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Dangers of oversharing with AI tools
Fox News chief political anchor Bret Baier has the latest on regulatory uncertainty amid artificial intelligence development on "Special Report." Have you ever stopped to think about how much your chatbot knows about you? Over the years, tools like ChatGPT have become incredibly adept at learning your preferences, habits and even some of your deepest secrets. But while this can make them seem more helpful and personalized, it also raises some serious privacy concerns. As much as you learn from these AI tools, they learn just as much about you.
#AAAI2025 invited talk round-up 1: labour economics, and reasoning about spatial information
The 39th Annual AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence (AAAI 2025) took place in Philadelphia from Tuesday 25 February to Tuesday 4 March 2025. The programme featured eight invited talks. Susan works at the intersection of computer science and economics. In the past she has researched problems relating to mechanism design, auctions, pricing, and causal inference, but recently she has turned her attention to modelling worker career transitions using transformer models. In her talk, Susan described the research in a few of her recent papers covering topics such as the gender wage gap and economic prediction of labour sequence data.
Eufy's new robot mowers use smart vision to trim your grass
Anker's lifestyle brand Eufy has already swallowed a big chunk of the robot vacuum market and now it's got its sights on your yard. The company has been sharing details of its first two robot mowers since the start of the year, and now they're ready to start selling them. Eufy's E15 and E18 are designed to automate one of the most tedious jobs around the home -- if you're able to pay. I've been testing an E15 for the last few weeks ahead of their retail debut today and I'm fairly impressed. Early robot mowers needed a boundary wire to tell them where they were allowed to mow.
Ukrainians doubt potential of Trump's peace plan amid deadly Russia attacks
Kyiv, Ukraine โ Thread-thin, glistening in the sun and kilometres long, optical fibres wind through the branches of trees on the frontlines of eastern Ukraine. The cords were โ sometimes still are โ attached to Russian drones, making them immune to radio-electronic jamming. The drones may have been shot down. Some are still operational, waylaid and replete with danger. "When somebody is passing by, they just fly up and attack," Oleh, a military officer deployed in eastern Ukraine, told Al Jazeera.
This gadget attends your meetings so you don't have to
No one's ever walked out of a meeting thinking, "Wow, that couldn't have been an email." If you're tired of hearing Steve and Chris ramble on for an hour, just stop going and send this AI voice recorder along instead. Even if you aren't in attendance, this gadget captures the whole conversation, uses ChatGPT-4 to provide an accurate transcript, and delivers smart summaries so you can get actual work done during that "important" meeting. Save 76 on the Focais meeting recorder and get free shipping while supplies last. You might not be allowed to skip the meeting outright, but this smart device at least allows you to secretly do work on your laptop--or just zone out into your happy place.
Trump official clashes with CBS host about if administration used AI to make tariff policy
"Face the Nation" host Margaret Brennan asked Trump Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick whether AI helped construct some of the tariff policies. CBS' Margaret Brennan asked Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick whether artificial intelligence was involved in designing President Donald Trump's broad tariff policies on Sunday. The "Face the Nation" host confronted Lutnick on Trump's "Liberation Day" announcement, which saw significant tariff increases across numerous countries. This included a baseline tariff of 10% on all U.S. imports that began on Saturday. The announcement caused chaos for investors as the stock market suffered some of its worst losses since the COVID pandemic in 2020.
'Sound of Freedom' producer says AI tools helped nab child trafficker that eluded FBI for 10 years
Editor's Note: This article contains discussions related to child sexual abuse and pornography. Child predators are on high alert as organizations around the globe have begun rolling out artificial intelligence (AI) tools to bring sex traffickers to justice and rescue young victims, according to "Sound of Freedom" executive producer Paul Hutchinson. Hutchinson, who has led 70 undercover rescue missions across 15 countries, told Fox News Digital on Wednesday that he has worked with "black hat" hackers to help identify child predators and bring them to justice. These guys are some of the best hackers anywhere. Some of them do highly illegal things for the right reasons, right?
The AI Race Has Gotten Crowded--and China Is Closing In on the US
The year that ChatGPT went viral, only two US companies--OpenAI and Google--could boast truly cutting-edge artificial intelligence. Three years on, AI is no longer a two-horse race, nor is it purely an American one. A new report published today by Stanford University's Institute for Human-Centered AI (HAI) highlights just how crowded the field has become. OpenAI and Google are still neck and neck in the race to build bleeding-edge AI, the report shows. But several other companies are closing in.
The Dire Wolf Is Back
Extinction is a part of nature. Of the five billion species that have existed on Earth, 99.9 per cent have vanished. The Triassic-Jurassic extinction, two hundred million years ago, finished off the crocodile-like phytosaur. Sixty-six million years ago, the end-Cretaceous extinction eliminated the Tyrannosaurus rex and the velociraptor; rapid climate change from an asteroid impact was the likely cause. The Neanderthals disappeared some forty thousand years ago. One day--whether from climate change, another asteroid, nuclear war, or something we can't yet imagine--humans will probably be wiped out, too.
How the Pentagon is adapting to China's technological rise
Over the past three decades, Hicks has watched the Pentagon transform--politically, strategically, and technologically. She entered government in the 1990s at the tail end of the Cold War, when optimism and a belief in global cooperation still dominated US foreign policy. After 9/11, the focus shifted to counterterrorism and nonstate actors. Then came Russia's resurgence and China's growing assertiveness. Hicks took two previous breaks from government work--the first to complete a PhD at MIT and joining the think thank Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), which she later rejoined to lead its International Security Program after her second tour. "By the time I returned in 2021," she says, "there was one actor--the PRC (People's Republic of China)--that had the capability and the will to really contest the international system as it's set up."