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List of All Articles with Tag 'tec'

Google Bets $2 Billion on AI Startup Anthropic, Inks Cloud Deal
Google Bets $2 Billion on AI Startup Anthropic, Inks Cloud Deal
Google has committed to invest $2 billion in the artificial intelligence company Anthropic, solidifying its relationship with the
1970-01-01 08:00
Crypto Unicorn Expects India to Lower Tax That Crushed Trading
Crypto Unicorn Expects India to Lower Tax That Crushed Trading
A tax that pulverized digital-asset trading in India has proved counterproductive and ought to be lowered, according to
1970-01-01 08:00
Bankman-Fried Testifies: ‘No, I Did Not’ Defraud FTX Customers
Bankman-Fried Testifies: ‘No, I Did Not’ Defraud FTX Customers
“The defense calls Sam Bankman-Fried.” The words hung in the air inside the hushed federal courtroom. Every eye
1970-01-01 08:00
Elon Musk's X launches two new premium subscription plans
Elon Musk's X launches two new premium subscription plans
Elon Musk's social media platform X, formerly known as Twitter, rolled out two new subscription plans on Friday,
1970-01-01 08:00
Tech Startup’s Wild First Week Won Then Lost Founder Billions
Tech Startup’s Wild First Week Won Then Lost Founder Billions
The chief executive officer of reAlpha Tech Corp., a small property technology startup, briefly gained billions of dollars
1970-01-01 08:00
iOS 17.2: Update bringing host of new changes including Journal app and iPhone 15 Pro features
iOS 17.2: Update bringing host of new changes including Journal app and iPhone 15 Pro features
Apple is preparing a new update that will bring a host of new features to the iPhone. Some of the tools were announced in June, when Apple first showed off its major iOS 17 update, such as the long-awaited Journal app. That uses machine learning to understand what people have done in a day, and encourages them to write about their activities to remember them. Some are unexpected. That includes new updates to the iPhone 15 Pro’s action button: now, users can press the button to bring up a translate option, which shows a window and lets people speak text to have it appear in another language. The action button was introduced with the iPhone 15 Pro last month, as a replacement for the mute switch that can be mapped to any activity. Apple did not say then that it was planning to introduce new actions for that button. The new update also lets people add stickers as reactions on messages, collaborate on Apple Music playlists, redesigns the Apple TV app and some widgets, and more. iOS 17.2 was released as a developer beta update this week. It will likely make its way to everyone’s phones in November or December, though it will be possible to get it earlier by signing up to Apple’s public beta channel. Those on the public updates received their own update this week, in the form iOS 17.1. But the changes introduced with that update are more limited, such as new settings for the StandBy mode that shows when a phone is placed on its side and an AirDrop feature that lets transfers continue over the internet when devices are separated. Read More The Apple Watch feature everyone has been waiting for has finally arrived Apple’s plans for the future of AirPods might just have been revealed Apple TV+ and other subscriptions are about to get a lot more expensive
1970-01-01 08:00
Silver Lake, Thoma Bravo-Backed SolarWinds Is Weighing Potential Sale
Silver Lake, Thoma Bravo-Backed SolarWinds Is Weighing Potential Sale
SolarWinds Corp., a publicly traded software company controlled by Silver Lake Management and Thoma Bravo, is exploring options
1970-01-01 08:00
EU's von der Leyen to attend Britain's AI summit
EU's von der Leyen to attend Britain's AI summit
By Martin Coulter LONDON Two of the European Union's most senior officials plan to attend Britain's artificial intelligence
1970-01-01 08:00
ChatGPT creators OpenAI form ‘Preparedness’ group to get ready for ‘catastrophe’
ChatGPT creators OpenAI form ‘Preparedness’ group to get ready for ‘catastrophe’
OpenAI, the creators of ChatGPT, have formed a new group to prepare for the “catastrophic risks” of artificial intelligence. The “Preparedness” team will aim to “track, evaluate, forecast and protect against catastrophic risks”, the company said. Those risks include artificial intelligence being used to craft powerful persuasive messages, to endanger cybersecurity and to be used in nuclear and other kinds of weapons. The team will also work against “autonomous replication and adaptation”, or ARA – the danger that an AI would gain the power to be able to copy and change itself. “We believe that frontier AI models, which will exceed the capabilities currently present in the most advanced existing models, have the potential to benefit all of humanity,” OpenAI said. “But they also pose increasingly severe risks.” Avoiding those dangerous situations will mean building frameworks to predict and then protect people against the dangerous capabilities of new artificial intelligence systems, OpenAI said. That will be one of the tasks of the new team. At the same time, OpenAI launched a new “Preparedness Challenge”. That encourages people to think about “the most unique, while still being probable, potentially catastrophic misuse of the model” such as using it to shut down power grids, for instance. Particularly good submissions of ideas for the malicious uses of artificial intelligence will win credits to use on OpenAI’s tools, and the company suggested that some of those people could be hired to the team. It will be led by Aleksander Madry, an AI expert from Massachusetts Institute of Technology, OpenAI said. OpenAI revealed the new team as part of its contribution to the UK’s AI Safety Summit, which will happen next week. OpenAI was one of a range of companies that have made commitments on how it will ensure the safe use of artificial intelligence. Read More WhatsApp update will change how you log in forever ChatGPT creator quietly changes core values from ‘thoughtful’ to ‘scrappy’
1970-01-01 08:00
Low-cost e-commerce rivals Shein and Temu shelve US court cases
Low-cost e-commerce rivals Shein and Temu shelve US court cases
By Casey Hall SHANGHAI Fierce rivals Shein and PDD Holdings-owned Temu have applied to end their legal fights
1970-01-01 08:00
Retail investors seek to buy the dip on US megacaps -Vanda Research
Retail investors seek to buy the dip on US megacaps -Vanda Research
By Lewis Krauskopf NEW YORK Retail investors appear to be eager to buy up shares of the big
1970-01-01 08:00
Your brain doesn’t work the same on Zoom, scientists say
Your brain doesn’t work the same on Zoom, scientists say
Your brain doesn’t work the same when you speak to someone on Zoom, scientists have confirmed. Neural signalling is significantly less when chatting to someone through a video call rather than having a face-to-face conversation, the new study found. When researchers watched the brain of someone talking in real life, they found that there was a detailed and complex system of neurological activity. On Zoom, however, that was dramatically less. It suggests that there is still something fundamentally lacking about speaking with someone online. People’s faces are not able to light up people’s brains in the same way, the researchers suggest. That is something of a surprise: current models suggest that the brain should process people’s faces in the same way whether they are on Zoom or in real life, given the features of them are the same. But the new study suggests that there really is something fundamentally different between the two contexts. “In this study we find that the social systems of the human brain are more active during real live in-person encounters than on Zoom,” said Joy Hirsch, a Yale professor who was the lead author on the new study. “Zoom appears to be an impoverished social communication system relative to in-person conditions.” To find that, researchers studied people’s brains in real time as well as looking at other signals, such as where people’s eyes moved. As well as increased neural activity, the researchers found that people’s eyes hovered for longer on the real faces, for instance. The two people’s brains also seemed to be more co-ordinated. That suggests that there are more social cues being shared between the two people, they said. “Overall, the dynamic and natural social interactions that occur spontaneously during in-person interactions appear to be less apparent or absent during Zoom encounters,” Professor Hirsch said. “This is a really robust effect.” The study suggests that face-to-face encounters remain very important, even as technology companies and others come up with new ways for us to interact with people remotely, the authors said. “Online representations of faces, at least with current technology, do not have the same ‘privileged access’ to social neural circuitry in the brain that is typical of the real thing,” said Professor Hirsch. The findings are described in a new paper, ‘Separable Processes for Live “In-Person” and Live “Zoom-like” Faces’, published in Imaging Neuroscience. Read More The Apple Watch feature everyone has been waiting for has finally arrived Scientists find surprise ‘layer’ underneath surface of Mars Apple’s plans for the future of AirPods might just have been revealed
1970-01-01 08:00
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