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The CrowdStrike bug and the risk of cascading failures

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During World War II, the U.S. Army Air Forces twice targeted ball bearing factories in Schweinfurt based on the thesis that disrupting manufacturing operations would have an impact on Germany’s ability to produce many forms of war fighting machinery. This pattern is playing out today in the cybersecurity world, where an attack on one industry […]

The post The CrowdStrike bug and the risk of cascading failures appeared first on SiliconANGLE.

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JayM
19 hours ago
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denismm
17 hours ago
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The AI illustration makes me assume the author has no idea what they’re talking about.

We're excited about our new roundabout

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JayM
1 day ago
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Insecure Deebot robot vacuums collect photos and audio to train AI

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JayM
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License Plate Readers Are Creating a US-Wide Database of More Than Just Cars

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Wired reports on "AI-powered cameras mounted on cars and trucks, initially designed to capture license plates, but which are now photographing political lawn signs outside private homes, individuals wearing T-shirts with text, and vehicles displaying pro-abortion bumper stickers — all while recordi00ng the precise locations of these observations..." The detailed photographs all surfaced in search results produced by the systems of DRN Data, a license-plate-recognition (LPR) company owned by Motorola Solutions. The LPR system can be used by private investigators, repossession agents, and insurance companies; a related Motorola business, called Vigilant, gives cops access to the same LPR data. However, files shared with WIRED by artist Julia Weist, who is documenting restricted datasets as part of her work, show how those with access to the LPR system can search for common phrases or names, such as those of politicians, and be served with photographs where the search term is present, even if it is not displayed on license plates... Beyond highlighting the far-reaching nature of LPR technology, which has collected billions of images of license plates, the research also shows how people's personal political views and their homes can be recorded into vast databases that can be queried. "It really reveals the extent to which surveillance is happening on a mass scale in the quiet streets of America," says Jay Stanley, a senior policy analyst at the American Civil Liberties Union. "That surveillance is not limited just to license plates, but also to a lot of other potentially very revealing information about people." DRN, in a statement issued to WIRED, said it complies with "all applicable laws and regulations...." Over more than a decade, DRN has amassed more than 15 billion "vehicle sightings" across the United States, and it claims in its marketing materials that it amasses more than 250 million sightings per month. Images in DRN's commercial database are shared with police using its Vigilant system, but images captured by law enforcement are not shared back into the wider database. The system is partly fueled by DRN "affiliates" who install cameras in their vehicles, such as repossession trucks, and capture license plates as they drive around. Each vehicle can have up to four cameras attached to it, capturing images in all angles. These affiliates earn monthly bonuses and can also receive free cameras and search credits... "License plate recognition (LPR) technology supports public safety and community services, from helping to find abducted children and stolen vehicles to automating toll collection and lowering insurance premiums by mitigating insurance fraud," Jeremiah Wheeler, the president of DRN, says in a statement... Wheeler did not respond to WIRED's questions about whether there are limits on what can be searched in license plate databases, why images of homes with lawn signs but no vehicles in sight appeared in search results, or if filters are used to reduce such images. Privacy experts shared their reactions with Wired "Perhaps [people] want to express themselves in their communities, to their neighbors, but they don't necessarily want to be logged into a nationwide database that's accessible to police authorities." — Jay Stanley, a senior policy analyst at the American Civil Liberties Union "When government or private companies promote license plate readers, they make it sound like the technology is only looking for lawbreakers or people suspected of stealing a car or involved in an amber alert, but that's just not how the technology works. The technology collects everyone's data and stores that data often for immense periods of time." — Dave Maass, an EFF director of investigations "The way that the country is set up was to protect citizens from government overreach, but there's not a lot put in place to protect us from private actors who are engaged in business meant to make money." — Nicole McConlogue, associate law professor at Mitchell Hamline School of Law (who has researched license-plate-surveillance systems) Thanks to long-time Slashdot reader schwit1 for sharing the article.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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JayM
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OpenAI launches new ‘Canvas’ ChatGPT interface tailored to writing and coding projects

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OpenAI is currently beta testing its new Canvas feature. (Video above from Developers Digest.) They hope to ‘go beyond simple chat’ in a collaborative environment. While some kinks need to be worked out it could become a powerful new tool

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The features for the coding canvas are slightly different. Levine prompted ChatGPT to create an API web server in Python, which spawned in the canvas window. By pressing an “add comments” button, ChatGPT will add in-line documentation to explain the code in plain English. Further, if you highlight a section of code that ChatGPT created, you can ask the chatbot to explain it to you, or ask questions about it. ChatGPT is also getting a new “review code” button, which will suggest specific edits for the code in the window, whether generated or user-written, for them to approve, edit themselves, or decline. If they press approve, ChatGPT will take a stab at fixing the bugs itself.

Reas more from Tech Crunch and the announcement post form OpenAI


Generating Text with ChatGPT, Pico W & CircuitPython using these products!

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JayM
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Kevin Mandia Joins Expel's Board of Directors

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JayM
2 days ago
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Well, I mean Dave worked for him as CTO at Mandiant and retired from there before starting Expel... ;)
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