• www.techspot.com
    What just happened? In response to Western organizations calling it "shady and untrustworthy," DeepSeek launched "Open Source Week." During last week's event, the company released several repositories to the open-source community, including a highly efficient file system. Many AI specialists reviewing the code have come away impressed. Last week, DeepSeek released five of its most advanced software repositories during its "Open Source Week" event. The Chinese AI firm unveiled a Linux-based file system it uses internally for AI training and inference workloads. The Fire-Flyer File System (3FS) boasts some impressive performance benchmarks. Western AI companies have taken note and are exploring the repos. The company designed 3FS to accelerate AI tasks. The technology leverages the features of modern solid-state storage units and RDMA networks, providing a shared storage layer to simplify the deployment of distributed applications.Tom's Harware notes that DeepSeek's 3FS code works without read caching and prioritizes random read requests since AI models running on GPU nodes constantly access data snippets stored on servers. The file system can combine the throughput of thousands of SSD units and the network bandwidth of hundreds of storage nodes, simplifying application code and applying standard storage API models.The distributed file system can reach a 6.6 TiB/s aggregate read throughput when used in a 180-node cluster, achieving a 3.66 TiB/min throughput on the GraySort benchmark (in a 25-node cluster). Startup company Perspective AI praised DeepSeek's figures as some "next-level" benchmarks, describing 3FS as a potential revolution for data-heavy workloads related to AI, research, and more.In a paper published last summer, DeepSeek researchers described the features of the company's custom Fire-Flyer 2 AI high-performance computing architecture. Thanks to 3FS, HaiScale, and other elements of its software stack, DeepSeek achieved 80 percent of the performance of Nvidia's DGX-A100 servers at 50 percent of the price and using 40 percent less energy. Fire-Flyer 2 used 180 storage nodes with 16 16TB SSDs each, two 200Gbps NUCs, and 10,000 Nvidia A100 GPUs over PCIe. // Related StoriesDeepSeek created Open Source Week to emphasize its transparency and community-based innovation after being criticized as shadowy and untrustworthy. The Chinese company is releasing many software products as open-source repositories, with key targets including FlashMLA, DeepEP, DeepGEMM, and more.
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  • www.techspot.com
    Editor's take: Google's push to make Gemini a more interactive AI assistant could revolutionize how we use the technology. However, as users share their camera and screen with Gemini, what are the privacy implications? While the benefits of real-time assistance are clear, the potential for data misuse or overreach is also a concern. Google took the stage at the Mobile World Congress (MWC) in Barcelona on Monday to showcase the latest enhancements to its AI assistant, Gemini. The company revealed two new features to make Gemini more interactive and context-aware, including real-time video analysis and screen-sharing capabilities.One cool upgrade to Gemini Live lets users fire up their smartphone camera and point it at objects, surroundings, or even their computer screen for instant analysis and feedback (above). Whether identifying an item, explaining something technical, or helping troubleshoot a problem, Google wants Gemini to be more than just a chatbot it aims to be a hands-on AI assistant that actually sees what's happening.The second is a new screen-sharing feature that allows users to show Gemini Live their screen (below). The AI can then guide them through tasks, provide app-specific help, or summarize information from displayed content. Google aims to make digital assistance feel less like a chatbot and more like an ever-present AI helper that can interpret and respond to on-screen elements in real-time.However, these features won't come free. Google is locking real-time video analysis and screen sharing behind its AI Premium plan, which costs $20 per month. This move follows the industry trend of placing advanced AI capabilities behind paywalls, like OpenAI's GPT-4.5 access through ChatGPT Plus. There's also the question: How much do you trust giving Google access to your phone's camera?Google previosly demonstrated these capabilities last year for WMC 2024 attendees (below), although it was called Project Astra back then. Through the camera, Gemini could identify landmarks and objects and remember where the demonstrator's glasses were. With screen-sharing enabled, Gemini could assist in tasks like shopping or providing technical support with a simple camera scan.While the demo was impressive, Ars Technica notes that the current AI has problems with video analysis under less ideal (read: nonscripted) conditions. However, the update is more evolved, and the early response has been positive, with beta users praising the potential of an AI assistant that can see and respond to its environment. The rest of the world can soon see for themselves. Google confirmed that the updates will roll out to the Gemini app on Android later this month, with iOS availability expected soon after. // Related Stories
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  • Whats new on Disney+ in March 2025
    www.digitaltrends.com
    Disney+ hashad some pretty lean months as its parent company chases streaming profitability, and March is no exception. Marvels highly anticipated Daredevil: Born Again series, launching on March 4 with a two-episode premiere, makes this month different. Episodes 3 and 4 will follow weekly, but for some reason, Disney+ is dropping episodes 5 and 6 on the same day as well.As big as Daredevil: Born Again is going to be this month, it pales in comparison to the impact that Moana 2is going to make on March 12. The original Moana is a huge performer for Disney+, so much so that Disney canceled plans for a Moana series on Disney+ and turned it into Moana 2. Now, its coming back to where it would have been in the first place.There are still new episodes of Pixars Win or Lose coming this month, as well as the premiere of David Blaine Do Not Attempt. Unfortunately, once Born Again, Win or Lose, and David Blaine Do Not Attempt are counted, there just isnt much new programming left to watch in March.RelatedOur roundup of everything new on Disney+ in March 2025 can be found below, with our favorites highlighted in bold.Do you need more suggestions on what to watch? We have guides to the best new shows to stream, the best shows on Disney+, the best movies on Disney+, and the best shows on Netflix.Not yet signed up to Disney+ or looking to upgrade? The Disney Bundle gets you three services for the price of one: Disney+, Hulu, and ESPN+ for $17 per month.March 3Malawi Wildlife Rescue (Season 2, 6 episodes)March 4Marvel Televisions Daredevil: Born Again Two-Episode Premiere @ 6pm PTMarch 5Morphle: Shorts (Season 1, 15 episodes)Primos (Season 1, 9 episodes)Win or Lose Two New EpisodesMarch 11Marvel Televisions Daredevil: Born Again Episode 3 at 6pm PTMarch 12Disney Jr.s Ariel (S1, 4 episodes)Port Protection Alaska (S8, 10 episodes)Meet the Pickles: The Making of Win or LoseMoana 2 PremiereWin or Lose Two New EpisodesMarch 18Marvel Televisions Daredevil: Born Again Episode 4 at 6pm PTMarch 19Life Below Zero (Season 2 3, 20 episodes)Star Wars: Young Jedi Adventures (Season 2) 12 Remaining Episodes from Season 2March 22Animals, Theyre Just Like Us! (Season 1, 6 episodes)March 24David Blaine Do Not Attempt Two-Episode PremiereMarch 25Marvel Televisions Daredevil: Born Again Episodes 5 & 6 at 6pm PTMarch 26Morphle and the Magic Pets: Shorts (Season 1, 10 episodes)March 28Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Road Trip PremiereMarch 31David Blaine Do Not Attempt Two New EpisodesEditors Recommendations
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  • The Dell XPS 13, a Copilot+ laptop, is on sale at $300 off
    www.digitaltrends.com
    If youre thinking about buying a laptop thats designed to maximize the capabilities of Microsofts Copilot, heres an offer from Dell that you should consider: the Dell XPS 13 with a $300 discount that brings its price down to $1,700 from $2,000. Its still not what youd call affordable after those savings, but its going to be worth every single penny with its capabilities. Youre going to have to act fast if you dont want to miss out though, as theres always a lot of interest in Dell XPS deals.The Dell XPS 13 is a Copilot+ laptop, which means its built so that you can fully enjoy the features of Microsofts Copilot. Youll be able to access the powerful AI assistant with ease as the device is powered by the Intel Core Ultra 7 258V Series 2 processor, Intel Arc Graphics, and 32GB of RAM, which our guide on how much RAM do you need says is the sweet spot for professionals. With these specifications and Windows 11 Home, youll also be able to carry out even the most demanding tasks for work or school without any issues, even when youre multitasking between several apps to get them done.With its sleek frame and 13.4-inch OLED touchscreen with 3K resolution, the Dell XPS 13 is an extremely portable device, so you wont mind bringing it with you wherever you go. The laptop can carry all of your important files and necessary apps in its 1TB SSD, and it also has a 1080p camera with dual-array microphones for whenever you need to join an online meeting or make a video call.RelatedThe laptop deals that are worth buying never come cheap, but you should still be on the lookout for savings that will make the purchase a little lighter on your wallet. Heres a great example the Dell XPS 13 at $300 off from Dell, for a lowered price of $1,700 from $2,000 originally. Were not sure how much time is remaining on this discount, so if you want to get the Dell XPS 13 for a more affordable price than usual, you need to proceed with the transaction as soon as possible.Editors Recommendations
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  • Portrait Now by Sheila Jordan Review: An Autobiography in Jazz
    www.wsj.com
    By Will Friedwald Sheila Jordan Photo: Edward CohenIn 1962, the jazz singer Sheila Jordan recorded her first album, which was titled Portrait of Sheila when issued by Blue Note Records in early 1963.Sixty yearsand roughly 25 albumslater, she went into a Bronx, N.Y., studio and cut her newest one, Portrait Now, which refers to that first release in its title.What makes that six-decade span even more noteworthy is that Ms. Jordan was hardly a newcomer in 1963; she would turn 35 that year, and had already spent most of her career on the fringes of the jazz world. And even when she reached her mid-40sthe age when such major singers as Billie Holiday and Nat King Cole arrived at the end of their lives and careersshe was still getting started as a recording artist: She cut her second album as leader, Confirmation, in 1975.Copyright 2025 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8
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  • Researchers surprised to find less-educated areas adopting AI writing tools faster
    arstechnica.com
    From the mouths of machines Researchers surprised to find less-educated areas adopting AI writing tools faster Stanford researchers analyzed 305 million texts, revealing AI-writing trends. Benj Edwards Mar 3, 2025 5:32 pm | 0 Credit: Moor Studio via Getty Images Credit: Moor Studio via Getty Images Story textSizeSmallStandardLargeWidth *StandardWideLinksStandardOrange* Subscribers only Learn moreSince the launch of ChatGPT in late 2022, experts have debated how widely AI language models would impact the world. A few years later, the picture is getting clear. According to new Stanford University-led research examining over 300 million text samples across multiple sectors, AI language models now assist in writing up to a quarter of professional communications across sectors. It's having a large impact, especially in less-educated parts of the United States."Our study shows the emergence of a new reality in which firms, consumers and even international organizations substantially rely on generative AI for communications," wrote the researchers.The researchers tracked large language model (LLM) adoption across industries from January 2022 to September 2024 using a dataset that included 687,241 consumer complaints submitted to the US Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), 537,413 corporate press releases, 304.3 million job postings, and 15,919 United Nations press releases.By using a statistical detection system that tracked word usage patterns, the researchers found that roughly 18 percent of financial consumer complaints (including 30 percent of all complaints from Arkansas), 24 percent of corporate press releases, up to 15 percent of job postings, and 14 percent of UN press releases showed signs of AI assistance during that period of time.The study also found that while urban areas showed higher adoption overall (18.2 percent versus 10.9 percent in rural areas), regions with lower educational attainment used AI writing tools more frequently (19.9 percent compared to 17.4 percent in higher-education areas). The researchers note that this contradicts typical technology adoption patterns where more educated populations adopt new tools fastest."In the consumer complaint domain, the geographic and demographic patterns in LLM adoption present an intriguing departure from historical technology diffusion trends where technology adoption has generally been concentrated in urban areas, among higher-income groups, and populations with higher levels of educational attainment."Researchers from Stanford, the University of Washington, and Emory University led the study, titled, "The Widespread Adoption of Large Language Model-Assisted Writing Across Society," first listed on the arXiv preprint server in mid-February. Weixin Liang and Yaohui Zhang from Stanford served as lead authors, with collaborators Mihai Codreanu, Jiayu Wang, Hancheng Cao, and James Zou.Detecting AI use in aggregateWe've previously covered that AI writing detection services aren't reliable, and this study does not contradict that finding. On a document-by-document basis, AI detectors cannot be trusted. But when analyzing millions of documents in aggregate, telltale patterns emerge that suggest the influence of AI language models on text.The researchers developed an approach based on a statistical framework in a previously released work that analyzed shifts in word frequencies and linguistic patterns before and after ChatGPT's release. By comparing large sets of pre- and post-ChatGPT texts, they estimated the proportion of AI-assisted content at a population level. The presumption is that LLMs tend to favor certain word choices, sentence structures, and linguistic patterns that differ subtly from typical human writing.To validate their approach, the researchers created test sets with known percentages of AI content (from zero percent to 25 percent) and found their method predicted these percentages with error rates below 3.3 percent. This statistical validation gave them confidence in their population-level estimates.While the researchers specifically note their estimates likely represent a minimum level of AI usage, it's important to understand that actual AI involvement might be significantly greater. Due to the difficulty in detecting heavily edited or increasingly sophisticated AI-generated content, the researchers say their reported adoption rates could substantially underestimate true levels of generative AI use.Analysis suggests AI use as equalizing toolsWhile the overall adoption rates are revealing, perhaps more insightful are the patterns of who is using AI writing tools and how these patterns may challenge conventional assumptions about technology adoption.In examining the CFPB complaints (a US public resource that collects complaints about consumer financial products and services), the researchers' geographic analysis revealed substantial variation across US states.Arkansas showed the highest adoption rate at 29.2 percent (based on 7,376 complaints), followed by Missouri at 26.9 percent (16,807 complaints) and North Dakota at 24.8 percent (1,025 complaints). In contrast, states like West Virginia (2.6 percent), Idaho (3.8 percent), and Vermont (4.8 percent) showed minimal AI writing adoption. Major population centers demonstrated moderate adoption, with California at 17.4 percent (157,056 complaints) and New York at 16.6 percent (104,862 complaints).The urban-rural divide followed expected technology adoption patterns initially, but with an interesting twist. Using Rural Urban Commuting Area (RUCA) codes, the researchers found that urban and rural areas initially adopted AI writing tools at similar rates during early 2023. However, adoption trajectories diverged by mid-2023, with urban areas reaching 18.2 percent adoption compared to 10.9 percent in rural areas.Contrary to typical technology diffusion patterns, areas with lower educational attainment showed higher AI writing tool usage. Comparing regions above and below state median levels of bachelor's degree attainment, areas with fewer college graduates stabilized at 19.9 percent adoption rates compared to 17.4 percent in more educated regions. This pattern held even within urban areas, where less-educated communities showed 21.4 percent adoption versus 17.8 percent in more educated urban areas.The researchers suggest that AI writing tools may serve as a leg-up for people who may not have as much educational experience. "While the urban-rural digital divide seems to persist," the researchers write, "our finding that areas with lower educational attainment showed modestly higher LLM adoption rates in consumer complaints suggests these tools may serve as equalizing tools in consumer advocacy."Corporate and diplomatic trends in AI writingAccording to the researchers, all sectors they analyzed (consumer complaints, corporate communications, job postings) showed similar adoption patterns: sharp increases beginning three to four months after ChatGPT's November 2022 launch, followed by stabilization in late 2023.Organization age emerged as the strongest predictor of AI writing usage in the job posting analysis. Companies founded after 2015 showed adoption rates up to three times higher than firms established before 1980, reaching 1015 percent AI-modified text in certain roles compared to below 5 percent for older organizations. Small companies with fewer employees also incorporated AI more readily than larger organizations.When examining corporate press releases by sector, science and technology companies integrated AI most extensively, with an adoption rate of 16.8 percent by late 2023. Business and financial news (1415.6 percent) and people and culture topics (13.614.3 percent) showed slightly lower but still significant adoption.In the international arena, Latin American and Caribbean UN country teams showed the highest adoption among international organizations at approximately 20 percent, while African states, Asia-Pacific states, and Eastern European states demonstrated more moderate increases to 1114 percent by 2024.Implications and limitationsIn the study, the researchers acknowledge limitations in their analysis due to a focus on English-language content. Also, as we mentioned earlier, they found they could not reliably detect human-edited AI-generated text or text generated by newer models instructed to imitate human writing styles. As a result, the researchers suggest their findings represent a lower bound of actual AI writing tool adoption.The researchers noted that the plateauing of AI writing adoption in 2024 might reflect either market saturation or increasingly sophisticated LLMs producing text that evades detection methods. They conclude we now live in a world where distinguishing between human and AI writing becomes progressively more difficult, with implications for communications across society."The growing reliance on AI-generated content may introduce challenges in communication," the researchers write. "In sensitive categories, over-reliance on AI could result in messages that fail to address concerns or overall release less credible information externally. Over-reliance on AI could also introduce public mistrust in the authenticity of messages sent by firms."Benj EdwardsSenior AI ReporterBenj EdwardsSenior AI Reporter Benj Edwards is Ars Technica's Senior AI Reporter and founder of the site's dedicated AI beat in 2022. He's also a tech historian with almost two decades of experience. In his free time, he writes and records music, collects vintage computers, and enjoys nature. He lives in Raleigh, NC. 0 Comments
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  • Kaizen: A Factory Story makes a game of perfecting 1980s Japanese manufacturing
    arstechnica.com
    Zach Barth, the namesake of game studio Zachtronics, tends to make a certain kind of game.Besides crafting the free browser game Infiniminer, which inspired the entire global Minecraft industry, Barth and his collaborators made SpaceChem, Infinifactory, TIS-100, Shenzen I/O, Opus Magnum, andExapunks. Each one of them is some combination of puzzle game, light capitalism horror, and the most memorable introductory-level computer science, chemistry, or logistics class into which you unwittingly enrolled. Each game is its own thing, but they have a certain similar brain feel between them. It is summed up perhaps best by the Zachtronics team itself in a book: Zach-Like.Barth and his crew have made other kinds of games, including a forward-looking visual novel about AI, Eliza, and multiplayer card battler Nerts!. And Barth himself told PC Gamer that he hates "saying Zach-like." But fans of refining inputs, ordering operations, and working their way past constraints will thrill to learn that Zach is, in fact, back. Announcement trailer for Kaizen: A Factory Story.Kaizen: A Factory Story, from developer Coincidence and comprising "the original Zachtronics team," puts you, an American neophyte business type, in charge of a factory making toys, tiny electronics, and other goods during the Japanese economic boom of the 1980s. You arrange the spacing and order of operations of the mechanical arms that snap the head onto a robot toy, or the battery onto a Walkman, for as little time, power, and financial cost as possible.
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  • Should we be moving data centers to space?
    www.technologyreview.com
    Last week, the Florida-based company Lonestar Data Holdings launched a shoebox-size device carrying data from internet pioneer Vint Cerf and the government of Florida, among others, on board Intuitive Machines Athena lander. When its device lands on the moon later this week, the company will be the first to explicitly test out a question that has been on some technologists minds of late: Maybe its time to move data centers off Earth? After all, energy-guzzling data centers are springing up like mushrooms all over the world, devouring precious land, straining our power grids, consuming water, and emitting noise. Building facilities in orbit or on or near the moon might help ameliorate many of these issues. For Steve Eisele, Lonestars president and chief revenue officer, a big appeal of putting data storage on the moon is security. Ultimately, the moon can be the safest option where you can have a backup for your data, Eisele says. Its harder to hack; its way harder to penetrate; its above any issues on Earth, from natural disasters to power outages to war. Lonestars device is equipped with eight terabytes of storage, about as much as a high-end laptop. It will last for just a couple of weeks before lunar night descends, temperatures plummet, and solar power runs out. But the company expects that to be enough time to test practicalities like downloading and uploading data and verifying secure data transfer protocols. And it has bigger plans. As early as 2027, the company aims to launch a commercial data storage service using a bunch of satellites placed in the Earth-moon Lagrange point L1, a gravitationally stable point 61,350 kilometers above the moons surface. There, the spacecraft would have a constant view of Earth to allow continuous data access. Other companies have similar aspirations. The US space company Axiom, best known for organizing short trips to the International Space Station for private astronauts, intends to launch a prototype server to the station in the coming months. By 2027, the firm wants to set up a computing node in low Earth orbit aboard its own space station module. A company called Starcloud, based in Washington state, is also betting on the need to process data in space. The company, which raised an $11 million round in December and more since then, wants to launch a small data-crunching satellite fitted with Nvidia GPUs later this year. Axiom sees an urgent need for computing capacity in space beyond simply providing an untouchable backup for earthly data. Todays growing fleets of Earth- and space-observing satellites struggle with bandwidth limitations. Before users can glean any insights from satellite observations, the images must be downlinked to ground stations sparsely scattered around the planet and sent over to data centers for processing, which leads to delays. Data centers in space will help expedite many use cases, says Jason Aspiotis, the global director of in-space data and security at Axiom. The time from seeing something to taking action is very, very important for national security and for some scientific applications as well. A computer in space would also save costs that you need to bring all the data to the ground. But for these data centers to succeed, they must be able to withstand harsh conditions in space, pull in enough solar energy to operate, and make economic sense. Enthusiasts say the challenges are more tractable than they might appearespecially if you take into account some of the issues with data centers on Earth. Better in space? The current boom in AI and crypto mining is raising concerns about the environmental impact of computing infrastructure on Earth. Currently, data centers eat up around 1% or 2% of the worlds electricity. This number could double by 2030 alone, according to a Goldman Sachs report published last year. Space-tech aficionados think orbiting data centers could solve the problem. Data centers on Earth need a lot of power to operate, which means they have a high carbon footprint, says DamienDumestier, a space systems architect at the European aerospace conglomerate Thales Alenia Space. They also produce a lot of heat, so you need water to cool them. None of that is a problem in space, where you have unlimited access to solar power and where you can simply radiate excess heat into space. Dumestier, who led an EU-funded study on the feasibility of placing large-scale IT infrastructure in Earths orbit, also sees space as a more secure option than Earth for data transportation and storage. Subsea fiber-optic cables are vulnerable to sabotage and natural disasters, like the undersea volcanic eruption that cut Tonga off from the web for two weeks. High above Earth, data centers connected with unhackable laser links would be much harder to cut off or penetrate. Barring antisatellite missiles, space-based nuke explosions, or interceptor robots, these computing superhubs would be nigh untouchable. That is, except for micrometeorites and pieces of space debris, which spacecraft can dodge and, to some extent, be engineered to withstand. Outside of Earths protective atmosphere, the electronic equipment would also be exposed to energetic particles from the sun, which could damage it over time. Axiom plans to tackle the problem by using hardened military equipment, which Aspiotis says survives well in extreme environments. Lonestar thinks it could avoid the harsh radiation near the moon by ultimately placing its data centers in lava tubes under the lunar surface. Then there is the matter of powering these facilities. Although solar power in Earths orbit is free and constantly available, its never previously been harvested in amounts needed to power data infrastructure at the scale existing on Earth. The Thales Alenia Space study, called ASCEND (an acronym for advanced space cloud for European net zero emission and data sovereignty), envisions orbiting data platforms twice as large as the International Space Station, the largest space structure built to date. The server racks at the heart of the ASCEND platforms would be powered by vast solar arrays producing a megawatt of power, equivalent to the electricity consumption of about 500 Western households. In comparison, the solar panels on the ISS produce only about one-quarter that amount240 kilowatts at full illumination. Launch costsand the environmental effects of rocket launchesalso complicate the picture. For space-based data centers to be an environmental win, Dumestier says, the carbon footprint of rocket flights needs to improve. He says SpaceXs Starship, which is designed to carry very large loads and so could be cheaper and more efficient for each kilogram launched, is a major step in the right directionand might pave the way for the deployment of large-scale orbital data centers by 2030. Aspiotis echoes those views: There is a point in the not-too-distant future where data centers in space are as economical as they are on the ground, he says. In which case do we want them on the ground, where they are consuming power, water, and other kinds of utilities, including real estate? Domenico Vicinanza, an associate professor of intelligent systems and data science at Anglia Ruskin University in the UK, tempers the optimism, however. He says that moving data centers to space en masse is still a bit of a moonshot. Robotic technologies that could assemble and maintain such large-scale structures do not yet exist, and hardware failures in the harsh orbital environment would increase maintenance costs. Fixing problems in orbit is far from straightforward. Even with robotics and automation, there are limits to what can be repaired remotely, Vicinanza says. While space offers the benefit of 24-7 solar energy, solar flares and cosmic radiation could damage sensitive electronic equipment and current electronics, from mainstream microchips to memories that are not built and tested to work in space. He also notes that any collisions could further crowd Earth orbit with space debris. Any accidental damage to the data center could create cascading debris, further complicating orbital operations, he says. But even if we dont move data centers off Earth, supporters say its technology we will need to expand our presence in space. The lunar economy will grow, and within the next five years we will need digital infrastructure on the moon, Eisele says. We will have robots that will need to talk to each other. Governments will set up scientific bases and will need digital infrastructure to support their needs not only on the moon but also for going to Mars and beyond. That will be a big part of our future.
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  • My wife and I are using a sperm donor to have a baby. It's a strange and expensive process.
    www.businessinsider.com
    2025-03-03T22:31:14Z Read in app The author and her wife had to look for a sperm donor. Courtesy of Amanda Smith This story is available exclusively to Business Insider subscribers. Become an Insider and start reading now.Have an account? My wife and I want to be parents, but we need to find a sperm donor.The process of finding a sperm donor is strange because we can only look at documents.It's also expensive, and we have not yet gotten pregnant.The calling to have children and be a mother came from deep in my soul and has remained consistent over the years.When I came out as queer, I worried about how much more difficult it would be for me to become a parent."Modern science is great. You'll be able to have children," a friend said encouragingly. I hoped they were right and now I'm learning the truth.When my wife and I decided to become parents, we needed a sperm donor. The process has been difficult, strange, and expensive.We chose our sperm donor based on documentsMy wife and I have been in fits of laughter, browsing the sperm banks and seeing some of the photos and descriptions. Each donor provides photos (adult and baby), a personal essay, a voice recording, and a medical profile.It's weird. Several times, we thought we had found a donor we liked, but then we heard their voice, and it was off-putting or they'd say their favorite animal is a small bird or ladybug.We were looking for a donor who was more analytical or mathematical, given that we're both creative and artistic. Physically, we wanted someone tall, with dark brown curly hair to match the traits of my wife, given that I'd be carrying the baby.It's hard because the process forces us to emphasize the things that don't matter looks, career, genetic greatness, and astrological signs. There's no formula. It's all feeling.When we finally found the donor we wanted, it felt like an instant connection with "the one." It just felt right.But that connection never goes beyond documents or forms. It's a strange kind of pseudo-relationship and quasi-emotional connection.We're spending a lot of moneySo far, we have spent thousands of dollars on this process, and we've had no pregnancies.We're also sinking our money into an unregulated industry.Most of these sperm banks don't adhere to the family limit number, meaning one donor can have anywhere from 10 to 150 children.Avoiding half-sibling pods can be difficult, but right now, this expensive path seems like our only option.My wife and I are leaning on each other for supportThe process hasn't been easy. Since my wife's DNA won't be involved in the making of our baby, we are navigating a strange territory. We're trying to ensure my wife will leave her park on the child during pregnancy and early life."This shift in perspective does not change the facts but gives an optimistic way to see a scenario and gives back some of the control these individuals may feel they lost during the process," Jennifer Teplin, clinical director at Manhattan Wellness, who specializes in maternal mental health and treats LGBTQ+ patients, said told me.But my wife and I are getting through this together. Luckily, she's always cracking jokes, bringing levity to a strange scenario.I've also found peace in the fact that no one gets to choose their family. We found a donor my wife and I both felt drawn to, which I'm grateful for. In the end, if we only have one child, they will be born with a much wider support system and family beyond our home.That's a beautiful gift to give.
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  • Deepfake nudes are the perfect issue for Melania Trump to take on: It's bipartisan and everyone agrees it's a problem.
    www.businessinsider.com
    Katie Notopoulos, Senior Correspondent covering technology and culture 2025-03-03T22:19:36Z Read in app First lady Melania Trump is weighing in on deepfake nudes. Leon Neal/Getty Images This story is available exclusively to Business Insider subscribers. Become an Insider and start reading now.Have an account? Melania Trump is supporting a bill that aims to stop AI-generated nudes.Deepfake nudes are a growing issue in schools that is affecting young people especially girls.This is a perfect issue for the first lady to take up: It's bipartisan and relevant.Melania Trump appeared at a roundtable on Capitol Hill on Monday to support a proposed bill that would tackle the issue of nonconsensual sexual images, especially deepfake nudes.This is a perfect issue for the first lady to take on. It's bipartisan and is something everyone agrees is awful and a scourge to young people.It also hits a rare sweet spot of retaining some anti-tech and anti-AI feelings without actually impeding Big Tech. (In fact, Big Tech companies like Meta and TikTok have supported the bill.)Nonconsensual sexual images created with AI, or deepfake nudes, have exploded as an issue in high schools and even in middle schools, where images are created to harass and shame peers. It's especially affected young women, although it's also affected boys.People have created sexualized images and videos of celebrities for years by using photo-editing software, but AI has made it that much easier. There are "nudify" apps that do this with just a few taps. 404 Media has reported on how Instagram has struggled to take down ads for these kinds of apps, which are against Meta's rules.On Monday, Thorn, an organization that advocates against online child sexual abuse and exploitation,published a report based on its survey of 13-to-20-year-olds: It said one out of eight young people who responded said theyknew someone personally who had been a victim of a deepfake nude image. These images, sickeningly, put a victim's real face on an AI-generated body."By closing a key legal gap, this bill criminalizes the knowing distribution of intimate visual depictions of minors whether real or AI-generated when shared with intent to harm, harass, or exploit," Emily Slifer, Thorn's director of policy, told Business Insider.For the people affected, such images can be devastating. The New York Times called the issue an "epidemic" in a story about how AI images have wreaked havoc in suburban high schools and middle schools. During Monday's roundtable, several young women shared their experiences.In the past, Melania Trump has rarely gotten involved in the weeds of legislation, so putting her weight behind this bill sends a signal. Using her prominent position, she can push for action that actually will make a difference.The "Take It Down Act," a bill introduced by Republican Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, along with a bipartisan group of senators, including Democrat Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota and Democratic Sen. Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut, would criminalize publishing these kinds of nonconsensual images and make it easier for victims to get images removed quickly.During Donald Trump's first presidency, the first lady launched a "Be Best" initiative, which was aimed at stopping online bullying. At the time, the amorphous slogan and the fact that the president himself was no stranger to hurling insults on social media made it a bit of a punchline among some people.But in the last two years, the effect of social media on teen mental health and the dangers of a "phone-based childhood" have become front-of-mind issues for parents and regulators. The timing for the return of Be Best is perfect."As first lady, my commitment to the Be Best initiative underscores the importance of online safety," Melania Trump said during the roundtable with Cruz and others. "In an era where digital interactions are integral to daily life, it is imperative that we safeguard children from mean-spirited and hurtful online behavior."Cyberbullying is actually quite complicated.For social platforms, there's a tension between banning people for being jerks online and upholding the values of free speech. Elon Musk's X and now Mark Zuckerberg's Meta platforms have both loosened policies around speech that some people, including me, would consider abhorrent like anti-trans slurs.But some stuff, of course, should clearly not be allowed like child sexual abuse material, or sexualized photos that are either fake or used without someone's consent. It makes sense for Melania Trump to say that out loud.
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