The Cybertruck’s Steering Has a Significant Lag

Tesla's Cybertruck's steer-by-wire system has a considerable delay. But that may be a feature, not a bug, as many netizens have argued.

Tesla's Cybertruck is a major departure from conventional automotive design in many ways, from its peculiar shape to its use of stainless steel.

High on that list is also the pickup's steer-by-wire system, which translates the movement of the steering yoke to all four wheels using actuators, foregoing any physical connection.

Tesla claims that the system means that "steering Cybertruck feels more responsive and requires less effort from the driver."

But if a recent video spotted by Jalopnik is anything to go by, the system suffers from a considerable delay between the movement of the steering yoke and the front wheels, raising questions over whether the truck is truly safe to drive.

The cybertruck has a fly-by-wire steering wheel.... and it LAGS ??? pic.twitter.com/nUbrCXjU0r

— Heart (@heartereum) June 3, 2024

The video quickly drew plenty of derision.

"Imagine crashing because of your steering ping," one user joked.

But as many other netizens have since pointed out, there may be a good reason for the delay.

Other users on Tesla CEO Elon Musk's social media platform X quickly amended the viral video with a Community note, arguing that "without steer by wire would take far longer to make that turn."

"It isn't lag," the note reads. "This is a safety feature."

They may be onto something. Going from one extreme of the steering range to the othertakes a considerable amount of movement of the steering wheel in a conventional car, as one Reddit user demonstrated with his Ford F-150. Besides, completing the maneuver seen in the video while traveling at speed could result in very erratic and potentially dangerous movement, and in extreme cases even flip the vehicle (although you'd have to try very hard to flip a 6,600-pound EV).

The Cybertruck's steering wheel is also designed to translate far more movement to the wheels with relatively little turning of the steering yoke at slower speeds. At highway speeds, that ratio becomes much lower to ensure stability on the road.

"There’s absolutely no real-life scenario in which you need to turn the wheels that quickly while stationary," one Reddit user pointed out.

Car journalists have generally spoken highly of the steer-by-wire system, noting the truck's surprising agility. However, most have also noted that the unusual setup takes time to get used to.

But what about the responsiveness of the steering at higher speeds? What would happen if a Cybertruck driver had to swerve out of the way of an oncoming obstacle, a situation where every fraction of a second counts? As users on Hacker News pointed out, even a minimal amount of lag could lead to a driver overreacting, making the situation worse.

Plenty of questions remain. For one, we don't know whether the delay is present when the Cybertruck is in motion, or how a possible delay would compare to a stationary one, especially when taking its variable turning ratio into account.

Nonetheless, there's a good case to be made that this particular video may have primarily served as a way to take a potshot at Tesla and draw a crowd.

To be clear, there are plenty of other valid criticisms of the unusual pickup, including terrible range, shoddy workmanship, besmirched body panels, lack of manual controls, a finicky and unreliable truck bed cover — and lots of lemons being delivered to customers.

"There's many, many, many, many reasons to hate on the Cybertruck but this isn't one of them," one Reddit user argued.

More on the Cybertruck: Elon Musk Is Gonna Blow a Gasket When He Sees This Pride-Themed Cybertruck

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NASA Slaps Down Billionaire’s Plan to Fly Up and Fix Hubble Space Telescope

Billionaire space tourist Jared Isaacman offered to fix NASA's Hubble telescope. Officials are still unsure the benefits outweigh the risks.

Offer Declined

NASA's groundbreaking Hubble Space Telescope is on its last legs.

Ongoing issues with the aging spacecraft's remaining gyroscopes, which help point in the right direction, have forced scientists to limit its scientific operations, according to a Tuesday update, with teams preparing for "one-gyro operations."

And while billionaire space tourist Jared Isaacman, who already circled the Earth inside a SpaceX Crew Dragon, has offered to foot the bill for a Hubble maintenance mission — the last one took place in 2009, before the end of the Space Shuttle program — NASA has now turned him down.

Basically, the agency is worried Isaacman and his collaborators may end up doing more harm than good.

"After exploring the current commercial capabilities, we are not going to pursue a reboost right now," said NASA astrophysics director Mark Clampin, as quoted by CBS News. While NASA "greatly appreciates" their efforts, "our assessment also raised a number of considerations, including potential risks such as premature loss of science and some technology challenges."

However, the door isn't entirely shut just yet.

"So while the reboost is an option for the future, we believe we need to do some additional work to determine whether the long-term science return will outweigh the short-term science risk," Clampin concluded.

Thanks, But No Thanks

It's yet another intriguing development in the ever-changing relationship between NASA and the burgeoning private industry it's increasingly relying on for access to space.

As NPR reported last month, NASA spent years hemming and hawing over Isaacman's offer to visit the Hubble.

The entrepreneur and trained fighter jet pilot, who was the commander of the first all-civilian mission into space, which saw a crew of four circle the Earth inside a SpaceX Crew Dragon spacecraft in September 2021, has been calling for a maintenance mission, arguing that "the 'clock' is being run out on this game."

Isaacman will also attempt to perform the first-ever private spacewalk later this year.

But plenty of concerns remain, with NASA pointing out that SpaceX's Crew Dragon isn't exactly designed for such a mission, and lacks several core features over NASA's Space Shuttle, which was used to service the Hubble five times between 1993 and 2009.

For one, it doesn't have an airlock or a robotic arm, which could make repairing the Hubble difficult.

Besides, even during NASA's servicing missions, astronauts came nail-bitingly close to permanently damaging the space telescope.

Instead, NASA is looking for ways to eke out just over another decade of life out of the Hubble, without a SpaceX-enabled visit.

"We updated reliability assessments for the gyros... and we still come to the conclusion that (we have a) greater than 70 percent probability of operating at least one gyro through 2035," Hubble project manager Patrick Crouse told reporters on Tuesday.

More on the Hubble: NASA Experts Concerned Billionaire Space Tourist Will Accidentally Break Hubble Space Telescope While Trying to Fix It

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The Diamond Industry Is Withering as Beautiful Lab-Grown Diamonds Drive Down Prices

Lab-grown diamonds are taking the jewelry industry by storm — and those invested in the natural-grown kind are none too pleased.

Not Forever

Lab-grown diamonds are taking the jewelry industry by storm — and those invested in the natural-grown kind are none too pleased.

As CNBC reports, consumers have developed a taste for less-expensive lab-grown diamonds, which are identical to those forged within the Earth's pressurized mantle but only take a few hours to make, rather than a few billion years.

Said to be up to 85 percent cheaper than mined diamonds, lab-grown diamonds have seen a huge jump in demand as frugal consumers seek to save money and — let's be honest — patronize sellers who don't have blood on their hands.

According to data provided to CNBC by diamond industry analyst Paul Zimnisky, lab-grown represented more than 18 percent of the diamonds sold in 2023, up from just two percent in 2017. Overall diamond prices, meanwhile, have fallen 5.7 percent this year alone, the analyst said.

This sea change has made major waves in the diamond industry, as evidenced by the current debacle at De Beers, the company that in 1948 coined the slogan "diamonds are forever." After seeing major revenue losses in the hundreds of millions of dollars, De Beers is now in a tense breakup with its majority shareholder, the mining company Anglo American — and is recommitting itself to mined diamonds in the midst of it all.

Crazy Diamond

While the drama at the diamond industry's most prestigious institutions rages on, smaller companies are left dealing with the fallout.

Take it from Ankur Daga, the CEO and founder of the e-commerce jeweler Angara who pointed to analysis suggesting that half of engagement rings bought this year will feature lab-grown diamonds. That figure, as a survey commissioned by The Knot wedding magazine found, is almost quadruple the 12 percent who said they'd be buying lab-grown in 2019.

"The diamond industry is in trouble," said Daga, with the "core issue" at hand being the "rapid growth of lab-grown diamonds."

Anish Aggarwal, the cofounder of the diamond advisory firm Gemdex, told CNBC that he believes the industry is up to the challenge — and that its own short-sightedness is likely the cause for its current crisis, anyway.

"The industry has not done large-scale... marketing for almost 20 years," Aggarwal noted. "And we’re seeing the aftermath of that."

To recapture the public's infatuation with diamonds, the industry clearly needs to get on board with the times — and, perhaps, take the L when it comes to consumers wanting to save on luxury goods during an ongoing global recession.

More on luxury: Orcas Strike Again, Sinking Yacht as Oil Tanker Called for Rescue

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Widow Astonished by Options After Husband Dies: "Space?! I Can Shoot Him Into Space?"

After her husband died, one woman found the perfect way to send off his cremated remains after discovering space burial company Celestis.

Rest in Space

Jeremiah Corner was a lifelong fan of "Star Trek."

In 2022, he succumbed to an aggressive autoimmune disease, leaving his wife Uli to decide what to do with his cremated remains, as KOMO News reports.

After doing some research, Corner found the perfect solution after discovering space burial company Celestis.

"Space?! I can shoot him into space?" Corner recalled in an interview with KOMO News.

Fitting End

Having your loved one's cremated remains launched into near-space doesn't come cheap, costing anywhere from $3,500 to $13,000 in the case of a deep space mission.

"I thought to myself, 'If he was alive, I'd be like, honey, do you want to keep your car or do you want to go to space?'" Corner told KOMO. "Space! So, I sold his car and sent him to space."

Since 1997, Celestis has been rocketing the ashes of the deceased into space. Over the decades, it's delivered the remains of "Star Trek" creator Gene Roddenberry, legendary physicist Dr. Gerard O’Neill, and Apollo-era Moon astronaut Philip Chapman.

In total, the company has completed 17 memorial spaceflights, including one that impacted the Moon.

But not everybody agrees with the practice. In January, Navajo Nation president Buu Nygren filed a formal objection with NASA and the US Department of Transportation, decrying plans to deliver ashes to the lunar surface as part of US-based space startup Astrobotic's Peregrine Mission 1 as an "act of desecration."

Fortunately for Nygren — and unfortunately for Roddenberry's family — Peregrine never made it to the Moon and crash-landed in the Pacific Ocean after spending six days in orbit.

Corner's husband Jeremiah, however, fared much better. His remains were part of Celestis Enterprise mission — named in honor of "Star Trek," of course — into deep space, which launched on the same United Launch Alliance's Vulcan rocket as Celestis' moonbound Tranquility mission on January 8.

Corner was in good company, to say the least. Joining his ashes were the DNA of American presidents George Washington, Dwight Eisenhower, and John Kennedy, as well as some of the remains of several cast and crew members from the original "Star Trek" series.

"It felt very spiritual in a way because you're watching someone ascend, literally ascent into the heavens," his surviving wife told KOMO News. "One of the things I wrote on his memorial was I give you the universe. I loved him that much, and so I wanted to do that for him."

More on Celestis: Native Americans Say New Mission Will Desecrate the Moon

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Widow Astonished by Options After Husband Dies: "Space?! I Can Shoot Him Into Space?"

You Might Cry When You Read This Study About What’s Happening to the Oceans

Beware the three horsemen of the ocean apocalypse, according to a new study: extreme heat, acidification, and deoxygenation.

Aquatic Omens

Beware the three horsemen of the ocean apocalypse: extreme heat, acidification, and deoxygenation. New research, published in the journal AGU Advances, has shown how this "triple threat" has drastically intensified over the past several decades, pushing our oceans ever closer to the brink in what is yet another clear consequence of climate change.

Though nothing's set in stone, the findings exhibit eerie parallels to the precursors of previous mass extinctions.

"If you look at the fossil record you can see there was this same pattern at the end of the Permian, where two-thirds of marine genera became extinct," Andrea Dutton, a climate scientist at the University of Wisconisin-Madison who was not involved in the study, told The Guardian. "We don't have identical conditions to that now, but it's worth pointing out that the environmental changes going on are similar."

New Extremes

Extreme heat, acidification, and deoxygenation are all fearsome forces on their own. Combine two or more of them, and they can be catastrophic: they cause what's known as column-compound extreme events (CCX), which turn affected areas of the ocean virtually uninhabitable.

The research, which focused on the effects in the upper one thousand feet of the ocean, found that these compound events are growing, and now threaten up to 20 percent of global ocean volume. The waters of the North Pacific and the tropics are the most hard hit, as the only areas faced with full-blown triple CCX — at least so far.

To make matters worse, the events are only getting more extreme, lasting three times longer — up to 30 days — and are six times more intense compared to the 1960s, per the Guardian. And wherever they occur, they can cut down the amount of habitable space by up to 75 percent.

"The impacts of this have already been seen and felt," study lead author Joel Wong, a researcher at ETH Zurich, told the newspaper.  "Intense extreme events like these are likely to happen again in the future and will disrupt marine ecosystems and fisheries around the world."

Sinking Feeling

Oceans are the world's largest carbon sinks, absorbing the greenhouse gas and keeping it out of the atmosphere — and this immense burden, worsened due to climate change driven by human emissions, is taking its toll.

As the oceans absorb more carbon, their seawater becomes more acidic, damaging marine life. It also has the effect of crowding out oxygen molecules, straining aquatic populations.

Marine biomes are also enormous heat sinks. As expected, soaring global temperatures are putting them under incredible stress. But last year, the oceans also experienced a spike in warming that outpaced even the most pessimistic predictions, bewildering scientists. Who knows, then, just how extreme these compounding catastrophes can get.

More on oceans: Scientists Find Plastic-Eating Fungus Feasting on Great Pacific Garbage Patch

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Facebook Page Uses AI-Generated Image of Disabled Veteran to Farm Engagement

An AI-generated image of a young disabled veteran went viral on Facebook. A lot of folks — particularly older men — think she's the real deal.

An image, posted this week to a Facebook page called "Summer Vibes," shows a smiling young woman with brunette hair. She's dressed in Army fatigues — although, quizzically, she's not wearing pants, and the mangled American flag patch on the arm of her jacket has only six stripes and zero stars. She's white. She's conventionally attractive. And crucially, this grinning young woman is seated in a wheelchair, implying that she's an injured or disabled veteran.

"Please don't swip [sic] up without giving some love," reads the image's garbled caption. "Without heroes,we [sic] are all plain people,and [sic] don't know how far we can go." The caption is then followed by a string of hashtags listing the names of famous actresses like Anne Hathaway, Megan Fox, and Jennifer Lopez (as well as Christian Bale and Chris Evans, for some reason.)

Needless to say, the woman isn't real. She's AI-generated, and to many, that's obvious. In addition to the woefully incorrect American flag tacked onto the uniform, the last name that would normally appear on a soldier's pocket is an illegible clump of blobs that, when zoomed out, gives off only the semblance of lettering. Her teeth, eyes, and ears are also blurry and uncanny, as are her poorly defined hands.

And yet, despite these obvious flaws, the image has gone viral: at present, it has more than 62,000 reactions, nearly 5,000 comments, and 2,500 shares. And judging by the comments section? A lot of folks — particularly older men — absolutely think she's the real deal.

"Thank you for your sacrificial service to America and its citizens to maintain, [sic] our Republic, our Constitution and our God given [sic] rights and freedoms!" wrote one commenter, noting that he served in the military during the Vietnam war. "Thank you Summer, you are a beautiful, brave young lady!" he added, rounding the post out with heart, American flag, Statue of Liberty, and bald eagle emojis.

"Thank you my sister in arms," wrote another older man, "bless you for your service and dedication."

"Beautiful," added yet another. "Thank you for your service and prayers for healing and mercies and comfort from our Lord Jesus Christ Amen."

"Miss Beautiful USA!" yet another older guy chimed in. "THANK YOU FOR YOUR SERVICE."

Though the title of the Facebook page — "Summer Vibes" — would suggest a feed of poolside shots and cocktails with tiny umbrellas, its posts are neither summery nor even vibey. It's a spam page, dedicated to posting what's likely an automated stream of images and graphics featuring battle-wounded war veterans; each post is outfitted with that same error-packed caption imploring users not to scroll through without "giving some love." Despite the page's continued pleas to support the folks in the many photos and graphics, it doesn't give any information about them, or link to any charities or donations. The page instead keeps posting image after image, begging for likes, comments, and shares.

The vast majority of Summer Vibes' images appear to be of real veterans. However, most of these posts don't get a ton of reach — some gain a sparse handful of likes and comments, others might rake in a few hundred on a good day. But like Facebook's now-infamous Shrimp Jesus AI images, not to mention countless other AI outputs that have recently gone viral on the platform, it seems that the pantsless AI vet was scooped up by Facebook's recommendation algorithm and took off from there.

It's concerning for a few reasons. On the one hand, we have plenty of real disabled veterans who deserve care, respect, and medical and financial help. Distracting from these actual humans — who have been historically neglected upon their return from service — with a viral image of a fake one immediately raises ethical red flags. And broadly speaking, images like this clogging up the internet, where real people are still trying to share information and communicate, isn't great. (We reached out to Summer Vibes, but haven't received any response.)

Then, of course, there's the reaction to the image. As far as AI images go, this one isn't even particularly good or convincing. But some Facebook users — again, mostly older people, and especially older men — fell hook, line, and sinker for the fake photo. Some were even persuaded enough to push back against the few commenters who pointed out that the image was AI-made.

"What makes u so sure of that??" read one such retort.

This kind of reaction also has implications beyond synthetic clickbait. In March, a BBC report revealed that MAGA influencers and pundits were using AI to generate fabricated images of former president Donald Trump posing with groups of Black voters, a demographic group with whom the presidential candidate is hoping to shore up more support in his ongoing 2024 campaign.

When we looked at the comments on one of these fake photos, which was posted to Facebook by a far-right media personality as part of their effort to sell a Rush Limbaugh-inspired Christmas book — yes, seriously — we noticed lauding, clueless comments. Some users praised Trump; some users issued prayers; others simply remarked on the "beautiful photo." Sound familiar?

And that's just one example of AI's convincing use in political content. AI is creeping further into political campaigns and election cycles worldwide, the United States' 2024 race included, and experts have repeatedly warned of the associated risks. Spamming the web with photos of attractive fake veterans, though an objectively lousy thing to do, is one thing. But after spending some time in the cursed land that is Facebook comments, it's hard not to come away with the uneasy sense that enough fake images could make a genuine dent in what a large group of individuals believes to be true.

In a consequential year, it might just matter that old dudes on the internet are looking straight past this extremely fake brunette's mangled fingers and messed-up uniform and thanking her for her service.

More on AI and misinformation: Researchers Say Russia Is Using AI to Predict Terrorism at Paris Olympics

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There’s No Passport Required For This Private Island Escape in the U.S. Virgin Islands – Hotels Above Par

As you arrive at Lovango Resort & Beach Club by sea, a check-in team waits at the dock with a tray of Caribbean rum welcome drinks and a Kawasaki cart ready to ascend a steep hillside to your room in paradise. Its the only hotel on the small 118-acre island, lending the experience a luxuriously private feel.

The accommodations take full advantage of the wild, natural surroundings, from treehouses and glamping tents to cottages and villas overlooking turquoise waters. We stayed in an AC-equipped treehouse nestled on a cliffside with front-row views of Crescent Beach and Congo Cay. (The latter being an uninhabited island thats a tropical bird sanctuary.)

The wood-paneled interiors feel like elevated Swiss Family Robinson, with textural touches such as woven light fixtures, cotton canvas upholstery, and gauzey mosquito nets for the bed. Theres a spacious outdoor deck for morning coffee, and an outdoor shower with lush vegetation framing views of the ocean.

One of the best ways to experience Lovangos private setting in nature is with a day at the beach. Guests can choose between the Beach Club, equipped with creature comforts like umbrellas, daybeds, towels, showers, and food & drink service (or a cabana if youre feeling fancy). On the opposite side of the island is Crescent Beacha striking stretch of sand and stones with world-class snorkeling and a truly remote feel. While there are no services at Crescent Beach, you can text the concierge to pack up a gourmet lunch for you and have it delivered.

Other culinary options range from casual beachfront bites at The Sandpit to fine dining with coastal Caribbean cuisine by Chef Stephen Belie (dont miss the sea urchin gnocchi). Every morning theres a breakfast buffet at the Treetop Lobby Tent with freshly-made quiches, fruits, and other hot and cold items.

The concierge team is top-notch, available to customize an itinerary on Lovango, organize a charter, or plan out a day at the nearby Virgin Islands National Park. They have a desk set up at breakfast each morning to ensure your day is well spentan especially nice touch.

Location: Lovango Cay, United States Virgin Islands

The Vibe: A relaxing private island resort with an abundance of opportunities to experience nature, both luxurious and rustic.

Food + Drink: Choose between casual beachfront bites and Lovangos fine dining restaurant situated by the sea. The menu leans on coastal Caribbean ingredients, with a strong focus on local seafood favorites.

Amenities: Pool club, private beach, snorkeling equipment, five shopping boutiques, outdoor showers, iPads, hiking trails, complimentary resort ferry to/from St. John and St. Thomas, and concierge service.

Any personal neighborhood recs? A visit to St. John is a must while visiting Lovango. If youre an avid snorkeler and want to spot a sea turtle, head to Maho Bay where theyre commonly seen nibbling on seagrass just off shore. For post-swim bites, head to Morgans Mango Restaurant on St. John or grab a casual drink at The Longboard.

Our favorite thing about the hotel: While the infinity pool at Lovango Beach Club with its beach umbrellas and sun loungers is undeniably appealing, on the other side of the island lies Crescent Beachan untouched cove with a rugged shoreline that feels plucked from the Jurassic period. Pack up a complimentary Igloo cooler with water, bubbly, and snacks and take the brief hike down to Crescent Beach for a day of snorkeling a protected coral reef, strolling down a pebble beach accompanied by a fleet of pelicans, or simply lounging on the sand letting the salty Caribbean water rush over your legs.

Whats nearby? St. John is a 10-minute ferry ride away, with island highlights including the national park and plenty of shops, restaurants, and bars to fill up an entire day.

Rooms: There are 19 accommodations total at Lovango (five treehouses, 11 glamping tents, two cottages and one three-bedroom villa).

Pricing: Rooms start at $995 per night.

Closest Airport: Cyril E. King Airport on St. Thomas

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There's No Passport Required For This Private Island Escape in the U.S. Virgin Islands - Hotels Above Par

Remote Amazon Tribe Finally Gets Internet, Gets Hooked on Porn and Social Media

Starlink allows the Marubo people, an Amazon tribe, to have internet even in the heart of the rainforest — but it comes at a cost.

Five Bars

A remote tribe in the Amazon rainforest is getting to experience the wonders of the internet for the first time, thanks to Elon Musk's satellite network Starlink. But, by connecting to the rest of the world, it sounds like the Marubo people are beginning to pick up some of our modern bad habits.

The New York Times reports on what may sound a bit familiar: young people poring over social media feeds, streaming soccer games, and of course, gossiping over WhatsApp. Evenings are spent lounging around on their phones and playing first-person shooters and other video games.

"When it arrived, everyone was happy," said Tsainama Marubo, 73. "But now, things have gotten worse."

Some of the young men are especially getting a kick out of it. Alfredo Marubo, a leader of an association of the tribe's villages, lamented that the boys, now with their own group chats, were sharing porn and other explicit videos — which is unprecedented in their culture that considers kissing in public taboo.

"We're worried young people are going to want to try it," Alfredo told the NYT, referring to what they see in porn.

Culture Rot

The Marubo have been using Starlink since September, after an American woman bought them some antennas to connect to the satellite network.

Now, some in the tribe fear that the internet poses an existential threat to their culture. Young people kill time by fiddling with their smartphones instead of socializing the old-fashioned way, isolating them from their elders. By being exposed to the outside world, some of the teenagers now dream of exploring it. Alfredo fears that this could mean the tribe's culture and history, which has been passed down orally, could be lost.

"Everyone is so connected that sometimes they don't even talk to their own family," he told the NYT.

Tsainama echoed those fears, but was more conflicted. "Young people have gotten lazy because of the internet," she said. "They're learning the ways of the white people. But please don't take our internet away."

A Tangled Web

The internet comes with its vices, and to combat them, leaders have imposed strict windows for using it, outside of which the connection's shut off. But they also realize its undeniable benefits. In an area so remote that it takes several days of arduous hiking to reach, effortless and instant communication is life-changing.

New job opportunities have opened up. Villages can now easily coordinate over group chats, and also reach out to local authorities.

"It's already saved lives," Enoque Marubo, who was one of the first in the tribe to push for an internet connection, told the NYT, such as in the case of venomous snakebites, which need immediate medical treatment.

"The leaders have been clear," he added. "We can't live without the internet."

More on: Something Fascinating Happens When You Take Smartphones Away From Narcissists

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Bring Me The Horizon become most streamed rock band on planet as they announce physical release of ‘POST … – NME

Bring Me The Horizon have become most streamed rock band on planet as they announce the physical release of POST HUMAN: NeX GEn.

After months of waiting, POST HUMAN: NeX GEn the follow-up to 2020s POST HUMAN: SURVIVAL HORROR arrived last week. It was scheduled to arrive last September after being announced during the bands headline debut at Download Festival. However, the record was later delayed due to unforeseen circumstances.

It is BMTHs first album since the sudden departure of longtime bandmate Jordan Fish, who had been a part of the line-up since 2012.

The new album has already been streamed over 70million times since its arrival and has currently claimed eight spots on Spotifys Top Ten chart. This makes the band the most streamed rock band on the planet this week.

As NeX GEns midweek figures currently places them in the top five of the UK album chart on digital sales alone. The band have now also announced physical release of the album on September 27 via Sony/RCA.

Last June, Sykes spoke about the sound of the new record with NME, calling it unhinged: I wouldnt say its a hyper-pop album, but Ive definitely been inspired by that world As you become a bigger band, things do get more polished. I want to go the opposite way. Lets be unhinged, lets stop trying to make all the edges smooth.

The vocalist provided a further update to us this March when we saw Bring Me The Horizon at the BRITs. Its nearly finished, but its not finished, Sykes told NME. Every time we think weve got it, we get another song Its going to be right good though, its our best album ever Worth the wait.

Following its surprise release, NME gave the album a four-star review.

Few modern rock bands have made an album that is such a bombardment of sound and colour. Post-Jordan Fish, they continue to be what theyve always been: a creative force that transcends the personalities of its individuals, it read.

It entirely justifies the four-year wait, which already feels like ancient history. Buckle up because this is still BMTHs world, and well be living in it for quite some time yet.

More recently, the frontman explained how rumours the band would be collaborating with Billie Eilish arose.

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Bring Me The Horizon become most streamed rock band on planet as they announce physical release of 'POST ... - NME

Bring Me The Horizon – POST HUMAN: NeX GEn (Album Review) – Stereoboard

Expectations are a difficult thing to manage. POST HUMAN: NeX GEn' has been a long time coming, allowing hype to build to fever pitch, but Bring Me The Horizon have also been hamstrung by the records protracted build up.

It has been almost a year since the metal titans initially intended to release the much-anticipated follow up to 2020s excellent Survival Horror, but its eventual surprise drop essentially came and went with little fanfare. Perhaps that has something to do with the fact weve had a lot of these songs for a while now Die4U has been kicking around since 2021, while Strangers released in 2022.

The opening salvo of Youtopia, Kool-Aid and Top 10 Statues That Cried Blood sets the scene well, displaying the manner in which their crunchy metalcore has broadened to include hyperpop and 2000s post-hardcore.

It's a shift that had plenty to do with the work of former member Jordan Fish, who recently left the band after helping them become the arena-filling behemoths they are today. How keenly his absence might be felt in future.

That 2000s influence is felt throughout. A Bullet With My Name On features scene greats Underoath, while single Amen has a (mostly inaudible) turn from Glassjaws Daryl Palumbo. And once Limousine hits, were in Deftones country. Darkside, meanwhile,slows things down for a more typical (if there is such a thing) Bring Me The Horizon ballad with a big, Thats The Spirit-esque chorus hook.

Fundamentally, though, this is an extraordinarily front-loaded album. Lost and Die4U remain two of the worst songs the band have committed to tape, with twee, contrived melodies and some truly terrible lyrics. There are also three ambient interludes that add little, if anything, to the overall experience. There are some good tracks here but POST HUMAN: NeX GEn is bloated, uneven and, even at its best, frustratingly workmanlike.

Bring Me The Horizon Upcoming Tour Dates are as follows:

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Thu 23 May 2024

Bring Me The Horizon Announce Imminent Release Of New Album 'POST HUMAN: NeX GEn'

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Bring Me The Horizon - POST HUMAN: NeX GEn (Album Review) - Stereoboard

Fans think they’ve stumbled upon a big secret hidden inside Bring Me The Horizon’s new album ‘POST HUMAN: NeX … – NME

Bring Me The Horizon fans are convinced that theyve stumbled upon a big secret, which is hidden inside the bands brand new album.

After months of waiting, POST HUMAN: NeX GEn the follow-up to 2020s POST HUMAN: SURVIVAL HORROR arrived last week. It was scheduled to arrive last September after being announced during the bands headline debut at Download Festival. However, the record was later delayed due to unforeseen circumstances.

It is BMTHs first album since the sudden departure of longtime bandmate Jordan Fish, who had been a part of the line-up since 2012.

Now, as fans continue to dig deep into the tracklist, it has emerged that a huge secret may have been hidden in the LP, and its got fans talking.

As highlighted on the Bring Me the Horizon subreddit, one devoted listener noticed something seemed unusual with the very end of Dig It the last track on the album and decided to explore the off-noise a little further by opening the song in audio editing software. When there, they allegedly noticed that a spectrogram was embedded in the song, which also showed a QR code within (via Loudwire).

Upon scanning the QR code, they found that it led them to what appeared to be a secret website that asked for a code.

Soon, fans noticed that the number that needed to be inputted was 93934521 the same serial number that is seen on the cover art, written in the head of the M8 character.

While it isnt yet fully clear what the website contains, the discovery has intrigued fans and led to a lot of speculation about what Oli Sykes and co. have on the way. The most common theories on the subreddit suggest that some bonus tracks will be included on the site, or at least some instrumental demo versions of the original tracklist.

Some have also claimed that they have found restricted folders on the site, which will no doubt contain a plethora of easter eggs. However, additional passwords to access these have not yet been shared.

As shared by Loudwire, some fans have been so eager to check out the full extent of the website that there have been reports of the site experiencing a hack on its first day of operation. According to the report, developers temporarily took the site down and shared an update with fans not to spoil the adventure.

It appears user/s have been illicitly hacking into the M8 server to decode hidden secrets, read a message from M8. Its my duty to inform you that this behaviour is both naughty and counterproductive!

You see, the whole idea of this program is to unravel the mysteries at a tantalizing pace, allowing everyone to enjoy the thrill of discovery. By bypassing the system and sharing the secrets prematurely, youre spoiling the fun for everyone!

Last June, Sykes spoke about the sound of the new record with NME, calling it unhinged: I wouldnt say its a hyper-pop album, but Ive definitely been inspired by that world As you become a bigger band, things do get more polished. I want to go the opposite way. Lets be unhinged, lets stop trying to make all the edges smooth.

The vocalist provided a further update to us this March when we saw Bring Me The Horizon at the BRITs. Its nearly finished, but its not finished, Sykes told NME. Every time we think weve got it, we get another song Its going to be right good though, its our best album ever Worth the wait.

Following its surprise release, NME gave the album a four-star review.

Few modern rock bands have made an album that is such a bombardment of sound and colour. Post-Jordan Fish, they continue to be what theyve always been: a creative force that transcends the personalities of its individuals, it read.

It entirely justifies the four-year wait, which already feels like ancient history. Buckle up because this is still BMTHs world, and well be living in it for quite some time yet.

More recently, the frontman explained how rumours the band would be collaborating with Billie Eilish arose.

Original post:

Fans think they've stumbled upon a big secret hidden inside Bring Me The Horizon's new album 'POST HUMAN: NeX ... - NME

NNR hosts new round of talks with public over Koeberg’s life extension – Creamer Media’s Engineering News

The National Nuclear Regulator (NNR) has started with another round of hearings on June 3, owing to concerns about the last consultation process having been insufficient.

The regulator conceded that the public required more information, but only after civil society organisations such as Southern African Faith Communities Environment Institute (Safcei) voiced its dissatisfaction with the overall governance and public participation process for the Koeberg long-term operation (LTO), or lifetime extension.

Other organisations that also raised the same concerns include Project90by2030, Save Bantamsklip, Earthlife Africa Johannesburg and Koeberg Alert Alliance (KAA).

Safcei executive director Francesca de Gasparis lists one of the main issues as being that the NNR held public hearings before the actual release of essential documentation, including a latest seismic risk study.

She says issues of safety are integral to determining the safety of the LTO, especially as the last scientific study to assess seismic risk was done in 1976.

The public needs to have sufficient data and time to make meaningful submissions. The safety of the LTO of Koeberg is a compliance and governance issue that cannot be taken lightly, De Gasparis states, questioning why South Africans have to accept 20 more years of a nuclear power station that would get ten years at most in France.

The organisations and members of the public have also raised concern about a number of safety recommendations made by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) that have not been implemented at Koeberg or, if implemented, have not been shared with the public.

These recommendations include a complete revalidation of the qualification of cables in the containment building, the full functionality of the containment structures monitoring system, the revalidation of time-limited ageing analyses and aging management of the structures, systems and components.

Failure to provide confirmation that these issues have been duly addressed has left no room for meaningful engagement. The containment structures storing high level waste are still cracked, one of which was a 110 m crack back in 2022 and aging management plans have not been shared with the public, Safcei says.

Additionally, Safcei says, an emergency compliance drill conducted at Koeberg in November 2022 revealed 22 noncompliance issues, including that the Mass Care Centre at the plant is not suitable to accept and respond to accident victims that have been exposed to radioactive areas.

KAA says Eskom has not been forthcoming about how it has addressed the critical safety issues highlighted by the IAEA regarding the LTO.

At first, Eskom did not want to make a safety case report available, then they released a heavily redacted version. After much pressure, the safety case is now available, but the 289 supporting documents are unavailable to the public. Why the secrecy, KAA member Lydia Petersen asks.

Earthlife Africa representative Makoma Lekalakala says extending Koebergs lifespan also means more toxic waste, hence the need for expanded disposal facilities on site and at Vaalputs in the Northern Cape, which stores low-level waste materials.

She adds that no feasibility studies provided to the public have shown that such expansions are doable, especially considering the proximity to local communities.

The conditions of the infrastructure to extend the life of the plant, in addition to the environmental and climate impacts, all affect the people and the planet, Lekalakala notes.

Project90 member Gabriel Klaasen agrees, saying Koeberg is already storing 40 years worth of high-level radioactive nuclear waste, for which there is no permanent solution. Once a week a truck containing low-level nuclear waste travels along the R355 alongside other motorists, with four accidents having occurred with these types of trucks over the years.

If we do not have a solution for the existing waste, why would we extend Koeberg and add an additional 20 years of waste to the mess?

De Gasparis concludes that not only is it unclear whether the plant is safe, but people have to accept that this plant will operate for another 20 years when there is much risk involved. If Eskom has addressed issues sufficiently, she implores the utility to provide proof of that.

ESKOM RATIONALE

The Koeberg nuclear power station, located 30 km north of Cape Town, is reaching the end of its 40-year designed lifespan, and Eskom has submitted its safety case to the NNR to extend the plants life by another 20 years.

Koebergs 1.8 GW generation potential is a key part of Eskoms ability to provide sufficient power to the country.

Unless the NNR grants Eskom a 20-year extension on Koebergs operating licence, the plants two 900 MW reactors will have to shut down in July this year.

Despite having taken the decision to apply for an LTO extension in 2010, the programme has been massively delayed and Eskom is now rushing to make the July 21 deadline.

Eskom says the cost of a nuclear plant LTO project is significantly cheaper than adding new onshore wind or solar PV. The primary energy cost of Koeberg is 99c/kWh, compared with 49c/kWh for wind and 43c/kWh for solar PV.

Eskom also maintains that nuclear is one of the lowest carbon emission sources of energy in the country and that the waste produced during the LTO of Koeberg would be moved to an off-site storage facility to be developed by the National Radioactive Waste Disposal Institute.

The Koeberg plant, despite having older infrastructure, which Eskom says does not necessarily mean the plant becomes less reliable or stable, lends stability to the national grid and has provided reliable baseload power to the national grid for many years.

By performing comprehensive safety assessments and applying good asset management practices, nuclear power plants can achieve safe plant operation for more than 60 years, Eskom states.

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NNR hosts new round of talks with public over Koeberg's life extension - Creamer Media's Engineering News

Principality of Sealand: The Smallest Nation in the World? – The Collector

In 1967, British citizen Major Roy Bates declared the independence of the Roughs Tower, a former World War II sea fort, and named it the Principality of Sealand. Populated by only a few individuals, Sealand represents a constitutional monarchy with its own passports, stamps, and currency. The national motto of the micro-nation isE Mare, Libertas(From the Sea, Freedom), symbolizing the challenges and controversies it has faced internationally.

DuringWorld War II, Great Britain built four Maunsell Naval Sea Forts to secure its coastlines against possible attacks by Nazi Germany. One of them was the Fort Roughs Tower.

The Roughs Tower was built in 1942 on a dry dock at Red Lion Wharf. Two concrete towers connected by a deck had seven floors each, providing dining, sleeping, and storage spaces. The Red Lion Wharf was intentionally submerged beneath the water to level The Roughs Tower with water.

During the war, the Fort Roughs Tower accommodated up to 300 personnel and military equipment, including radars, guns, and anti-aircraft ammunition. AsWorld War IIwas over, the naval sea forts lost their significance, and Britains Royal Navy eventually abandoned them. The Roughs Tower remained unoccupied until the early 1960s.

Paddy Roy Bates was born in London on August 29, 1921. All four of his siblings passed away either during childbirth or in their early childhood. Roy Bates, the only survivor, was born to be an adventurer, according to the Principality of Sealands official website. Because of his adventurous nature, Bates relocated to Spain to fight on the Republican side inthe Spanish Civil Warfrom 1936 to 1939, supporting the governmental forces. At that time, Bates was only 15.

At the end ofthe Spanish Civil War, Bates returned to London as an apprentice at Smithfield meat market and planned to emigrate to Argentina. However, due to economic difficulties, Bates chose to instead deploy with the 8th India Division in Iraq and Syria, as well as in North Africa, Italy, andthe Middle East.He was able to advance to the rank of infantry major in the First Battalion Royal Fusiliers during this time.

In the course of these military adventures, Roy Batessuffered multiple injuries, surviving frostbite, malaria, snakebites, and a German bomb that fractured his jaw. Reportedly, the surgeon ironically told Bates that no one would ever marry him due to the severity of his injury.Nevertheless, Roy Bates soon married model Joan Collins and later made her the princess of his country.

Roy Bates returned to his native country afterWorld War IIand earned a living by bringing fish and meat from Ireland and rubber from Malaysia into England. Bates also had a small fleet of Essex-based fishing vessels. He discovered the abandoned former naval forts during this period; among them was the Roughs Tower, located in international waters approximately 12 kilometers off the Suffolk coast.

In 1965, Roy Bates and his fleet landed on the Roughs Tower, set up the necessary radio equipment, and started to operate a pirate radio station. Operating the pirate radio was not a new experience for him. Before, Bates ran pirate Radio Essex on Knock John Tower. After the British government fined him 100 for illegal activities, Bates relocated to Roughs Tower.

The early 1960s have been considered a golden age in the operation of pirate radios. To avoid the strict anti-piracy laws in England, pirate radios were frequently positioned in international waters close to the British coast, giving peopleespecially the younger populationnonstop access to pop music.The Beatles, the Kinks, and Rolling Stones, for example, were only broadcasted at certain hours on legal radio stations in Britain.

The Marine Broadcasting Offences Act, passed by the British government in 1966, outlawed the broadcasting of pirate radios. Determined to continue broadcasting, on September 2, 1967, Batesdeclaredthe Roughs Tower an independent country named Sealand, free from British jurisdiction. It was his wifes birthday.

Bates declared himself as Prince Roy, his wife Princess Joan, and settled on The Roughs Tower together with their daughter Penelope, aged 16, and son Michael, aged 14.

The competing pirate Radio Caroline broadcasters presented the first significant challenge to the self-proclaimed Principality of Sealand. In 1967, Radio Caroline owners attacked Sealand and tried to seize control of the fort. Using guns and homemade bombs, Bates and his son launched a counterattack. The British Royal Navy was also notified of the incident. Unexpectedly, Bates shot at the authorities as well, citing the trespassing of Sealands waters as the main reason for his attack.

The Royal Navy detained Bates and his son on firearms charges. However, in 1968, the court ruled that since the fort was beyond the three-nautical mile limit of country waters, British jurisdiction could not apply to the case, referring to it as the swashbuckling incident. Bates and his son were released.

For Bates, the courts decision meant thede facto recognitionof Sealands independence. To complete the nation-building process, Bates created Sealands national flag, which depicts Mount Everest, the anthem, stamps, currency (the Sealand Dollar, printed with Princess Joans face on the front), a passport, a constitution composed of seven articles, and even a football team. The official language of Sealand is English.

An attempted putsch took place in Sealand on August 8, 1978. It was led byAlexander Achenbach, a former diamond dealer who helped Bates draft the constitution in 1975 and who claimed to be the Prime Minister of Sealand. While Roy Bates and his wife were away negotiating with Dutch and German businessmen on the construction of a luxury hotel and casino on Sealand, Alexander Achenbach hired Dutch and German private soldiers and organized the takeover. Michael, the son of Bates, was captured and left on the fort for four days without food or water. Michael was later sent to the Netherlands. Eventually, he escaped and joined his parents in Essex.

Roy Bates carried out a helicopter raid on August 16, 1978, intending to recapture Sealand. Achenbach surrendered. Bates held him and several Dutchmen hostage as prisoners of war. The Essex polices spokesmanreportedin a press statement that since the Roughs Tower was in international waters, the British government was not obliged to investigate the incident or take any further action.

Bates freed the majority of the hostages by the end of August. Gernot Puetz, a German lawyer, was the only person still in prison. Germany requested assistance from the British government in negotiating the release. The British government, however, refused once more, pointing to the courts 1968 decision as a justification.

A diplomat from the West German Embassy in London, Dr. Christoph Niemoller, Head of Legal and Consular Affairs, took on the responsibility of conducting negotiations with Bates. Puetz justified his involvement in the invasion by being misled by Alexander Achenbach. As Puetz held the passport of Sealand, Achenbach convinced him to assist in leading negotiations and promised they had the right to operate the Sealand. Although Bates demanded the payment of a 20,000 fine, he eventually released Puetz. Bates declared the appointment of an official diplomat to mediate the dispute as Germanys de facto recognition of the Principality of Sealand. Achenbach established a government in exile sometimes known as theSealand Rebel Government in Germany.

In the early 1970s, Sealand was home to aboutfiftypeople. The majority of them included Batess friends and extended family, in addition to maintenance staff.

Despite being cut off from the mainland, the Bates family had been able to establish a variety of sources of income. One of them was to provide safe havens for internet service providers who sought to evade government regulations. Reportedly, WikiLeaks alsoconsidered relocating its servers to Sealand.

The family also operatesthe official Sealand websiteand offers royalty titles, cards, stamps, and other associated products for sale. Like his father, Prince Michael owns and operates fishing boats, and his sister, Princess Penny, owns a dog grooming business.

The family also disclosed that a total of$1.4 millionwas allocated for maintenance. Tenants of Sealand produce their freshwater from seawater and, as stated, get 99% of their energy from renewable sources. Being an unrecognized sovereign nation, Sealand is excluded from international customs and immigration laws. After a fire in 2006, Sealand was temporarily abandoned but promptly rebuilt. In 2010, it was on sale for USD $906 million (about $1,245,193,000 in 2023).

In October 2012, Roy Bates, then 91, passed away from Alzheimers disease. Eighty-six-year-old Princess Joandiedin March 2016. Michael, their son, took over.

As of today, members of the Bates family do not live on Sealand permanently. Only one maintenance worker occupies the place. Sealand provides 22 living rooms, a kitchen, a chapel, and a gym. Interested people have the opportunity to visit the Principality of Sealand upon Prince Michaels invitation.

Bates and his family have encountered difficulties regarding the issuance of Sealand passports. In 1997, due to money laundering and human trafficking cases in Russia and Iraq, Bates was compelled to cancel all Sealand passports (there were reportedly150,000in circulation at the time) that had been issued during the 22-year history of its existence.

Achenbach, the architect of the 1978 coup on Sealand, was also involved in criminal activities, selling fake Sealand diplomatic immunity and passports to the citizens of Hong Kong. The situation became more tense when, in July 1997, theauthorities associatedthe Bates family with the murder of Italian fashion icon Gianni Versace. Police discovered the Sealand passport in a Miami houseboat, where Gianni Versaces assassin committed suicide.

The Principality of Sealand is not acknowledged as a sovereign state bythe United Nationsor its members. It is not involved in diplomatic relations and naturally has minimal impact on global affairs. Even though Sealands location in international waters and its status have raised juridical questions regarding the territorial claims, Sealand remains the subject of curiosity. There are, however, a few cases when the hope of international recognition was high. Sealand passports were once accepted as identification documents by France and Spain, and the Belgian postal service delivered letters bearing Sealand stamps.

The official Web site of the Principality of Sealand states:

Indeed, the Principality of Sealand has drawn interest and curiosity from the general public as well as radicals and rebels. Roy Bates once remarked, I might die old, or I might die young, but I wont die bored.

More here:

Principality of Sealand: The Smallest Nation in the World? - The Collector

The Pirate Bay Wants to Buy Sealand – Data Center Knowledge

The operators of The Pirate Bay, the world's largest BitTorrent tracker, are raising funds to try and buy the "micronation of Sealand." The gunnery platform on the North Sea, which was converted into a colocation data haven, is seeking buyers. The Pirate Bay has launched BuySealand.com (link via Liam Eagle), which is offering citizenship to anyone who donates money to the cause.

The Pirate Bay is the kind of operation that the founders of HavenCo had in mind when they converted Sealand into a colocation facility. The site's servers were seized by Swedish police last May, but soon relaunched. Its traffic has been growing ever since, and is now among the top 350 sites in the world, according to Alexa. A BitTorrent Tracker is a server which directs uploading and downloading of packets on BitTorrent, a peer-to-peer file distribution system.

The BuySealand effort has quickly gained traffic and attention, with more than 2,000 users registered in the site's online forum already. That may not be enough to be taken seriously, as Sealand's "royal family" apparently wants to sell the platform for

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The Pirate Bay Wants to Buy Sealand - Data Center Knowledge

OpenAI revives its robotic research team, plans to build dedicated AI – Interesting Engineering

OpenAI being in the news isnt a novelty at all. This time its bagging headlines for restarting its robotics research group after three years. A ChatGPT developer confirmed this move in an interview with Forbes.

It has been almost four years since OpenAI had disbanded a team which researched ways of using AI to teach robots new tasks.

According to media reports, OpenAI is now on the verge of developing a host of multimodal large language models for robotics use cases. A multimodal model is a neural network capable of processing various types of input, not just text. For instance, it can handle data from a robots onboard sensors.

OpenAI had bid goodbye to its original robotics research group. Wojciech Zaremba said, I actually believe quite strongly in the approach that the robotics [team] took in that direction, but from the perspective of AGI [artificial general intelligence], I think that there was actually some components missing. So when we created the robotics [team], we thought that we could go very far with self-generated data and reinforcement learning.

According to a report in Forbes, OpenAI has been hiring again for its robotics team and they have been actively on the lookout for a research robotics engineer. They are seeking an individual skilled in training multimodal robotics models to unlock new capabilities for our partners robots, researching and developing improvements to our core models, exploring new model architectures, collecting robotics data, and conducting evaluations.

Were looking for candidates with a strong research background and experience in shipping AI applications, the company stated.

Earlier this year, OpenAI also invested in humanoid developer Figure AIs Series B fundraising. This investment highlights OpenAIs clear interest in robotics.

Over the past year, OpenAI has significantly invested in the robotics field through its startup fund, pouring millions into companies like Figure AI, 1X Technologies, and Physical Intelligence. These investments underscore OpenAIs keen interest in advancing humanoid robots. In February, OpenAI hinted at a renewed focus on robotics when Figure AI secured additional funding. Shortly after, Figure AI released a video showcasing a robot with basic speech and reasoning skills, powered by OpenAIs model.

Peter Welinder, OpenAIs vice president and a member of the original robotics team, stated, Weve always planned to return to robotics, and we see a path with Figure to explore the potential of humanoid robots powered by highly capable multimodal models.

According to the report, OpenAI doesnt intend to compete directly with other robotics companies. Instead, it aims to develop AI technology that other manufacturers can integrate into their robots. Job listings indicate that new engineers will collaborate with external partners to train advanced AI models. It remains unclear if OpenAI will venture into creating its own robotics hardware, a challenge it has faced in the past. For now, the focus seems to be on leveraging its AI expertise to enhance robotic functionalities.

Apart from this Apple has also been reported to collaborate with OpenAI so that it can inculcate ChatGPT technology into its iOS 18 operating systems for iPhones, according to different media outlets.

The integration of ChatGPT, an advanced AI developed by OpenAI under Sam Altmans leadership, is set to revolutionize how Siri comprehends and responds to complex queries. This partnership, anticipated to be officially announced at this years Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC), has been in the works for several months and has faced internal challenges and resistance from both companies.

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Gairika Mitra Gairika is a technology nerd, an introvert, and an avid reader. Lock her up in a room full of books, and you'll never hear her complain.

Excerpt from:

OpenAI revives its robotic research team, plans to build dedicated AI - Interesting Engineering

Can AI ever be smarter than humans? | Context – Context

Whats the context?

"Artificial general intelligence" (AGI) - the benefits, the risks to security and jobs, and is it even possible?

LONDON - When researcher Jan Leike quit his job at OpenAI last month, he warned the tech firm's "safety culture and processes (had) taken a backseat" while it trained its next artificial intelligence model.

He voiced particular concern about the company's goal to develop "artificial general intelligence", a supercharged form of machine learning that it says would be "smarter than humans".

Some industry experts say AGI may be achievable within 20 years, but others say it will take many decades, if at all.

But what is AGI, how should it be regulated and what effect will it have on people and jobs?

OpenAI defines AGI as a system "generally smarter than humans". Scientists disagree on what this exactly means.

"Narrow" AI includes ChatGPT, which can perform a specific, singular task. This works by pattern matching, akin to putting together a puzzle without understanding what the pieces represent, and without the ability to count or complete logic puzzles.

"The running joke, when I used to work at Deepmind (Google's artificial intelligence research laboratory), was AGI is whatever we don't have yet," Andrew Strait, associate director of the Ada Lovelace Institute, told Context.

IBM has suggested that artificial intelligence would need at least seven critical skills to reach AGI, including visual and auditory perception, making decisions with incomplete information, and creating new ideas and concepts.

Narrow AI is already used in many industries, but has been responsible for many issues, like lawyers citing "hallucinated" - made up - legal precedents and recruiters using biased services to check potential employees.

AGI still lacks definition, so experts find it difficult to describe the risks that it might pose.

It is possible that AGI will be better at filtering out bias and incorrect information, but it is also possible new problems will arise.

One "very serious risk", Strait said, was an over-reliance on the new systems, "particularly as they start to mediate more sensitive human-to-human relationships".

AI systems also need huge amounts of data to train on and this could result in a massive expansion of surveillance infrastructure. Then there are security risks.

"If you collect (data), it's more likely to get leaked," Strait said.

There are also concerns over whether AI will replace human jobs.

Carl Frey, a professor of AI and work at the Oxford Internet Institute, said an AI apocalypse was unlikely and that "humans in the loop" would still be needed.

But there may be downward pressure on wages and middle-income jobs, especially with developments in advanced robotics.

"I don't see a lot of focus on using AI to develop new products and industries in the ways that it's often being portrayed. All applications boil down to some form of automation," Frey told Context.

As AI develops, governments must ensure there is competition in the market, as there are significant barriers to entry for new companies, Frey said.

There also needs to be a different approach to what the economy rewards, he added. It is currently in the interest of companies to focus on automation and cut labour costs, rather than create jobs.

"One of my concerns is that the more we emphasise the downsides, the more we emphasise the risks with AI, the more likely we are to get regulation, which means that we restrict entry and that we solidify the market position of incumbents," he said.

Last month, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security announced a board comprised of the CEOs of OpenAI, Microsoft, Google, and Nvidia to advise the government on AI in critical infrastructure.

"If your goal is to minimise the risks of AI, you don't want open source. You want a few incumbents that you can easily control, but you're going to end up with a tech monopoly," Frey said.

AGI does not have a precise timeline. Jensen Huang, the chief executive of Nvidia, predicts that today's models could advance to the point of AGI within five years.

Huang's definition of AGI would be a program that can improve on human logic quizzes and exams by 8%.

OpenAI has indicated that a breakthrough in AI is coming soon with Q* (pronounced Q-Star), a secretive project reported in November last year.

Microsoft researchers have said that GPT-4, one of OpenAI's generative AI models, has "sparks of AGI". However, it does not "(come) close to being able to do anything that a human can do", nor does it have "inner motivation and goals" - another key aspect in some definitions of AGI.

But Microsoft President Brad Smith has rejected claims of a breakthrough.

"There's absolutely no probability that you're going to see this so-called AGI, where computers are more powerful than people, in the next 12 months. It's going to take years, if not many decades, but I still think the time to focus on safety is now," he said in November.

Frey suggested there would need to be significant innovation to get to AGI, due to both limitations in hardware and the amount of training data available.

"There are real question marks around whether we can develop AI on the current path. I don't think we can just scale up existing models (with) more compute, more data, and get to AGI."

Read the rest here:

Can AI ever be smarter than humans? | Context - Context

The AI revolution is coming to robots: how will it change them? – Nature.com

For a generation of scientists raised watching Star Wars, theres a disappointing lack of C-3PO-like droids wandering around our cities and homes. Where are the humanoid robots fuelled with common sense that can help around the house and workplace?

Rapid advances in artificial intelligence (AI) might be set to fill that hole. I wouldnt be surprised if we are the last generation for which those sci-fi scenes are not a reality, says Alexander Khazatsky, a machine-learning and robotics researcher at Stanford University in California.

From OpenAI to Google DeepMind, almost every big technology firm with AI expertise is now working on bringing the versatile learning algorithms that power chatbots, known as foundation models, to robotics. The idea is to imbue robots with common-sense knowledge, letting them tackle a wide range of tasks. Many researchers think that robots could become really good, really fast. We believe we are at the point of a step change in robotics, says Gerard Andrews, a marketing manager focused on robotics at technology company Nvidia in Santa Clara, California, which in March launched a general-purpose AI model designed for humanoid robots.

At the same time, robots could help to improve AI. Many researchers hope that bringing an embodied experience to AI training could take them closer to the dream of artificial general intelligence AI that has human-like cognitive abilities across any task. The last step to true intelligence has to be physical intelligence, says Akshara Rai, an AI researcher at Meta in Menlo Park, California.

But although many researchers are excited about the latest injection of AI into robotics, they also caution that some of the more impressive demonstrations are just that demonstrations, often by companies that are eager to generate buzz. It can be a long road from demonstration to deployment, says Rodney Brooks, a roboticist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Cambridge, whose company iRobot invented the Roomba autonomous vacuum cleaner.

There are plenty of hurdles on this road, including scraping together enough of the right data for robots to learn from, dealing with temperamental hardware and tackling concerns about safety. Foundation models for robotics should be explored, says Harold Soh, a specialist in humanrobot interactions at the National University of Singapore. But he is sceptical, he says, that this strategy will lead to the revolution in robotics that some researchers predict.

The term robot covers a wide range of automated devices, from the robotic arms widely used in manufacturing, to self-driving cars and drones used in warfare and rescue missions. Most incorporate some sort of AI to recognize objects, for example. But they are also programmed to carry out specific tasks, work in particular environments or rely on some level of human supervision, says Joyce Sidopoulos, co-founder of MassRobotics, an innovation hub for robotics companies in Boston, Massachusetts. Even Atlas a robot made by Boston Dynamics, a robotics company in Waltham, Massachusetts, which famously showed off its parkour skills in 2018 works by carefully mapping its environment and choosing the best actions to execute from a library of built-in templates.

For most AI researchers branching into robotics, the goal is to create something much more autonomous and adaptable across a wider range of circumstances. This might start with robot arms that can pick and place any factory product, but evolve into humanoid robots that provide company and support for older people, for example. There are so many applications, says Sidopoulos.

The human form is complicated and not always optimized for specific physical tasks, but it has the huge benefit of being perfectly suited to the world that people have built. A human-shaped robot would be able to physically interact with the world in much the same way that a person does.

However, controlling any robot let alone a human-shaped one is incredibly hard. Apparently simple tasks, such as opening a door, are actually hugely complex, requiring a robot to understand how different door mechanisms work, how much force to apply to a handle and how to maintain balance while doing so. The real world is extremely varied and constantly changing.

The approach now gathering steam is to control a robot using the same type of AI foundation models that power image generators and chatbots such as ChatGPT. These models use brain-inspired neural networks to learn from huge swathes of generic data. They build associations between elements of their training data and, when asked for an output, tap these connections to generate appropriate words or images, often with uncannily good results.

Likewise, a robot foundation model is trained on text and images from the Internet, providing it with information about the nature of various objects and their contexts. It also learns from examples of robotic operations. It can be trained, for example, on videos of robot trial and error, or videos of robots that are being remotely operated by humans, alongside the instructions that pair with those actions. A trained robot foundation model can then observe a scenario and use its learnt associations to predict what action will lead to the best outcome.

Google DeepMind has built one of the most advanced robotic foundation models, known as Robotic Transformer 2 (RT-2), that can operate a mobile robot arm built by its sister company Everyday Robots in Mountain View, California. Like other robotic foundation models, it was trained on both the Internet and videos of robotic operation. Thanks to the online training, RT-2 can follow instructions even when those commands go beyond what the robot has seen another robot do before1. For example, it can move a drink can onto a picture of Taylor Swift when asked to do so even though Swifts image was not in any of the 130,000 demonstrations that RT-2 had been trained on.

In other words, knowledge gleaned from Internet trawling (such as what the singer Taylor Swift looks like) is being carried over into the robots actions. A lot of Internet concepts just transfer, says Keerthana Gopalakrishnan, an AI and robotics researcher at Google DeepMind in San Francisco, California. This radically reduces the amount of physical data that a robot needs to have absorbed to cope in different situations, she says.

But to fully understand the basics of movements and their consequences, robots still need to learn from lots of physical data. And therein lies a problem.

Although chatbots are being trained on billions of words from the Internet, there is no equivalently large data set for robotic activity. This lack of data has left robotics in the dust, says Khazatsky.

Pooling data is one way around this. Khazatsky and his colleagues have created DROID2, an open-source data set that brings together around 350 hours of video data from one type of robot arm (the Franka Panda 7DoF robot arm, built by Franka Robotics in Munich, Germany), as it was being remotely operated by people in 18 laboratories around the world. The robot-eye-view camera has recorded visual data in hundreds of environments, including bathrooms, laundry rooms, bedrooms and kitchens. This diversity helps robots to perform well on tasks with previously unencountered elements, says Khazatsky.

When prompted to pick up extinct animal, Googles RT-2 model selects the dinosaur figurine from a crowded table.Credit: Google DeepMind

Gopalakrishnan is part of a collaboration of more than a dozen academic labs that is also bringing together robotic data, in its case from a diversity of robot forms, from single arms to quadrupeds. The collaborators theory is that learning about the physical world in one robot body should help an AI to operate another in the same way that learning in English can help a language model to generate Chinese, because the underlying concepts about the world that the words describe are the same. This seems to work. The collaborations resulting foundation model, called RT-X, which was released in October 20233, performed better on real-world tasks than did models the researchers trained on one robot architecture.

Many researchers say that having this kind of diversity is essential. We believe that a true robotics foundation model should not be tied to only one embodiment, says Peter Chen, an AI researcher and co-founder of Covariant, an AI firm in Emeryville, California.

Covariant is also working hard on scaling up robot data. The company, which was set up in part by former OpenAI researchers, began collecting data in 2018 from 30 variations of robot arms in warehouses across the world, which all run using Covariant software. Covariants Robotics Foundation Model 1 (RFM-1) goes beyond collecting video data to encompass sensor readings, such as how much weight was lifted or force applied. This kind of data should help a robot to perform tasks such as manipulating a squishy object, says Gopalakrishnan in theory, helping a robot to know, for example, how not to bruise a banana.

Covariant has built up a proprietary database that includes hundreds of billions of tokens units of real-world robotic information which Chen says is roughly on a par with the scale of data that trained GPT-3, the 2020 version of OpenAI's large language model. We have way more real-world data than other people, because thats what we have been focused on, Chen says. RFM-1 is poised to roll out soon, says Chen, and should allow operators of robots running Covariants software to type or speak general instructions, such as pick up apples from the bin.

Another way to access large databases of movement is to focus on a humanoid robot form so that an AI can learn by watching videos of people of which there are billions online. Nvidias Project GR00T foundation model, for example, is ingesting videos of people performing tasks, says Andrews. Although copying humans has huge potential for boosting robot skills, doing so well is hard, says Gopalakrishnan. For example, robot videos generally come with data about context and commands the same isnt true for human videos, she says.

A final and promising way to find limitless supplies of physical data, researchers say, is through simulation. Many roboticists are working on building 3D virtual-reality environments, the physics of which mimic the real world, and then wiring those up to a robotic brain for training. Simulators can churn out huge quantities of data and allow humans and robots to interact virtually, without risk, in rare or dangerous situations, all without wearing out the mechanics. If you had to get a farm of robotic hands and exercise them until they achieve [a high] level of dexterity, you will blow the motors, says Nvidias Andrews.

But making a good simulator is a difficult task. Simulators have good physics, but not perfect physics, and making diverse simulated environments is almost as hard as just collecting diverse data, says Khazatsky.

Meta and Nvidia are both betting big on simulation to scale up robot data, and have built sophisticated simulated worlds: Habitat from Meta and Isaac Sim from Nvidia. In them, robots gain the equivalent of years of experience in a few hours, and, in trials, they then successfully apply what they have learnt to situations they have never encountered in the real world. Simulation is an extremely powerful but underrated tool in robotics, and I am excited to see it gaining momentum, says Rai.

Many researchers are optimistic that foundation models will help to create general-purpose robots that can replace human labour. In February, Figure, a robotics company in Sunnyvale, California, raised US$675 million in investment for its plan to use language and vision models developed by OpenAI in its general-purpose humanoid robot. A demonstration video shows a robot giving a person an apple in response to a general request for something to eat. The video on X (the platform formerly known as Twitter) has racked up 4.8 million views.

Exactly how this robots foundation model has been trained, along with any details about its performance across various settings, is unclear (neither OpenAI nor Figure responded to Natures requests for an interview). Such demos should be taken with a pinch of salt, says Soh. The environment in the video is conspicuously sparse, he says. Adding a more complex environment could potentially confuse the robot in the same way that such environments have fooled self-driving cars. Roboticists are very sceptical of robot videos for good reason, because we make them and we know that out of 100 shots, theres usually only one that works, Soh says.

As the AI research community forges ahead with robotic brains, many of those who actually build robots caution that the hardware also presents a challenge: robots are complicated and break a lot. Hardware has been advancing, Chen says, but a lot of people looking at the promise of foundation models just don't know the other side of how difficult it is to deploy these types of robots, he says.

Another issue is how far robot foundation models can get using the visual data that make up the vast majority of their physical training. Robots might need reams of other kinds of sensory data, for example from the sense of touch or proprioception a sense of where their body is in space say Soh. Those data sets dont yet exist. Theres all this stuff thats missing, which I think is required for things like a humanoid to work efficiently in the world, he says.

Releasing foundation models into the real world comes with another major challenge safety. In the two years since they started proliferating, large language models have been shown to come up with false and biased information. They can also be tricked into doing things that they are programmed not to do, such as telling users how to make a bomb. Giving AI systems a body brings these types of mistake and threat to the physical world. If a robot is wrong, it can actually physically harm you or break things or cause damage, says Gopalakrishnan.

Valuable work going on in AI safety will transfer to the world of robotics, says Gopalakrishnan. In addition, her team has imbued some robot AI models with rules that layer on top of their learning, such as not to even attempt tasks that involve interacting with people, animals or other living organisms. Until we have confidence in robots, we will need a lot of human supervision, she says.

Despite the risks, there is a lot of momentum in using AI to improve robots and using robots to improve AI. Gopalakrishnan thinks that hooking up AI brains to physical robots will improve the foundation models, for example giving them better spatial reasoning. Meta, says Rai, is among those pursuing the hypothesis that true intelligence can only emerge when an agent can interact with its world. That real-world interaction, some say, is what could take AI beyond learning patterns and making predictions, to truly understanding and reasoning about the world.

What the future holds depends on who you ask. Brooks says that robots will continue to improve and find new applications, but their eventual use is nowhere near as sexy as humanoids replacing human labour. But others think that developing a functional and safe humanoid robot that is capable of cooking dinner, running errands and folding the laundry is possible but could just cost hundreds of millions of dollars. Im sure someone will do it, says Khazatsky. Itll just be a lot of money, and time.

Originally posted here:

The AI revolution is coming to robots: how will it change them? - Nature.com

OpenAI says it’s charting a "path to AGI" with its next frontier AI model – ITPro

OpenAI has revealed that it recently started work on training its next frontier large language model (LLM).

The first version of OpenAIs ChatGPT debuted back in November 2022 and became an unexpected breakthrough hit which launched generative AI into public consciousness.

Since then, there have been a number of updates to the underlying model. The first version of ChatGPT was built on GPT-3.5 which finished training in early 2022., while GPT-4 arrived in March 2023. The most recent, GPT-4o, arrived in April this year.

Now OpenAI is working on a new LLM and said it anticipates the system to bring us to the next level of capabilities on our path to [artificial general intelligence] AGI.

AGI is a hotly contested concept whereby an AI would like humans be good at adapting to many different tasks, including ones it has never been trained on, rather than being designed for one particular use.

AI researchers are split on whether AGI could ever exist or whether the search for it may even be based on a misunderstanding of how intelligence works.

OpenAI provided no details of what the next model might do, but as its LLMs have evolved, the capabilities of the underlying models have expanded.

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While GPT-3 could only deal with text, GTP-4 is able to accept images as well, while GPT-4o has been optimized for voice communication. Context windows have also increased markedly with each interaction, although the size of the models and technical details still remain secret.

Sam Altman, CEO at OpenAI, has stated that GPT-4 cost more than $100 million to train, per Wired, and the model is rumored to have more than one trillion parameters. This would make it one of, if not the biggest, LLM currently in existence.

That doesnt necessarily mean the next model will be even larger; Altman has previously suggested the race for ever bigger models may be coming to an end.

Smaller models working together might be a more useful way of using generative AI, he has said.

And even if OpenAI has started training its next model, dont expect to see the impact of it very soon. Training models can take many months and that can be just the first step. It took six months of testing after training was finished before OpenAI released GPT-4.

The company also said it will create a new Safety and Security Committee led by OpenAI directors Bret Taylor, Adam DAngelo, Nicole Seligman, and Altman. This committee will be responsible for making recommendations to the board on critical safety and security decisions for OpenAI projects and operations.

One of its first tasks will be to evaluate and develop OpenAIs processes and safeguards over the next 90 days. After that the committee will share their recommendations with the board.

Some may raise eyebrows at the safety committee being made up of members of existing OpenAIs board.

Dr Ilia Kolochenko, CEO at ImmuniWeb and adjunct professor of cyber security at Capital Technology University, questioned whether the move will actually deliver positive outcomes as far as AI safety is concerned.

Being safe does not necessarily imply being accurate, reliable, fair, transparent, explainable and non-discriminative the absolutely crucial characteristics of GenAI solutions, Kolochenko said. In view of the past turbulence at OpenAI, I am not sure that the new committee will make a radical improvement.

The launch of the safety committee comes amidst greater calls for more rigorous regulation and oversight of LLM development. Most recently, a former OpenAI board member has argued that self-governance isnt the right approach for AI firms and has argued that a strong regulatory framework is needed.

OpenAI has made public efforts to calm AI safety fears in recent months. It was among a host of major industry players to sign up to a safe development pledge at the Seoul AI Summit that could see them pull the plug on their own models if they cannot be built or deployed safely.

But these commitments are voluntary and come with plenty of caveats, leading some experts to call for stronger legislation and requirements for tougher testing of LLMs.

Because of the potentially large risks associated with the technology, AI companies should be subject to a similar regulatory framework as pharmaceuticals companies, critics argue, where companies have to hit standards set by regulators who can make the final decision on if and when a product can be released.

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OpenAI says it's charting a "path to AGI" with its next frontier AI model - ITPro

Responsible AI needs further collaboration – Chinadaily.com.cn – China Daily

Wang Lei (standing), chairman of Wenge Tech Corporation, talks to participants at the World Summit on the Information Society. For China Daily

Further efforts are needed to build responsible artificial intelligence by promoting technological openness, fostering collaboration and establishing consensus-driven governance to fully unleash AI's potential to boost productivity across various industries, an executive said.

The remarks were made by Wang Lei, chairman of Wenge Tech. Corporation, a Beijing-based AI company recognized by the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology as a "little giant" firmnovel and elite small and medium-sized enterprises that specialize in niche markets. Wang delivered his speech at the recently concluded World Summit on the Information Society.

"AI has made extraordinary progress in recent years. Innovations like ChatGPT and hundreds of other large language models (LLMs) have captured global attention, profoundly transforming how we work and live," said Wang.

"Now we are entering a new era of Artificial General Intelligence (AGI). Enterprise AI has proven to create significant value for customers in fields such as government operations, ESGs, supply chain management, and defense intelligence, excelling in analysis, forecasting, decision-making, optimization, and risk monitoring," he added.

A recent report from the think-tank a16z and IDC reveals that global enterprise investments in AI have surged from an average of $7 million to $18 million, a 2.5-fold increase. In China, the number of LLMs grew from 16 to 318 last year, with over 80 percent focusing on industry-specific applications, Wang noted.

He predicted a promising future for Enterprise AI, with decision intelligence being the ultimate goal. "Complex problems will be broken down into smaller tasks, each resolved by different AI models. AI agents and multi-agent collaboration frameworks will optimize decision-making strategies and action planning, integrating AI into workflows, data streams, and decision-making processes within industry-specific scenarios."

Wang proposed a three-step methodology for successful Enterprise AI transformation: data engineering, model engineering, and domain engineering.

"To build responsible AI, we must address several challenges head-on," he emphasized. "Promoting technological openness can reduce regional and industrial imbalances, fostering collaboration can mitigate unfair usage restrictions, and establishing consensus-driven governance can significantly enhance AI safety."

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Responsible AI needs further collaboration - Chinadaily.com.cn - China Daily

OpenAI announces new Safety and Security Committee as the AI race hots up and concerns grow around ethics – TechRadar

OpenAI, the tech company behind ChatGPT, has announced that its formed a Safety and Security Committee thats intended to make the firms approach to AI more responsible and consistent in terms of security.

Its no secret that OpenAI and CEO Sam Altman - who will be on the committee - want to be the first to reach AGI (Artificial General Intelligence), which is broadly considered as achieving artificial intelligence that will resemble human-like intelligence and can teach itself. Having recently debuted GPT-4o to the public, OpenAI is already training the next-generation GPT model, which it expects to be one step closer to AGI.

GPT-4o was debuted on May 13 to the public as a next-level multimodal (capable of processing in multiple modes) generative AI model, able to deal with input and respond with audio, text, and images. It was met with a generally positive reception, but more discussion around the innovation has since arisen regarding its actual capabilities, implications, and the ethics around technologies like it.

Just over a week ago, OpenAI confirmed to Wired that its previous team responsible for overseeing the safety of its AI models had been disbanded and reabsorbed into other existing teams. This followed the notable departures of key company figures like OpenAI co-founder and chief scientist Ilya Sutskever, and co-lead of the AI safety superalignment team Jan Leike. Their departure was reportedly related to their concerns that OpenAI, and Altman in particular, was not doing enough to develop its technologies responsibly, and was forgoing conducting due diligence.

This has seemingly given OpenAI a lot to reflect on and its formed the oversight committee in response. In the announcement post about the committee being formed, OpenAI also states that it welcomes a robust debate at this important moment. The first job of the committee will be to evaluate and further develop OpenAIs processes and safeguards over the next 90 days, and then share recommendations with the companys board.

The recommendations that are subsequently agreed upon to be adopted will be shared publicly in a manner that is consistent with safety and security.

The committee will be made up of Chairman Bret Taylor, CEO of Quora Adam DAngelo, and Nicole Seligman, a former executive of Sony Entertainment, alongside six OpenAI employees which includes Sam Altman as mentioned, and John Schulman, a researcher and cofounder of OpenAI. According to Bloomberg, OpenAI stated that it will also consult external experts as part of this process.

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Ill reserve my judgment for when OpenAIs adopted recommendations are published, and I can see how theyre implemented, but intuitively, I dont have the greatest confidence that OpenAI (or any major tech firm) is prioritizing safety and ethics as much as they are trying to win the AI race.

Thats a shame, and its unfortunate that generally speaking, those who are striving to be the best no matter what are often slow to consider the cost and effects of their actions, and how they might impact others in a very real way - even if large numbers of people are potentially going to be affected.

Ill be happy to be proven wrong and I hope I am, and in an ideal world, all tech companies, whether theyre in the AI race or not, should prioritize the ethics and safety of what theyre doing at the same level that they strive for innovation. So far in the realm of AI, that does not appear to be the case from where Im standing, and unless there are real consequences, I dont see companies like OpenAI being swayed that much to change their overall ethos or behavior.

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OpenAI announces new Safety and Security Committee as the AI race hots up and concerns grow around ethics - TechRadar