traitor
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'I didn't have anything to prove': what Traitors finalist Jade Scott learned about survival from video games
'Minecraft was my way in' The Traitors 2026 finalist Jade. 'Minecraft was my way in' The Traitors 2026 finalist Jade. 'I didn't have anything to prove': what Traitors finalist Jade Scott learned about survival from video games T he latest series of The Traitors, which ended last week on a nail-biting finale, featured some of the usual characters - from guileless extroverts to wannabe Columbos endlessly observing fellow contestants for the slightest flicker of treachery. But one faithful stood out for her quiet determination, despite a ceaseless onslaught of suspicion and accusation. That person was Jade Scott, and I wasn't at all surprised when, quite early on in the series, she revealed she was a keen gamer.
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Author Philip Pullman calls on government to act on AI using books for training
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.
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CuDA2: An approach for Incorporating Traitor Agents into Cooperative Multi-Agent Systems
Chen, Zhen, Liao, Yong, Zhao, Youpeng, Dai, Zipeng, Zhao, Jian
Cooperative Multi-Agent Reinforcement Learning (CMARL) strategies are well known to be vulnerable to adversarial perturbations. Previous works on adversarial attacks have primarily focused on white-box attacks that directly perturb the states or actions of victim agents, often in scenarios with a limited number of attacks. However, gaining complete access to victim agents in real-world environments is exceedingly difficult. To create more realistic adversarial attacks, we introduce a novel method that involves injecting traitor agents into the CMARL system. We model this problem as a Traitor Markov Decision Process (TMDP), where traitors cannot directly attack the victim agents but can influence their formation or positioning through collisions. In TMDP, traitors are trained using the same MARL algorithm as the victim agents, with their reward function set as the negative of the victim agents' reward. Despite this, the training efficiency for traitors remains low because it is challenging for them to directly associate their actions with the victim agents' rewards. To address this issue, we propose the Curiosity-Driven Adversarial Attack (CuDA2) framework. CuDA2 enhances the efficiency and aggressiveness of attacks on the specified victim agents' policies while maintaining the optimal policy invariance of the traitors. Specifically, we employ a pre-trained Random Network Distillation (RND) module, where the extra reward generated by the RND module encourages traitors to explore states unencountered by the victim agents. Extensive experiments on various scenarios from SMAC demonstrate that our CuDA2 framework offers comparable or superior adversarial attack capabilities compared to other baselines.
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Integrating A.I. into museums: Expert says visitors may one day interact with people from history
Fox News correspondent Grady Trimble has the latest on fears the technology will spiral out of control on'Special Report.' As artificial intelligence upends many industries, museums are figuring out creative ways to integrate the technology into their organizations. Douglass McDonald, the former CEO of Alamo Trust, founder of NGOGro, and former president and CEO of the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center, has spent more than 40 years leading museums. While many industries are anxious about AI's impact, McDonald said he is optimistic about its potential to enrich the field – despite lingering unknowns. FILE: People roam around the entrance on reopening day at The Metropolitan Museum of Art (The Met), Aug. 29, 2020, in New York City.
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Women Are Talking, But is the Academy Listening?
This week, Dana, Julia, and Stephen start by discussing the film, Women Talking. Then they chat about the new U.K. import Traitors with Slate's own Carl Wilson. Finally, they finish by talking ChatGPT and the coming of AI chatbots. Dana: Werner Herzog is in his somber, elegiac mode with The Fire Within: A Requiem for Katia and Maurice Krafft. Not to be confused with Fire of Love, about the same people, but made by Sara Dosa.
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'Among Us': AOC, Ilhan Omar are fans of the popular video game. Here's what to know about it
The video game "Among Us" captured the spotlight Tuesday night after House Representatives Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Ilhan Omar joined Twitch to play along with top streamers as part of a broader effort to encourage Americans to vote in the upcoming election. The stream drew more than 435,000 viewers, making it one of the most popular streams ever on Twitch. Although the game launched more than two years, it only recently surged in popularity this year after several YouTubers and streamers started to profile the game through their channels. So, what is "Among Us" all about? Here's what you should know about the video game.
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