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ByteDance and DeepSeek Are Placing Very Different AI Bets

WIRED

The diverging path of China's two leading AI players shows where the country's artificial intelligence industry is headed. DeepSeek and ByteDance, the two leaders of China's AI industry, are adopting vastly different strategies. On Monday, DeepSeek released DeepSeek V3.2, another open-weight model that anyone can tinker with. The startup says it performs on par with the latest models from OpenAI and Google, and it even beats them on some key mathematics benchmarks. That same day, ByteDance, whose dominance in AI applications we covered previously, introduced ways for people to use its chatbot, Doubao.


Putin rejects key parts of US peace plan as Kremlin official warns Europe faces new war risk: report

FOX News

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MIKE DAVIS: Congress must stop Big Tech's AI amnesty scam before it's too late

FOX News

Senator Ted Cruz leads efforts to pass AI amnesty through the NDAA, giving Big Tech federal preemption without rules to protect conservatives and children.


The age of unipolar diplomacy is coming to an end

Al Jazeera

What is a Palestinian without olives? In Gaza, the world has seen the cost of a diplomacy that claims to uphold a rules-based order but applies it selectively. The United States intervened late, and only to defend an occupation the International Court of Justice (ICJ) has ruled illegal. Alongside other Western nations that built multilateral institutions, the US increasingly pursues nationalist agendas that undermine them. The hypocrisy is stark: one set of rules for Ukraine, another for Gaza.


'I don't take no for an answer': how a small group of women changed the law on deepfake porn

The Guardian

Charlotte Owen: 'The Lords were blown away by these brilliant women.' Charlotte Owen: 'The Lords were blown away by these brilliant women.' 'I don't take no for an answer': how a small group of women changed the law on deepfake porn For Jodie*, watching the conviction of her best friend, and knowing she helped secure it, felt at first like a kind of victory. It was certainly more than most survivors of deepfake image-based abuse could expect. They had met as students and bonded over their shared love of music. In the years since graduation, he'd also become her support system, the friend she reached for each time she learned that her images and personal details had been posted online without her consent.


Spotlight shines on humanoid robots at Tokyo show

The Japan Times

A humanoid robot from GMO Internet Group dances and hops at the 2025 International Robot Exhibition on Wednesday in Tokyo. Robots equipped with cutting-edge technologies that perform duties on behalf of humans at workplaces and disaster-hit sites are on display at the 2025 International Robot Exhibition in Tokyo. At the exhibition, which kicked off at Tokyo Big Sight on Wednesday, the spotlight is on humanoid robots as well as those powered by artificial intelligence. Kawasaki Heavy Industries is showcasing the newest model of its humanoid robot Kaleido, which is equipped with technologies such as autonomous movement and remote control. In a demonstration held the same day, the robot extinguished a mock fire, removed a fallen shelf weighing 30 kilograms and rescued a dummy cat.


Police arrest high school student over cyberattack on net cafe operator

The Japan Times

The Metropolitan Police Department arrested a 17-year-old boy on Thursday for allegedly carrying out a cyberattack on the operator of the Kaikatsu Club internet cafe chain, sources said. Tokyo police served an arrest warrant on a 17-year-old boy on Thursday for allegedly carrying out a cyberattack on the operator of the Kaikatsu Club internet cafe chain, investigative sources said. The Metropolitan Police Department arrested the second-year high school student from the city of Osaka over an alleged violation of the law against unauthorized computer access and fraudulent obstruction of business. According to the sources, the boy fraudulently obtained about 7.25 million sets of Kaikatsu Club membership information with a computer program he created using the ChatGPT artificial intelligence chatbot. The boy is said to have skills strong enough to have won awards in cybersecurity competitions, as reported by TBS.


Facial recognition could be used more widely by police

BBC News

Facial recognition technology could be used more often by UK police forces, according to new plans announced by the Home Office. Policing and crime minister Sarah Jones said a widespread rollout of the equipment could mark the biggest breakthrough in catching criminals since DNA matching. People are being asked for their views on its use, as part of a 10-week consultation launched on Thursday, possibly paving the way for new laws. Jones credited the technology for helping to arrest thousands of criminals, but campaign group Big Brother Watch said increased use would make George Orwell roll in his grave. Facial recognition is used to locate wanted suspects and find vulnerable people.


Protest at synagogue in Koreatown ends in arrests, hate accusations

Los Angeles Times

Things to Do in L.A. Tap to enable a layout that focuses on the article. The Audrey Irmas Pavilion, left, at the Wilshire Boulevard Temple, center in background, in 2021. This is read by an automated voice. Please report any issues or inconsistencies here . Two were arrested during a pro-Palestinian protest at Wilshire Boulevard Temple that ended in confrontation.


Canadian military's cyber chief touts AI's advantages but warns against 'unquestioned' use

The Japan Times

Canadian military's cyber chief touts AI's advantages but warns against'unquestioned' use AI-infused military systems are enabling operators and commanders to not only identify anomalies or threats that might be missed by analysts or traditional systems, but also to quickly analyze large volumes of data to support critical decision-making on the battlefield. Artificial intelligence has begun providing critical advantages for armed forces in an era where the speed of decision-making could be the deciding factor between victory and defeat, the Canadian military's cybercommand chief told The Japan Times. Yet despite the advantages in operational efficiency, no country should be adopting these cutting-edge technologies in "an unquestioned or unlimited manner," Maj. Gen. Dave Yarker warned in an exclusive interview on Wednesday in Tokyo, amid concerns that doing so may present unforeseeable risks. "We are using AI to make our defenses stronger and improve our ability to protect ourselves," Yarker said.