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WWW.COMPUTERWORLD.COMYoull soon be able to clone your voice to speak other languages in TeamsIn connection with this years Ignite conference, Microsoft has unveileda new interpretation tool that will be added to Teams in the spring. What makes the voice cloning tool currently called Interpreter In Teams special is that users will be able to use your own voice to speak in other languages in real time.According toTechcrunch,users need a subscription to Microsoft 365 to have access to the technology.Initially, the tool will support nine languages: English, French, Italian, Portuguese, Spanish, German, Japanese, Korean and Mandarin. More languages are likely to be added over time.0 Comments 0 Shares 29 Views
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WWW.COMPUTERWORLD.COMApple admins: Update your hardware nowAmong the first things Apple IT admins woke up to this morning was news of a pair of actively exploited zero-day attacks in the wild targeting Intel Macs, iPhones, iPads, and even Vision Pro users. Apple has already released software patches for the flaws, which is why the second thing admins realized is that they must rush through any necessary software verification process required before expediting installation of the update.In these days of remotely managed devices and increasingly effective MDM systems, thats far less a problem than it was in the past. You can usually make a policy change and push out updates to all your managed devices quickly.Companies that dont use these systems, or those that have employees using their own personal devices to access potentially sensitive internal data, must work harder to convince users to install security updates. So, what can they tell people about the latest threat that might help motivate them to install the patch today?Why you should update immediatelyFirst, Applesaysit believes the attack is being actively used, which means any Intel system including systems used by other people you interact with is a potential target. Apple is aware of a report that this issue may have been exploited, the company said.Second, it slips in using flaws in software you use daily, including JavaScript and WebKit, the rendering engine that powers the Safari browser on Apple devices. In other words, everyone using Apples devices is a potential target.Finally and perhaps best of all Apple has already shipped a fix for the problem, maintaining its reputation for being ahead of threats, rather thanechoingthe approach taken by some other platforms and racing to keep up with attacks. Its almost as if Apples systemsremain more secure for a reason. The company addressed 20 zero-day attacks in 2023 and has guarded against just six so far this year.Apple also shipped security patchesfor iOS 17 and iPad OS 17 systemsand patches for Safari onmacOS Ventura and Sonoma.What the experts sayMichael Covington, vice president for portfolio strategy at Jamf, thinks all users should update at once.While Apple has warned that the vulnerabilities, also present in macOS, may be actively exploited on Intel-based systems, we recommend updating any device that is at risk, he said. With attackers potentially exploiting both vulnerabilities, it is critical that users and mobile-first organizations apply the latest patches as soon as they are able.What are these attacks?The attack vector makes use of two vulnerabilities found in macOS Sequoia JavaScriptCore (CVE-2024-44308) and WebKit (CVE-2024-44309). The first lets attackers achieve remote code execution (RCE) through maliciously crafted web content; the second lets attackers engage in cross-site scripting attacks.As admins will recognize, RCE exploits can enable attackers to install malware surreptitiously on infected machines, perform denial-of-service attacks, or access sensitive information, while a cross-scripting attack can help hackers grab personal data for identity theft and other nefarious ends.No one wants to be a victim of either form of attack.Who is using these attacks?No information pertaining to who has been using these flaws in their attacks has been shared. With that in mind, its important to note that the flaws were identified by researchers at Googles Threat Analysis Group (TAG), which works to counter government-backed attacks. That suggests that whoever has been weaponizing these vulnerabilities is connected to a national entity of some kind.If that is the case,recent reports from TAG suggest an upsurge in such attacks, so users in some industries and professions might want to consider locking down their devices with ApplesLockdown Mode to minimize their attack surface. IT, meanwhile, should review security compliance, particularly among those using older iPhones, iPads, or Intel Macs.You can follow me on social media! Join me onBlueSky, LinkedIn,Mastodon, andMeWe.0 Comments 0 Shares 28 Views
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WWW.TECHNOLOGYREVIEW.COMAI can now create a replica of your personalityImagine sitting down with an AI model for a spoken two-hour interview. A friendly voice guides you through a conversation that ranges from your childhood, your formative memories, and your career to your thoughts on immigration policy. Not long after, a virtual replica of you is able to embody your values and preferences with stunning accuracy.Thats now possible, according to a new paper from a team including researchers from Stanford and Google DeepMind, which has been published on arXiv and has not yet been peer-reviewed.Led by Joon Sung Park, a Stanford PhD student in computer science, the team recruited 1,000 people who varied by age, gender, race, region, education, and political ideology. They were paid up to $100 for their participation. From interviews with them, the team created agent replicas of those individuals. As a test of how well the agents mimicked their human counterparts, participants did a series of personality tests, social surveys, and logic games, twice each, two weeks apart; then the agents completed the same exercises. The results were 85% similar.If you can have a bunch of small yous running around and actually making the decisions that you would have madethat, I think, is ultimately the future, Joon says.In the paper the replicas are called simulation agents, and the impetus for creating them is to make it easier for researchers in social sciences and other fields to conduct studies that would be expensive, impractical, or unethical to do with real human subjects. If you can create AI models that behave like real people, the thinking goes, you can use them to test everything from how well interventions on social media combat misinformation to what behaviors cause traffic jams.Such simulation agents are slightly different from the agents that are dominating the work of leading AI companies today. Called tool-based agents, those are models built to do things for you, not converse with you. For example, they might enter data, retrieve information you have stored somewhere, orsomedaybook travel for you and schedule appointments. Salesforce announced its own tool-based agents in September, followed by Anthropic in October, and OpenAI is planning to release some in January, according to Bloomberg.The two types of agents are different but share common ground. Research on simulation agents, like the ones in this paper, is likely to lead to stronger AI agents overall, says John Horton, an associate professor of information technologies at the MIT Sloan School of Management, who founded a company to conduct research using AI-simulated participants.This paper is showing how you can do a kind of hybrid: use real humans to generate personas which can then be used programmatically/in-simulation in ways you could not with real humans, he told MIT Technology Review in an email.The research comes with caveats, not the least of which is the danger that it points to. Just as image generation technology has made it easy to create harmful deepfakes of people without their consent, any agent generation technology raises questions about the ease with which people can build tools to personify others online, saying or authorizing things they didnt intend to say.The evaluation methods the team used to test how well the AI agents replicated their corresponding humans were also fairly basic. These included the General Social Surveywhich collects information on ones demographics, happiness, behaviors, and moreand assessments of the Big Five personality traits: openness to experience, conscientiousness, extroversion, agreeableness, and neuroticism. Such tests are commonly used in social science research but dont pretend to capture all the unique details that make us ourselves. The AI agents were also worse at replicating the humans in behavioral tests like the dictator game, which is meant to illuminate how participants consider values such as fairness.To build an AI agent that replicates people well, the researchers needed ways to distill our uniqueness into language AI models can understand. They chose qualitative interviews to do just that, Joon says. He says he was convinced that interviews are the most efficient way to learn about someone after he appeared on countless podcasts following a 2023 paper that he wrote on generative agents, which sparked a huge amount of interest in the field. I would go on maybe a two-hour podcast podcast interview, and after the interview, I felt like, wow, people know a lot about me now, he says. Two hours can be very powerful.These interviews can also reveal idiosyncrasies that are less likely to show up on a survey. Imagine somebody just had cancer but was finally cured last year. Thats very unique information about you that says a lot about how you might behave and think about things, he says. It would be difficult to craft survey questions that elicit these sorts of memories and responses.Interviews arent the only option, though. Companies that offer to make digital twins of users, like Tavus, can have their AI models ingest customer emails or other data. It tends to take a pretty large data set to replicate someones personality that way, Tavus CEO Hassaan Raza told me, but this new paper suggests a more efficient route.What was really cool here is that they show you might not need that much information, Raza says, adding that his company will experiment with the approach. How about you just talk to an AI interviewer for 30 minutes today, 30 minutes tomorrow? And then we use that to construct this digital twin of you.0 Comments 0 Shares 32 Views
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WWW.TECHNOLOGYREVIEW.COMThe Download: Clears identity ambitions, and the climate blame gameThis is todays edition ofThe Download,our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of whats going on in the world of technology.Inside Clears ambitions to manage your identity beyond the airportClear Secure is the most visible biometric identity company in the United States. Best known for its line-jumping service in airports, its also popping up at sports arenas and stadiums all over the country. You can also use its identity verification platform to rent tools at Home Depot, put your profile in front of recruiters on LinkedIn, and, as of this month, verify your identity as a rider on Uber.And soon enough, if Clear has its way, it may also be in your favorite retailer, bank, and even doctors officeor anywhere else that you currently have to pull out a wallet (or wait in line).While the company has been building toward this sweeping vision for years, it now seems its time has finally come. But as biometrics go mainstream, whatand whobears the cost? Read the full story.Eileen GuoLinkedIn Live: Facial verification tech promises a frictionless future. But at what cost?Do you use your face to unlock your phone, or speed through airport security? As biometrics companies move into more and more spaces, where else would you use this technology? The trade off seems simple: you scan your face, you get a frictionless future. But is it really? Join MIT Technology Reviews features and investigations team for a LinkedIn Live this Thursday, November 21, about the rise of facial verification tech and what it means to give up your face. Register for free.Whos to blame for climate change? Its surprisingly complicated.Once again, global greenhouse-gas emissions are projected to hit a new high in 2024.In this time of shifting political landscapes and ongoing international negotiations, many are quick to blame one country or another for an outsize role in causing climate change.But assigning responsibility is complicated. These three visualizations help explain why.Casey CrownhartCyber Week Sale: subscriptions are half price!Take advantage of epic savings on award-winning reporting, razor-sharp analysis, and expert insights on your favorite technology topics. Subscribe today to save 50% on an annual subscription, plus receive a free digital copy of our Generative AI and the future of work report. Dont miss out.The must-readsIve combed the internet to find you todays most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology.1 AI can now translate your voice in real-time during meetingsIts part of Microsofts drive to push more AI into its products, but how well it works in the wild remains to be seen. (WP$)+Apple is having less success on that front, at least if its AI notification summaries are anything to go by.(The Atlantic$)2 Anyone can buy data tracking US soldiers in GermanyAnd the Pentagon is powerless to stop it.(Wired$)+Its shockingly easy to buy sensitive data about US military personnel.(MIT Technology Review)3 Bluesky now has over 20 million usersIts user base has tripled in the last three months. (Engadget)+Truth Social, on the other hand, is not doing quite so well.(WP$)+The rise of Bluesky, and the splintering of social.(MIT Technology Review)4 How Google created a culture of concealmentIts been preparing for antitrust action for over a decade, enforcing a policy where employees delete messages by default. (NYT$)+The company reacted angrily to reports it may be forced to sell Chrome. (BBC)5 Project 2025 is already infiltrating the Trump administrationDespite repeated denials, its clearly a blueprint for his next term. (Vox)+A hacker reportedly gained access to damaging testimonies about Matt Gaetz, his pick to be attorney general.(NYT$)6 Quantum computers hit a major milestone for error-free calculationThis is a crucial part of making them useful for real-world tasks. (New Scientist$)7 Technology is changing political speechSlogans are becoming less effective. Now its more about saying different things to different audiences. (New Yorker$)8 Lab-grown foie gras, anyone?This could be the cultivated meat industrys future: as a luxury product for the few. (Wired$)9 Niantic is using Pokmon Go player data to build an AI navigation systemIf it works, it could unlock some amazing capabilities in AR, robotics and beyond. (404 Media)10 Minecraft is expanding into the real worldIt has struck a $110 million deal with one of the worlds biggest theme park operators. (The Guardian)Quote of the dayNobody believes that these cables were severed by accident.Germanys defense minister Boris Pistorius, tells reporters that the severing of two fiber-optic cables in the Baltic Sea was a deliberate act of sabotage, theNew York Timesreports.The big storyAre we alone in the universe?ARIEL DAVISNovember 2023The quest to determine if life is out there has gained greater scientific footing over the past 50 years. Back then, astronomers had yet to spot a single planet outside our solar system. Now we know the galaxy is teeming with a diversity of worlds.Were getting closer than ever before to learning how common living worlds like ours actually are. New tools, including artificial intelligence, could help scientists look past their preconceived notions of what constitutes life.Read the full story.Adam MannWe can still have nice thingsA place for comfort, fun and distraction to brighten up your day. (Got any ideas? Drop me a line or tweet em at me.)+ How to not only survive but thriveduring the winter.+ Fancy working from somewhere new? Here are some of thebest citiesfor a workcation.+ Want to see David Bowie imitating Mick Jagger?Of course you do.+ Its an old(ish) joke butstill funny.0 Comments 0 Shares 30 Views
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WWW.APPLE.COMShazam hits 100 billion song recognitionsShazam has now officially surpassed over 100 billion song recognitions since it launched.0 Comments 0 Shares 30 Views
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APPLEINSIDER.COMGoogle is pissed that the DOJ may make it sell off ChromeYou'll all pay for this, just you wait and see, says a petulant Google as the US Department of Justice is rumored to make it sell off its Chrome browser.Google Chrome on an iPhoneChrome is the darling of the technology industry because technical people love its customizability. But that does come with the price of your battery life, plus what Google may or may not do with your data.Consequently, it's common when you have a problem with a website to be told to switch to Chrome. For example, our own content management system works slightly better under Chrome than it does with Safari. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums0 Comments 0 Shares 30 Views
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APPLEINSIDER.COMApple's iPad 10th Gen plunges to $279 in early Black Friday price warGrab the lowest iPad 10th Generation price on record as Amazon and Best Buy compete for the best early Black Friday deals.Grab the best iPad 10th Gen price on recordNovember is a great time to pick up an Apple device at a discount and iPads are no exception with one week to go before Black Friday. Take advantage of the lowest price on record on Apple's iPad 10th Generation, with prices falling to $279 at Amazon and Best Buy. Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums0 Comments 0 Shares 31 Views
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WWW.FACEBOOK.COMRegional Science Centre, Gujarat, India - e-architectDesigned by INI Design Studio, the Regional Science Centre in Bhuj city, in the Kutch region of Gujarat state, is situated to the north of a hillock known locally as Bhujiyo Dungar, Indiahttps://www.e-architect.com/india/regional-science-centre-gujarat-india#designstudio #sciencecenter #gujarat #indian #architectureDesigned by INI Design Studio, the Regional Science Centre in Bhuj city, in the Kutch region of Gujarat state, India0 Comments 0 Shares 28 Views
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WWW.FACEBOOK.COMStrada Rosetti Home, Brila, Romania - e-architectThe Strada Rosetti Home, designed by Manea Kella in Brila, Romania, is a boutique residential design nestled delicately in a historic conservation areahttps://www.e-architect.com/romania/strada-rosetti-home-braila-romania#home #romania #boutiquestyle #residentialdesign #architectureThe Strada Rosetti Home, designed by Manea Kella in Brila, Romania, is a boutique residential design nestled in a conservation area0 Comments 0 Shares 29 Views