bad thing
Trump gives Iran 10-15 days to make deal, warns 'bad things will happen'
Iran says'ready for war' Which are Iran's main opposition groups? Trump gives Iran 10-15 days to make deal, warns'bad things will happen' NewsFeed Trump gives Iran 10-15 days to make deal, warns'bad things will happen' US President Donald Trump has warned Iran it has 10 to 15 days to reach a deal over its nuclear program, or "really bad things" will happen. Iran's envoy to the United Nations said Tehran will respond "decisively" to any military aggression. Masked protesters arrested outside Trump's Board of Peace meeting Palestinians in Gaza say'Board of Peace' will further occupation OpenAI's Sam Altman: Global AI regulation'urgently' needed Gaza'stabilization force' commander outlines security plans Trump praises'magnificent' B-2 bombers that struck Iran in 2025
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Video Game Remakes Are in a Golden Age. That Could Be a Bad Thing
When the demo for the remake of Resident Evil 4 dropped in March, one presiding concern stood above all others: Would Leon say "Where's everyone going? The line comes early in the game, right after our coiffured all-American hero has seen his police escort burned alive. Leon is about to be butchered by pitchfork and chainsaw-wielding Spanish farmers, but then a tolling bell suddenly psychically summons them away. The line is amazingly stupid, and if he doesn't say it, I thought after seeing news of the demo, I'm joining the mob outside the Capcom offices. The culture industry loves a remake; it also loves a reboot, a remaster, a sequel, a prequel, a multiverse, and a cinematic universe.
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'I do not think ethical surveillance can exist': Rumman Chowdhury on accountability in AI
Rumman Chowdhury often has trouble sleeping, but, to her, this is not a problem that requires solving. She has what she calls "2am brain", a different sort of brain from her day-to-day brain, and the one she relies on for especially urgent or difficult problems. Ideas, even small-scale ones, require care and attention, she says, along with a kind of alchemic intuition. "It's just like baking," she says. "You can't force it, you can't turn the temperature up, you can't make it go faster. It will take however long it takes. And when it's done baking, it will present itself."
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Fox News Poll: More see bad than good in AI
Fox News medical contributor Dr. Marc Siegel weighs in on a survey that found a majority of patients prefer interacting with chatbots over doctors on'Fox News Live.' While 76% of voters want the federal government to regulate artificial intelligence technology, a new Fox News survey finds that only 39% think Uncle Sam is up to the job. In a broader sense, more voters think AI is generally a bad thing, but the view is more positive among those who are familiar with the technology. By an 8-point margin, voters overall are more likely to believe AI is a bad thing for society than a good thing. However, those familiar with AI are more likely to say it's a good thing by a 6-point margin.
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Are The Metaverse And Web3 Still Relevant?
Generative AI, ChatGPT, Dall-E - it seems everyone's so excited about AI at the moment that they've forgotten all about the hot technology trends of just a short while back. Are The Metaverse And Web3 Still Relevant? This is the nature of the "hype cycle" that those of us who follow the latest developments in technology have become very accustomed to. New ideas get a lot of attention – not always of the right sort – then the excitement dies off when something even newer emerges. But does that mean that they're dead and forgotten?
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With Artificial Intelligence, It's All About Power Structures - TPM – Talking Points Memo
This article is part of TPM Cafe, TPM's home for opinion and news analysis. It first appeared on our publisher Joe Ragazzo's newsletter, Rhapsody. These online applications--which allow a person to converse with a "bot" powered by artificial intelligence via text--interface are a potential window into the future of technology. A few weeks ago, ChatGPT burst on the scene and spawned a million takes. It was promptly banned from some school districts.
Bite-size thoughts about AI - The Fishbowl
Majikthise: By law the Quest for Ultimate Truth is quite clearly the inalienable prerogative of your working thinkers. Any bloody machine goes and actually finds it and we're straight out of a job aren't we? I mean what's the use of our sitting up all night saying there may… Majikthise: …or may not be, a God if this machine comes along next morning and gives you His telephone number? Vroomfondel: We demand guaranteed rigidly defined areas of doubt and uncertainty. I claim no special knowledge or insight into the field of Artificial Intelligence (AI) or AI ethics.
3 ways next-gen academics can avoid an unnecessary AI winter
There are two realities when it comes to artificial intelligence. In one, the future's so bright you need to put on welding goggles just to glance at it. AI is a backbone technology that's just as necessary for global human operations as electricity and the internet. But in the other reality, winter is coming. An "AI winter," is a period in which nothing can grow.
AI helped write this article. Can you tell which part?
In recent years, artificial intelligence (AI) has made incredible strides in its ability to generate human-like text. As a result, AI writing is becoming increasingly commonplace, with businesses and organisations using it to create everything from marketing copy to financial reports. While AI writing is still in its early stages and far from perfect, it's clear that it poses a threat to the livelihood of professional writers. After all, if a machine can produce text that is indistinguishable from that of a human writer, why would anyone need to hire a real person to do the job? It's not just low-skilled jobs like content writing that are at risk of being automated by AI.
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La veille de la cybersécurité
What their professors don't know about them is that they're using a powerful AI language model to finish most homework assignments. "It would be simple assignments that included extended responses," innovate_rye, who asked to use their Reddit handle to avoid detection by their college, told Motherboard. "For biology, we would learn about biotech and write five good and bad things about biotech. I would send a prompt to the AI like, 'what are five good and bad things about biotech?' and it would generate an answer that would get me an A." "I like to learn a lot [and] sometimes schoolwork that I have done before makes me procrastinate and not turn in the assignment," innovate_rye explains. "Being able to do it faster and more efficient seems like a skill to me."