisher Collins.Defined as the modelling of human mental functions by computer programs", AI was chosen because it has accelerated at such a fast pace and become the dominant conversation of 2023", the publisher said. The use of the word (strictly an initialism) has quadrupled over the past year. Continue reading...
Nick Clegg compares AI clamour to ‘moral panic’ in 80s over video games
Meta executive's comments show regulation discussions at UK summit could face tough resistanceNick Clegg has compared the clamour over artificial intelligence to the 80s-era moral panic" over video games, firing a warning shot to international politicians and regulators as they gather for a two-day summit on AI safety.The former UK deputy prime minister who is now president of global affairs at Mark Zuckerberg's Meta said AI was caught in a great hype cycle" but warned that new technologies inspired a mixture of excessive zeal and excessive pessimism. Continue reading...
Tesla wins first major US autopilot lawsuit over 2019 fatal crash
The case was filed in California by two passengers who survived a 2019 crash, in which the driver diedTesla on Tuesday won the first US trial over allegations that its autopilot driver assistance feature led to a death, a major victory for the automaker as it faces several similar lawsuits across the country.The case, in a California state court, was filed by two passengers in a 2019 crash who accused the company of knowing the autopilot feature was defective when it sold the car. Tesla argued that human error caused the crash. Continue reading...
TSB reimbursed 15 times more customers’ fraud losses than Monzo in 2022
Regulator figures show huge differences in banks' treatment of fraud victims, from 94% of claims refunded by TSB to 6% at MonzoThe shocking disparity in the way the banks refund fraud victims has been laid bare in figures that show TSB refunded 94% of customer fraud claims in full last year, while for Monzo the figure was just 6%.According to the data, published on Tuesday by the Payments System Regulator (PSR), TSB was the standout bank in terms of refunding victims of authorised push payment (APP) fraud. Continue reading...
An AI smoothie shop opened in San Francisco with much hype. Why is it closed already?
BetterBlends promised to invest in the city's beleaguered downtown but closed its doors in under two monthsIn September, a bespoke AI nutrition" store opened in beleaguered downtown San Francisco to much fanfare, promising smoothie concoctions generated by AI and a much-needed boost to the area. Less than two months later, it has seemingly closed without explanation.BetterBlends advertised Your Smoothie, powered by AI" and received positive press upon its opening, ginning up excitement for a new business and a novel use of artificial intelligence. Its AI model would take customer orders and preferences to generate a smoothie recipe that would then be blended by hand by co-founders Michael Parlato and Clayton Reynolds, who worked in the shop. Continue reading...
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