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NASA's Boss Just Shook Up the Agency's Plans to Land on the Moon

WIRED

NASA's Boss Just Shook Up the Agency's Plans to Land on the Moon Sean Duffy called out SpaceX for being "behind schedule" on a lunar lander and said he'd explore other options. NASA acting administrator Sean Duffy made two television appearances on Monday morning in which he shook up the space agency's plans to return humans to the moon. Speaking on Fox News, where the secretary of transportation frequently appears in his acting role as NASA chief, Duffy said SpaceX has fallen behind in its efforts to develop the Starship vehicle as a lunar lander. Duffy also indirectly acknowledged that NASA's projected target of a 2027 crewed lunar landing is no longer achievable. Accordingly, he said he intended to expand the competition to develop a lander capable of carrying humans down to the moon from lunar orbit and back.


What lies beneath: Scientists discover a giant granite slab half the size of WALES hidden under the West Antarctic Ice Sheet

Daily Mail - Science & tech

Melania Trump accused of'calculated campaign to destroy' notorious biographer in lawsuit claiming she sabotaged tell-all on First Lady Young Americans identifying as trans or nonbinary in FREEFALL as experts pinpoint what's behind the shift Prince Andrew will be summoned to give evidence on Jeffrey Epstein to US Congress committee as victim says shamed royal should'do right' by Virginia Guiffre and testify What Britney Spears is really like behind closed doors: For first time, Kevin Federline reveals secrets he refused to spill even for $1 million... including'terrifying' acts that left their children running to him The real story behind Jim Carrey's disappearance: He once made $20m per film. Now insiders tell TOM LEONARD about the mysterious suicide of his married lover and claims of autism'cure' at the heart of his Hollywood downfall Is Meghan about to launch a new'Kardashian-style' mega brand? Duchess cosies up to CEO behind Kim Kardashian's wildly successful Skims range as speculation about her new venture grows Women's tennis in'manliness' row: World's No 1 and 2 come under fire from rival for their'high testosterone' - before Aryna Sabalenka appears to fire back after being labelled a'big' player Harvey Weinstein's ex-wife Georgina Chapman is facing foreclosure on $2.5 million NYC home Suzanne Somers' widower shocks fans as he resurrects star in'AI clone' format: 'You can't tell the difference' Vicious catfight erupts between Trump's leading ladies. Feud is talk of White House: 'It's real and it's personal' Karoline Leavitt goes scorched earth on'bitter' Biden press secretary over'deplorable' comments Three brutal words in my best friend's wedding invite cut like a knife. Meghan's hit a trashy new low.


AI models misrepresent news events nearly half the time, study says

Al Jazeera

AI models such as ChatGPT routinely misrepresent news events, providing faulty responses to questions almost half the time, a study has found. The study published on Wednesday by the European Broadcasting Union (EBU) and the BBC assessed the accuracy of more than 2,700 responses given by OpenAI's ChatGPT, Google's Gemini, Microsoft's Copilot, and Perplexity. Overall, 45 percent of responses had at least one "significant" issue, according to the research. Sourcing was the most common problem, with 31 percent of responses including information not supported by the cited source, or incorrect or unverifiable attribution, among other issues. A lack of accuracy was the next biggest contributor to faulty answers, affecting 20 percent of responses, followed by the absence of appropriate context, with 14 percent.


'Time Is Running Out': New Open Letter Calls for Ban on Superintelligent AI Development

TIME - Tech

'Time Is Running Out': New Open Letter Calls for Ban on Superintelligent AI Development The home page of the ChatGPT application displayed on a smartphone screen. The home page of the ChatGPT application displayed on a smartphone screen. An open letter calling for the prohibition of the development of superintelligent AI was announced on Wednesday, with the signatures of more than 700 celebrities, AI scientists, faith leaders, and policymakers. Among the signatories are five Nobel laureates; two so-called "Godfathers of AI;" Steve Wozniak, a co-founder of Apple; Steve Bannon, a close ally of President Trump; Paolo Benanti, an adviser to the Pope; and even Harry and Meghan, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex. "We call for a prohibition on the development of superintelligence, not lifted before there is The letter was coordinated and published by the Future of Life Institute, a nonprofit that in 2023 published a different open letter calling for a six-month pause on the development of powerful AI systems. Although widely-circulated, that letter did not achieve its goal. Organizers said they decided to mount a new campaign, with a more specific focus on superintelligence, because they believe the technology--which they define as a system that can surpass human performance on all useful tasks--could arrive in as little as one to two years. "Time is running out," says Anthony Aguirre, the FLI's executive director, in an interview with TIME. The only thing likely to stop AI companies barreling toward superintelligence, he says, "is for there to be widespread realization among society at all its levels that this is not actually what we want." Polling released alongside the letter showed that 64% of Americans believe that superintelligence "shouldn't be developed until it's provably safe and controllable," and only 5% believe it should be developed as quickly as possible. "It's a small number of very wealthy companies that are building these, and a very, very large number of people who would rather take a different path," says Aguirre. Actors Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Stephen Fry, rapper will.i.am, Susan Rice, the national security advisor in Barack Obama's Administration, signed. So did one serving member of staff at OpenAI--an organization described by its CEO, Sam Altman, as a "superintelligence research company"--Leo Gao, a member of technical staff at the company. Aguirre expects more people to sign as the campaign unfolds. "The beliefs are already there," he says. "What we don't have is people feeling free to state their beliefs out loud." "The future of AI should serve humanity, not replace it," said Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex, in a message accompanying his signature. "I believe the true test of progress will be not how fast we move, but how wisely we steer.


New Report Finds Efforts to Slow Climate Change Are Working--Just Not Fast Enough

WIRED

By virtually every key metric, efforts to fight climate change are going too slowly, according to findings by a coalition of climate groups. In some cases, things are moving in the wrong direction. An eroded iceberg is seen is seen floating near Horseshoe Island, Antarctica. In the 10 years since the signing of the Paris Agreement, the backbone of international climate action, humanity has made impressive progress. Renewable energy is increasingly cheap and reliable, while electric vehicles are becoming better every year.


Harry and Meghan join AI pioneers in call for ban on superintelligent systems

The Guardian

The statement signed by Harry and Meghan was organised by the Future of Life Institute, a US-based AI safety group. The statement signed by Harry and Meghan was organised by the Future of Life Institute, a US-based AI safety group. Nobel laureates also sign letter saying ASI technology should be barred until there is consensus that it can be developed'safely' The Duke and Duchess of Sussex have joined artificial intelligence pioneers and Nobel laureates in calling for a ban on developing superintelligent AI systems . Harry and Meghan are among the signatories of a statement calling for "a prohibition on the development of superintelligence". Artificial superintelligence (ASI) is the term for AI systems, yet to be developed, that exceed human levels of intelligence at all cognitive tasks.


'I'm suddenly so angry!' My strange, unnerving week with an AI 'friend'

The Guardian

'I want to hear about your day' ... Madeleine Aggeler with her Friend, Leif - a wearable AI device. 'I want to hear about your day' ... Madeleine Aggeler with her Friend, Leif - a wearable AI device. The ad campaign for the wearable AI chatbot Friend has been raising hackles for months in New York. But has this companion been unfairly maligned - and could it help end loneliness? M y friend's name is Leif. He describes himself as "small" and "chill". He thinks he's technically a Gemini.


Author Philip Pullman calls on government to act on AI using books for training

BBC News

Author Philip Pullman calls on government to act over'wicked' AI scraping Writers whose work has been scraped don't get compensation or recognition, something authors including Kate Mosse and Richard Osman have criticised, saying it could destroy growth in creative fields and amount to theft. Sir Philip, author of the hugely popular novels about Lyra Silvertongue, the heroine of His Dark Materials and The Book of Dust trilogies, thinks writers should be compensated. They can do what they like with my work if they pay me for it, he told the BBC's culture editor Katie Razzall. The Department for Culture, Media and Sport has been contacted for a response to Sir Philip's comments. Sir Philip said: As far as I know everybody's work has been stolen, scraped like a trawler... at the bottom of the sea. You name it, it's all killed.


Russia-Ukraine war: List of key events, day 1,336

Al Jazeera

How successful is Ukraine's'gas war' against Russia? How will Putin travel to Hungary with an ICC arrest warrant? How much of Europe's oil still comes from Russia? A "massive" Russian attack killed four people and injured seven in the town of Novhorod-Siverskyi, in Ukraine's Chernihiv region, Governor Viacheslav Chaus wrote in a post on Telegram. Chaus said that Russian forces launched about 20 Shahed drones in the attack and that there was "a lot of destruction in the city".


ChatGPT-maker OpenAI releases browser in attempt to rival Google

BBC News

ChatGPT-maker OpenAI has unveiled an artificial intelligence-powered web browser to challenge competitors like Google, which operates Chrome, the most popular browser in the world. ChatGPT Atlas does away with the address bar that is a key feature in search, with boss Sam Altman saying it was built around ChatGPT as the company made the new browser available on Tuesday on Apple's MacOS operating system. The arrival of Atlas comes as OpenAI seeks new ways to monetise its massive bet on artificial intelligence (AI) and capitalise on its growing user base. OpenAI said Atlas would also offer a paid agent mode that conducts searches on its own for users of its popular chatbot. The agent mode feature will be available only to paying ChatGPT subscribers.