task force
Youngkin credits Trump administration with bolstering anti-human trafficking efforts
Youngkin, joined by Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares and other state attorneys general, compared human trafficking enforcement to addressing transnational gangs. "We must have multi-state and federal support in order to dismantle the networks, not just arrest an individual, we've got to unpack the networks," Youngkin told a crowd of a few hundred. The Trump administration has been a boon to human trafficking enforcement efforts, Youngkin said, noting he met with top Justice Department officials at the White House after the inauguration to discuss the matter and found them receptive. Virginia law enforcement has since been coordinating with the federal government to take down foreign gang operations, which Youngkin said overlaps with the human trafficking space. Youngkin used the example of gang crime inside correctional centers, which he said was the first "thread" his team pulled.
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DeSantis announces Florida 'DOGE task force'
Florida is creating a "state DOGE task force" to "eliminate unnecessary bureaucracy," Gov. Ron DeSantis announced Monday. Florida is creating a "DOGE task force" to "eliminate unnecessary bureaucracy and to continue to ensure tax dollars are used in the most efficient way possible," Gov. Ron DeSantis announced Monday. The Republican said the Sunshine State "has never been in better fiscal health," but "we always want to get better, and so we looked to see what [Elon] Musk is doing with the [Department of Government Efficiency] in Washington, D.C." "And the one thing I think that they are doing that we need to incorporate is to utilize and leverage technology like artificial intelligence to be able to police the payments and the operations and the contracts that are done in government," DeSantis continued, speaking behind a lectern with the message "Keeping Florida Efficient." "For example, we have people that review these contracts and if there is DEI, they nix it and things like that. But this is some high-powered stuff and I think would be able to provide us with some good information," he added. "We have already been doing this stuff.
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ACLU Warns DOGE's 'Unchecked' Access Could Violate Federal Law
The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) told federal lawmakers on Friday that Elon Musk and his Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) have seized control over a number of federal computer systems that house data tightly restricted under federal statutes. In some cases, any deviations in the manner in which the data is being used may be not only illegal, the ACLU says, but unconstitutional. DOGE operatives have infiltrated or assumed control over a number of federal agencies that are responsible for managing personnel files on nearly two million federal employees, as well as offices that supply the government with a broad range of software and information technology services. Unauthorized use of sensitive or personally identifiable data as part of an effort to purge the government of ideologically unaligned staff may constitute a violation of federal law. The Privacy Act and the Federal Information Security Modernization Act strictly prohibit, for instance, unauthorized access and use of government personnel data.
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Experts praise long-awaited AI report from Congress: 'A thoughtful and forward-thinking framework'
Fox News chief political anchor Bret Baier has the latest on regulatory uncertainty amid AI development on'Special Report.' Congress's bipartisan task force on artificial intelligence (AI) released its long-anticipated report this week, detailing strategies for how the U.S. can protect itself against emerging AI-related threats while ensuring the nation remains a leader in innovation within this rapidly evolving sector. Responses to the report, which sought to strike a "flexible sectoral regulatory framework," were positive and with mixed concerns. "The Task Force report offers a thoughtful and forward-thinking framework that balances AI's transformative economic potential with the imperative to address legitimate safety concerns," said Dr. Vahid Behzadan, a professor in the computer science department at the University of New Haven. "That said, there's still work to be done."
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Fox News AI Newsletter: OpenAI responds to Elon Musk's lawsuit
Raj Goyle, CEO of intelligence firm Bodhala and former Democratic Kansas state representative, told Fox News Digital it is encouraging to see members of both parties come together to try and determine the source of these drones. SpaceX and Tesla founder Elon Musk speaks during an America PAC town hall on October 26, 2024, in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. AI WARS: OpenAI is pushing back against Elon Musk's latest attempt to rework his lawsuit against the artificial intelligence giant that seeks to prevent the company from moving to a for-profit structure, noting in a blog post and legal filing that Musk had argued for it to do so years ago. AGE OF AI: OpenAI CEO Sam Altman is joining the list of U.S. tech titans donating to President-elect Trump's inaugural fund, a spokesperson exclusively told Fox News Digital. ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE: The House task force on artificial intelligence is urging the U.S. government to aim for "a flexible sectoral regulatory framework" for the technology in a nearly 300-page report released Tuesday morning.
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House AI task force says 'unreasonable' to expect immediate congressional action on AI in 250-page report
Raj Goyle, CEO of intelligence firm Bodhala and former Democratic Kansas state representative, told Fox News Digital it is encouraging to see members of both parties come together to try and determine the source of these drones. The House task force on artificial intelligence (AI) is urging the U.S. government to aim for "a flexible sectoral regulatory framework" for the technology in a nearly 300-page report released Tuesday morning. The report held up a light-touch approach to regulation, as well as "a thriving innovation ecosystem" as pillars that help keep the U.S. a leader in AI. "If maintained, these strengths will help our country remain the world's undisputed leader in the responsible design, development, and deployment of AI," the report read. The task force is led by California Reps. Jay Obernolte, a Republican, and Ted Lieu, a Democrat, and was commissioned by House leaders as Congress scrambles to get ahead of rapidly advancing AI technology.
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Founder of company that created LAUSD chatbot charged with fraud
The head of an education technology startup that created a highly touted chatbot for the Los Angeles school system has been arrested and charged with fraud. Federal prosecutors, in an indictment unsealed Tuesday, accused Joanna Smith-Griffin of defrauding investors and charged her with securities fraud, wire fraud and aggravated identity theft. Smith-Griffin, 33, is the founder and former chief executive of AllHere, the Boston-based company that created "Ed," an artificial-intelligence tool billed as revolutionary for students' education and the interaction between the L.A. Unified School District and the families it serves. After unveiling the chatbot with great fanfare in March, L.A. school officials, months later, quietly disconnected the tool -- which was supposed to respond to any question from students or parents in an accurate, helpful and private manner. LAUSD board members at Tuesday's meeting will consider resolutions on immigration sanctuary, LGBTQ protection and accelerating the teaching of current events.
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Measuring Free-Form Decision-Making Inconsistency of Language Models in Military Crisis Simulations
Shrivastava, Aryan, Hullman, Jessica, Lamparth, Max
There is an increasing interest in using language models (LMs) for automated decision-making, with multiple countries actively testing LMs to aid in military crisis decision-making. To scrutinize relying on LM decision-making in high-stakes settings, we examine the inconsistency of responses in a crisis simulation ("wargame"), similar to reported tests conducted by the US military. Prior work illustrated escalatory tendencies and varying levels of aggression among LMs but were constrained to simulations with pre-defined actions. This was due to the challenges associated with quantitatively measuring semantic differences and evaluating natural language decision-making without relying on pre-defined actions. In this work, we query LMs for free form responses and use a metric based on BERTScore to measure response inconsistency quantitatively. Leveraging the benefits of BERTScore, we show that the inconsistency metric is robust to linguistic variations that preserve semantic meaning in a question-answering setting across text lengths. We show that all five tested LMs exhibit levels of inconsistency that indicate semantic differences, even when adjusting the wargame setting, anonymizing involved conflict countries, or adjusting the sampling temperature parameter $T$. Further qualitative evaluation shows that models recommend courses of action that share few to no similarities. We also study the impact of different prompt sensitivity variations on inconsistency at temperature $T = 0$. We find that inconsistency due to semantically equivalent prompt variations can exceed response inconsistency from temperature sampling for most studied models across different levels of ablations. Given the high-stakes nature of military deployment, we recommend further consideration be taken before using LMs to inform military decisions or other cases of high-stakes decision-making.
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LAUSD test scores rise in math and English, positive marks after pandemic setbacks
In a step forward from pandemic-era learning setbacks, standardized test scores in the Los Angeles school system made gains in all tested grade levels in math and English, Supt. Alberto Carvalho announced on Tuesday, although a majority of students remain below the state's grade level standards. At this time, the L.A. results can't be evaluated in a broader context because the California Department of Education has not publicly released statewide scores from the 2024 spring semester testing. Yet the scores suggest Los Angeles students have begun rebounding from sharp pandemic lows, when campuses were closed for more than a year and students kept pace as best they could through remote learning. In English, districtwide proficiency increased from about 41% to 43% of students year over year.