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"I'm interested in all kinds of astronomy."
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Three days after Amazon announced its AI chatbot Q, some employees are sounding alarms about accuracy and privacy issues. Q is “experiencing severe hallucinations and leaking confidential data,” including the location of AWS data centers, internal discount programs, and unreleased features, according to leaked documents obtained by Platformer.

An employee marked the incident as “sev 2,” meaning an incident bad enough to warrant paging engineers at night and make them work through the weekend to fix it.

https://www.platformer.news/p/amazons-q-has-severe-hallucinations

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The first was this paper, which discusses how master keyed mechanical locks work and relates them to the kind of analysis we use in cryptography: https://www.mattblaze.org/papers/mk.pdf

It was published in IEEE Security & Privacy, but locksmiths got wind of it because it got some press coverage. They didn't like it. They were unhappy that it described a very simple attack against master keyed systems that lets a regular user turn their key in to a master key for the whole system.

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Lorenzo Franceschi-Bicchierai

Edited 2 years ago

NEW: David Vincenzetti, the founder of spyware maker Hacking Team, has been arrested.

Vincenzetti is accused of attempted murder. He allegedly stabbed a relative at his home. A judge has ordered him to stay in prison as a precautionary measure, and has ordered a psychological evaluation, according to Italian media reports.

I'm honestly in shock. Hacking Team's story is still getting crazier, eight years after it got spectacularly hacked.

https://techcrunch.com/2023/11/29/founder-of-spyware-maker-hacking-team-arrested-for-attempted-murder-local-media/

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Interesting nugget from Okta's blog post by chief security officer David Bradbury.

"While 94% of Okta customers already require MFA for their administrators..."

That means 6% of Okta customers *don't* require MFA for its administrators. That accounts for over a thousand organizations potentially without a basic secondary security control in place. Truly wild in the year of 2023.

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Like, I really don't get why so many of you are so eager to have statistical models write code for you.

I've been arguing for literally my whole career that the actual writing isn't the hard part of software development. But wow, did everyone take that in the wrong direction recently.

Understanding the system is the hard and valuable part. And I genuinely don't know how you think you're going to do that if you never get to do any of the safe and easy interactions with the system.

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Terry Pratchett was wise

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Whenever I explain my at Google into mobile text editing, I'm usually met with blank stares or a slightly hostile "Everyone can edit text on their phones, right? What's the problem?"

Text editing on mobile isn't ok. It's actually much worse than you think, an invisible problem no one appreciates. I wrote this post so you can understand why it's so important.
https://jenson.org/text

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Martin Hamilton (39C3 rehab)

@cstross Butcher, baker, ransomware maker... blobfoxhyper2

Credit: @rubenbolling for Tom The Dancing Bug's take on Busy Town 🙏

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Edited 2 years ago

Microsoft paid money for this. A lot of money.

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Dear Microsoft. Here is a list of things I want the Start Menu to do:

* Show my installed programs
* Search my local files
* Provide access to system settings

Here is a list of things I do *not* want the Start Menu to do:

* Show the weather for a randomly-selected town near my network's public IP infrastructure
* Show tabloid headlines
* Show programs I *don't* have installed
* Search the web via Bing
* Show adverts(!)
* Attempt to engage me in conversation with a hallucinating LLM

Thanks.

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To any journalists reading this: It is essential that you bring a heavy dose of skepticism to all claims by people working on "AI". Just because they're using a lot of computer power/understand advanced math/failed up into large amounts of VC money doesn't mean their claims can't and shouldn't be challenged. 24/

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Check it out, it's tmp.0ut Volume 3!

https://tmpout.sh/3/

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Turing test.

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When we warn the real threat of AI is how it’s used against people in the present, not the fantasies that some day computers might think for themselves, this is exactly the kind of thing we’re talking about: health insurers using AI to deny care.

https://arstechnica.com/health/2023/11/ai-with-90-error-rate-forces-elderly-out-of-rehab-nursing-homes-suit-claims/

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the eu is fucking wild man
“hey, we just passed landmark privacy regulations!”
“oh by the way we’re trying to mandate backdoors into every encryption scheme”
“we are forcing google, apple, and microsoft to stop locking down their ecosystems!”
“oh yeah we’re also trying to mandate backdoors in all browsers’ certificate stacks”
“anti-adblock is spyware ^_^ we’re suing youtube”

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if it walks like malware and talks like malware, license it to game publishers and call it an anti-cheat solution

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Anyone gonna switch to Mozilla Firefox?

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Edited 2 years ago

I spent this year talking to the 3 young hackers behind Mirai, the malware that once broke the internet.

This is WIRED's resulting cover story—an epic, untold, 22,000-word tale of cybercrime, friendship, chaos, betrayal, paranoia, and redemption.

Read: https://www.wired.com/story/mirai-untold-story-three-young-hackers-web-killing-monster/

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The FBI reportedly has known the identities of at least a dozen hackers tied to the notorious Scattered Spider gang (which hacked MGM and Caesars in September) for more than six months, but has failed to make any arrests, according to this new @Reuters investigation.

The unusual part: Many of the hackers are seemingly based in the U.S. and other Western nations, making arrests actually possible!

https://www.reuters.com/technology/cybersecurity/fbi-struggled-disrupt-dangerous-casino-hacking-gang-cyber-responders-say-2023-11-14/

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