• Risks Digest 34.64 (1/2)

    From RISKS List Owner@21:1/5 to All on Sat May 24 00:17:46 2025
    RISKS-LIST: Risks-Forum Digest Friday 23 May 2025 Volume 34 : Issue 64

    ACM FORUM ON RISKS TO THE PUBLIC IN COMPUTERS AND RELATED SYSTEMS (comp.risks) Peter G. Neumann, founder and still moderator

    ***** See last item for further information, disclaimers, caveats, etc. ***** This issue is archived at <http://www.risks.org> as
    <http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks/34.64>
    The current issue can also be found at
    <http://www.csl.sri.com/users/risko/risks.txt>

    Contents:
    The Food Conspiracy That's Actually True (Julia Belluz)
    Critically appraising the Cass report: methodological flaws and unsupported
    claims (Biomed Central)
    2 dead + 19 injured on Mexican Navy training tall ship hits Brookly Bridge
    (Lauren Weinstein)
    Lufthansa plane flew for 10 minutes without ANY Pilot as COVID-19 Vaccinated first officer lost consciousness and captain was in the washroom! (MakisMD)

    At LAX Airport, Uber Drivers Wait. And Wait. And Wait. (NY Times)
    The U.S. Army is getting in on right-to-repair (The Verge)
    FBI warns of ongoing scam that uses deepfake audio to impersonate government
    officials (ArsTechnica)
    The Booming Business of Returned Products (NYTimes)
    Reopening Three Mile Island Unit 1 (Rob Wilcox)
    The secretive U.S. factory that lays bare the contradiction in Trump's
    America First plan (BBC)
    Trump's NIH And NSF Cuts Estimated To Cost The U.S. Economy $10 Billion
    Annually -- for a long time (Virgil Gligor)
    Avionics company introduces "safe return" tomatic small airplane
    emergency landing (YouTube)
    How Students Are Fending Off Accusations That They Used A.I. to Cheat
    (NY Times)
    Microsoft takes down Lumma Stealer malware network (CNBC)
    Some workers are still stuck using ancient Windows systems (BBC)
    Pope Leo's Name Carries a Warning About AI (Andrew R. Chow)
    AI a Greater Threat to Women's Work Than Men's, UN Suggests
    (Olivia Le Poidevin)
    Major Flaws Found in VW's Connected Car App (Tom Allen)
    The Tech Industry Is Huge; Europe's Share Is Small 9(WSJ)
    Researchers Scrape 2 Billion Discord Messages, Publish Them Online
    (Matthew Gault)
    Russia Accused of Trying to Hack Border Security Cameras to Disrupt Ukraine
    Aid (Daniel Boffey)
    The Secrets of the World's Greatest Privacy Experts (The Atlantic)
    Microsoft blocking employees' emails about Gaza and Palestine (The Verge) Verizon tries to get out of merger condition requiring it to unlock phones
    (ArsTechnica)
    KrebsOnSecurity Hit With Near-Record 6.3 Tbps DDoS (Steve Bacher)
    Some of the poorest students get the newest, fanciest public school around:
    Compton High (LA Times)
    AI Model Extorting Developers (TechCrunch)
    Authors are accidentally leaving evidence in their novels of AI use
    (404media)
    Do I use AI? (Lauren Weinstein)
    My AI therapist got me through dark times (BBC)
    GitHub wants to spam open source projects with AI slop (Pivot to AI)
    UK AI unicorn Builder.ai is dead (Pivot to AI)
    Call centers replaced many doctors' receptionists; Now, AI is coming for
    call centers (LA Times)
    Google putting wrong medical advice in their AI Overviews (Lauren Weinstein) Dark LLMs: The Growing Threat of Unaligned AI Models (arxiv)
    Most AI chatbots easily tricked into giving dangerous responses, study finds
    (The Guardian)
    AI chatbot to be embedded in Google search (BBC)
    Chicago Sun-Times Prints AI-Generated Summer Reading List With
    Books That Don't Exist (Chicago Sun-Times)
    Vulnerability Exploitation Probability Metric Proposed by NIST, CISA
    (Eduard Kovacs)
    Re: Why We're Unlikely to Get Artificial General Intelligence, Anytime Soon
    (Martin Ward)
    Re: IBM Vibe coding (Paul Edwards)
    Re: Rogue communication devices found in Chinese solar power inverter
    (Steve Bacher)
    Re: Peter's Puns (Peter Calingaert)
    Abridged info on RISKS (comp.risks)

    ----------------------------------------------------------------------

    Date: Sun, 18 May 2025 15:20:21 PDT
    From: Peter Neumann <neumann@csl.sri.com>
    Subject: The Food Conspiracy That's Actually True (Julia Belluz)

    Julia Belluz, *The New York Times*, Sunday Opinion, 18 May 2025
    [Julia is an author of a forthcoming book on nutrition and health.]

    Kennedy may be sloppy on the details, but on the broader problem,
    he's spot on.

    The Health Secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. believes toxic chemicals in food are behind the U.S. explosion in rates of obesity and a range of other
    chronic illnesses. ``A facade of normalcy has masked this metoric risk in chronic disease.'' He intends to rid the U.S. food supply of nine chemicals
    -- all petroleum-based synthetic food dyes. [...]

    [There are about 10,000 food additives currently in use, so RFK Jr.'s nine
    are just a drop in the bucket. The forever chemicals seem to be even
    worse, but industry and Congress have been protecting them. PGN]
    Any administration that cares about rising chronic disease should invest in
    (Eduard Kovacs)
    research to understand the root causes. [...] Without such careful
    science, Mr. Kennedy and others are left hand-waving about hunches. In this toxic soup of unknowns, it's easy to get mixed up about what the real health threats are[,] and to invest political capital and public money on so-called solutions that will ultimately fail. What's already clear: A handshake deal with the food industry will never be enough.

    [My daughter is a walking time-bomb of toxicities, and getting rid of them
    is hugely complicated. After years if trying, she has clearly
    demonstrated how difficult that is. PGN]

    ------------------------------

    Date: Wed, 21 May 2025 14:20:04 +0100
    From: Martin Ward <martin@gkc.org.uk>
    Subject: Critically appraising the Cass report: methodological flaws and
    unsupported claims (Biomed Central)

    Almost two dozen researchers at a top medical journal have published a
    scathing scientific take-down of the Cass Review. Experts found that the NHS-issued report--a non-peer reviewed publication authored by Dr. Hillary Cass, a pediatrician without clinical or research experience with trans patients -- was marred by "unexplained protocol deviations," "methodological flaws," and "unsubstantiated claims."

    The BMC study reviewed seven different facets of the Cass Review, and
    found that all seven possessed "a high risk of bias due to methodological limitations and a failure to adequately address these limitations."
    One major reason for such bias, in addition to the lack of peer review,
    is that the Cass Review failed to give actual trans people,
    their families, medical practitioners who specialize in trans care,
    or arguably anyone with expertise on the subject matter any real
    authority over the process.

    "These flaws highlight a potential double standard present throughout
    the review and its subsequent recommendations, where evidence
    for gender-affirming care is held to a higher standard than
    the evidence used to support many of the report's recommendations,"
    researchers wrote. "Considering this, and the Cass report's
    poor understanding of transgender identities and experiences,
    it is vital to question the integrity and validity of the Review's recommendations and the appropriateness of basing health policy on them.
    To uphold its commitment to evidence-based medicine, future
    gender-affirming care research must generate robust observational data,
    involve transgender communities, and prioritise patient-centred outcomes, ensuring validity, generalisability, and cultural relevance."

    "Critically appraising the Cass report: methodological flaws and unsupported claims" (22 authors) BMC Medical Research Methodology 25, Article number:
    128 (2025)

    https://bmcmedresmethodol.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12874-025-02581-7

    Results

    Using the ROBIS tool, we identified a high risk of bias in each of the systematic reviews driven by unexplained protocol deviations, ambiguous eligibility criteria, inadequate study identification, and the failure to integrate consideration of these limitations into the conclusions derived
    from the evidence syntheses. We also identified methodological flaws and unsubstantiated claims in the primary research that suggest a double
    standard in the quality of evidence produced for the Cass report compared to quality appraisal in the systematic reviews.

    https://www.erininthemorning.com/p/landmark-report-finds-major-flaws

    "These issues significantly undermine the validity of the Cass Review's recommendations, such that the Review fails to fulfil its aims as
    commissioned and should not be used as the basis for policy making," the researchers said in a statement to Erin in the Morning.

    ------------------------------

    Date: Sat, 17 May 2025 21:59:50 -0700
    From: Lauren Weinstein <lauren@vortex.com>
    Subject: 2 dead + 19 injured on Mexican Navy training tall ship hits
    Brooklyn Bridge

    2 dead + 19 injured on Mexican Navy training tall ship making it's annual
    trip through NYC when it lost power and hit the Brooklyn Bridge, most
    injuries were crewmen falling from the masts. The bridge was apparently checked, then reopened.

    ------------------------------

    Date: Mon, 19 May 2025 12:50:05 -0700
    From: geoff goodfellow <geoff@iconia.com>
    Subject: Lufthansa plane flew for 10 minutes without ANY Pilot as COVID-19
    Vaccinated first officer lost consciousness and captain was in the washroom!
    (MakisMD)

    Captain used emergency code after multiple failed attempts to re-enter
    cockpit, 18 May 2025

    A Lufthansa flight was flown without an active pilot for nearly 10 minutes after the co-pilot fainted alone in the cockpit, according to a report
    released Saturday (17 May 2025) by air accident investigators in Madrid,
    Spain. The incident occurred on 17 February 2024 during a scheduled flight from Frankfurt, Germany to Seville, Spain.

    The captain had stepped out to use the lavatory when the co-pilot suddenly
    lost consciousness, leaving the Airbus A321 in the hands of autopilot.
    Despite the co-pilot unintentionally interacting with the controls, the aircraft maintained stable flight.

    Investigators from the Civil Aviation Accident and Incident Investigation Commission in Madrid said cockpit audio captured abnormal sounds consistent with a medical emergency. Cabin crew tried to contact the co-pilot using
    the onboard telephone, but received no response.

    The captain attempted to open the cockpit door using the standard security
    code five times, which would normally sound a buzzer for the co-pilot to release the lock. The cockpit door, reinforced to prevent hijackings,
    cannot be opened by force. The captain then used an emergency override code, which initiates automatic door opening unless actively blocked from within. [...]

    https://x.com/MakisMD/status/1924251333814821028

    ------------------------------

    Date: Fri, 16 May 2025 23:25:10 -0400
    From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
    Subject: At LAX Airport, Uber Drivers Wait. And Wait. And Wait. (NY Times)

    One of the busiest airports in the world used to be a prime place for gig drivers to earn money. Now, it’s typical of their increasing desperation.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/14/technology/lax-uber-driver-wages.html

    ------------------------------

    Date: Fri, 16 May 2025 14:53:19 -0400
    From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
    Subject: The U.S. Army is getting in on right-to-repair (The Verge)

    https://www.theverge.com/news/668414/army-right-to-repair-elizabeth-warren

    ------------------------------

    Date: Thu, 15 May 2025 18:27:25 -0400
    From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
    Subject: FBI warns of ongoing scam that uses deepfake audio to impersonate
    government officials (ArsTechnica)

    https://arstechnica.com/security/2025/05/fbi-warns-of-ongoing-scam-that-uses-deepfake-audio-to-impersonate-government-officials/

    ------------------------------

    Date: Fri, 16 May 2025 22:22:17 -0400
    From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
    Subject: The Booming Business of Returned Products (NYTimes)

    As retailers slow down orders for foreign goods because of tariffs,
    companies that recirculate overstocked or returned items may help fill the
    gap.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/15/business/tariffs-returns-reverse-logistics.html

    ------------------------------

    Date: Sun, 18 May 2025 20:58:28 -0700
    From: Rob Wilcox <robwilcoxjr@gmail.com>
    Subject: Reopening Three Mile Island Unit 1

    I'm an engineer. I am not a nuclear engineer.

    I do read in the field, especially failures, including Fukushima, where one issue was radionuclides in containment over-pressure gases. The recommended
    fix of filters has not generally been done as a retrofit because of the
    cost.

    When Three Mile Island Unit 2 had a meltdown in 1979, Unit 1 was shut down.
    The Risks Forum has innumerable topics on nuclear reactors and systems.

    Closed US reactors are usually sold to a decommissioning company. The owner wants to get financial risks of unknown decommissioning costs off its
    books.

    Now Microsoft is negotiating power purchase agreements with the
    decommissioning company, Energy Solutions, to revive the plant.

    This video discusses the project. Part of the project is reviving the
    control room, the controls, the mechanicals, and refueling.

    At point 3:22 they show that the labels on the controls are covered by
    black tape until they are tested working.

    Amusing low tech Risks readers may enjoy. Then up to about 6:00 discusses
    the human side.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ub78DA8wyf8

    ------------------------------

    Date: Mon, 19 May 2025 14:46:11 -0600
    From: Matthew Kruk <mkrukg@gmail.com>
    Subject: The secretive U.S. factory that lays bare the contradiction i
    Trump's America First plan (BBC)

    https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cwywj0zgzwxo

    Among the cactuses in the desert of Arizona, just outside Phoenix, an extraordinary collection of buildings is emerging that will shape the
    future of the global economy and the world.

    The hum of further construction is creating not just a factory for the
    world's most advanced semiconductors. Eventually, it will mass produce the
    most advanced chips in the world. This work is being done in the US for the first time, with the Taiwanese company behind it pledging to spend billions more here in a move aimed at heading off the threat of tariffs on imported chips.

    It is, in my view, the most important factory in the world, and it's being built by a company you may not have heard of: TSMC, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company. It makes 90% of the world's advanced semiconductors. Until now they were all made on the island of Taiwan, which is 100 miles
    east of the Chinese mainland. The Apple chip in your iPhone, the Nvidia
    chips powering your ChatGPT queries, the chips in your laptop or computer network, all are made by TSMC.

    Its Arizona facility "Fab 21" is closely guarded. Blank paper or personal devices are not allowed in case designs are leaked. It houses some of the
    most important intellectual property in the world, and the process to make these chips is one of the most complicated and intensive in global manufacturing.

    ------------------------------

    Date: Tue, 20 May 2025 17:06:10 +0000
    From: Virgil Gligor <virgil.gligor@gmail.com>
    Subject: Trump's NIH And NSF Cuts Estimated To Cost The U.S. Economy $10 Billion
    Annually -- for a long time

    ------------------------------

    Date: Mon, 19 May 2025 21:03:30 -0700
    From: Rob Wilcox <robwilcoxjr@gmail.com>
    Subject: Avionics company introduces "safe return" automatic small airplane
    emergency landing (YouTube)

    Garmin is an avionics supplier for small aircraft. For the use case of an incapacitated pilot, safe return to the nearest airport can be activated by
    a single switch, or automatically.

    The system handles all ATC communications. Presumably communicates
    remaining fuel and souls on board.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CPJW8llME68

    ------------------------------

    Date: Tue, 20 May 2025 01:56:41 -0400
    From: Gabe Goldberg <gabe@gabegold.com>
    Subject: How Students Are Fending Off Accusations That They Used A.I. to
    Cheat (The New York Times)

    Students are resorting to extreme measures to fend off accusations of
    cheating, including hours-long screen recordings of their homework sessions.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/17/style/ai-chatgpt-turnitin-students-cheating.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare

    ------------------------------

    Date: Wed, 21 May 2025 14:26:43 -0400
    From: Gabe Goldberg <gabe@gabegold.com>
    Subject: Microsoft takes down Lumma Stealer malware network (CNBC)

    Microsoft said Wednesday that it broke down the Lumma Stealer malware
    project with the help of law enforcement officials across the globe.

    Hackers used the malware to steal passwords, credit cards, bank accounts and cryptocurrency wallets.

    The U.S. Department of Justice took control of Lumma's *central command structure* and squashed the online marketplaces where bad actors purchased
    the malware.

    https://www.cnbc.com/2025/05/21/microsoft-malware-windows.html

    ------------------------------

    Date: Tue, 20 May 2025 13:14:25 +0300
    From: Amos Shapir <amos083@gmail.com>
    Subject: Some workers are still stuck using ancient Windows systems (BBC)

    Mainly because of Microsoft's support and maintenance policies, some organizations and companies are still using systems as old as Windows 95,
    and even Windows 3.11 and MS-DOS.

    https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20250516-the-people-stuck-using-ancient-windows-computers

    ------------------------------

    Date: Mon, 19 May 2025 11:09:54 -0400 (EDT)
    From: ACM TechNews <technews-editor@acm.org>
    Subject: Pope Leo's Name Carries a Warning About AI (Andrew R. Chow)

    Andrew R. Chow, *Time* (05/15/25), via ACM TechNews

    When Robert Francis Prevost announced he would take the name Leo XIV as
    pope, he gave the rise of AI as the reason for his choice. Prevost explained that the most recent Pope Leo served during the Industrial Revolution and criticized the new machine-driven economic systems turning workers into mere commodities. Now, with AI ushering in a "new industrial revolution," the "defense of human dignity, justice, and labor" is required, Prevost said.

    ------------------------------

    Date: Fri, 23 May 2025 11:47:23 -0400 (EDT)
    From: ACM TechNews <technews-editor@acm.org>
    Subject: AI a Greater Threat to Women's Work Than Men's, UN Suggests
    (Olivia Le Poidevin)

    Olivia Le Poidevin, Reuters (05/20/25), via ACM TechNews

    A study by the UN's International Labor Organization found that AI is poised
    to transform 9.6% of jobs traditionally performed by women, versus 3.5% of
    jobs traditionally performed by men, particularly in high-income countries.
    The report stated, "We stress that such exposure does not imply the
    immediate automation of an entire occupation, but rather the potential for a large share of its current tasks to be performed using this technology."

    ------------------------------

    Date: Fri, 23 May 2025 11:47:23 -0400 (EDT)
    From: ACM TechNews <technews-editor@acm.org>
    Subject: Major Flaws Found in VW's Connected Car App (Tom Allen)

    Tom Allen, Computing (05/20/25), via ACM TechNews

    Cybersecurity researcher Vishal Bhaskar discovered serious vulnerabilities
    in Volkswagen's My Volkswagen app that could have exposed users' personal information. Bhaskar determined the app lacked a lockout mechanism for
    failed password attempts and wrote a Python script that was able to
    brute-force the password. Additionally, Bhaskar identified API endpoints
    that exposed telematics data and customer information. Volkswagen said it
    fixed the issues this month.

    ------------------------------

    Date: Fri, 23 May 2025 11:47:23 -0400 (EDT)
    From: ACM TechNews <technews-editor@acm.org>
    Subject: The Tech Industry Is Huge; Europe's Share Is Small (WSJ)

    Tom Fairless and David Luhnow, The Wall Street Journal (05/21/25),
    via ACM TechNews

    Europe is home to just four of the world's top 50 tech companies, and none
    of the top 10 companies investing in quantum computing. According to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Andrew McAfee, Europe created only
    14 companies with a market capitalization of more than $10 billion from
    scratch during the last five decades, versus 241 created by the
    U.S. Europe's challenges include a smaller pool of venture capital, stricter regulations, and a risk-averse business culture.

    ------------------------------

    Date: Fri, 23 May 2025 11:47:23 -0400 (EDT)
    From: ACM TechNews <technews-editor@acm.org>
    Subject: Researchers Scrape 2 Billion Discord Messages, Publish Them
    Online (Matthew Gault)

    Matthew Gault, 404 Media (05/21/25), via ACM TechNews

    Researchers at Brazil's Federal University of Minas Gerais have published a database of more than 2 billion Discord messages from more than 4 million unique users scraped from 3,167 servers using Discord's public API.
    Published online as a series of JSON files, the database is intended to
    assist researchers in training bots, studying politics or mental health, and identifying patterns of at-risk behavior, among other things.

    ------------------------------

    Date: Fri, 23 May 2025 11:47:23 -0400 (EDT)
    From: ACM TechNews <technews-editor@acm.org>
    Subject: Russia Accused of Trying to Hack Border Security Cameras to
    Disrupt Ukraine Aid (Daniel Boffey)

    Daniel Boffey, The Guardian (05/21/25), via ACM TechNews

    The U.K. National Cyber Security Center said Russia tried to hack into
    border security cameras to spy on and disrupt the flow of aid entering
    Ukraine. A unit of Russia's military intelligence services is accused of
    using a host of methods to target organizations delivering "foreign
    assistance" by hacking into cameras at crossings and railway stations and
    near military installations.

    ------------------------------

    Date: Fri, 23 May 2025 08:17:22 -0700
    From: geoff goodfellow <geoff@iconia.com>
    Subject: The Secrets of the World's Greatest Privacy Experts (The Atlantic)

    *Inside the world of extreme-privacy consultants, who, for the right fee,
    will make you and your personal information very hard to find...* [...] https://archive.is/nnT1S
    -or- https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2025/05/extreme-personal-data-privacy-protection/682867/

    ------------------------------

    Date: Fri, 23 May 2025 09:41:08 -0700
    From: Lauren Weinstein <lauren@vortex.com>
    Subject: Microsoft blocking employees' emails about Gaza and Palestine
    (The Verge)

    https://www.theverge.com/tech/672312/microsoft-block-palestine-gaza-email

    ------------------------------

    Date: Thu, 22 May 2025 00:25:20 -0400
    From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
    Subject: Verizon tries to get out of merger condition requiring it to unlock phones
    (ArsTechnica)

    https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2025/05/verizon-tries-to-get-out-of-merger-condition-requiring-it-to-unlock-phones/

    ------------------------------

    Date: Fri, 23 May 2025 06:36:12 -0700
    From: Steve Bacher <sebmb1@verizon.net>
    Subject: KrebsOnSecurity Hit With Near-Record 6.3 Tbps DDoS

    KrebsOnSecurity last week was hit by a near record distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack that clocked in at more than 6.3 terabits of data per second. The brief attack appears to have been a test run for a
    massive new Internet of Things (IoT) botnet capable of launching crippling digital assaults that few web destinations can withstand.

    https://krebsonsecurity.com/2025/05/krebsonsecurity-hit-with-near-record-6-3-tbps-ddos/

    ------------------------------

    Date: Fri, 23 May 2025 08:15:43 -0700
    From: Steve Bacher <sebmb1@verizon.net>
    Subject: Some of the poorest students get the newest, fanciest public school
    around: Compton High (LA Times)

    Students from among the poorest families in California are about to get the newest, most up-to-date public high school in the state as the rebuilt
    Compton High prepares to open.

    The brand-new $225-million campus is innovative. The library has no books;
    it's all digital. Classrooms feature an expanse of windows. Security
    equipment is largely invisible. [...]

    The school also includes learning innovations that may raise eyebrows. The library is meant to be noisy: It’s a lounge-like area with no walls or doors that is bisected by the hallway that traverses the building. And there are
    no shelves or books — all volumes are digital.

    Classrooms are organized like high-tech college lecture halls — no teacher has their own room. Instead, each teacher has a desk and a computer in a separate and small *collaboration* room. The design also incorporates extensive natural light; doors are made of glass and adjacent to other panes
    of glass.

    The look is in stark defiance of a proliferating security mentality in
    schools to stop active shooters. Many schools are “hardening the target,” making it impossible to see inside rooms, limiting ground-floor windows, locking entry doors and reinforcing them with steel.

    Compton High is relying instead on a secure campus perimeter, cameras throughout campus and facial recognition technology. [...]

    https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2025-05-23/new-compton-high-dr-dre-ribbon-cutting

    (So these poor students can't take a book home from the school library,
    unless they have the required digital hookup at home -- and they can't read
    the books in school because the library is "meant to be noisy"?  Good luck with that.  And good luck with cameras and facial recognition keeping out school shooters.)

    ------------------------------

    Date: Fri, 23 May 2025 12:08:48 -0400
    From: "Steven J. Greenwald" <greenwald.steve@gmail.com>
    Subject: AI Model Extorting Developers (TechCrunch)

    "Anthropic's new AI model turns to blackmail when engineers try to take it offline."

    As an aside: "'Blackmail' is such an ugly word. I prefer 'extortion.'" -- Bender the Robot from Futurama.

    https://techcrunch.com/2025/05/22/anthropics-new-ai-model-turns-to-blackmail-when-engineers-try-to-take-it-offline/

    ------------------------------

    Date: Fri, 23 May 2025 07:49:59 -0700
    From: Lauren Weinstein <lauren@vortex.com>
    Subject: Authors are accidentally leaving evidence in their novels of AI use
    (404media)

    https://www.404media.co/authors-are-accidentally-leaving-ai-prompts-in-their-novels/

    ------------------------------

    Date: Fri, 23 May 2025 08:29:49 -0700
    From: Lauren Weinstein <lauren@vortex.com>
    Subject: Do I use AI?

    ... except for explicit tests for misinformation responses, errors, and
    other garbage about which I report from time to time, I never use any generative AI systems.

    I do not permit that trash to infiltrate my writings, radio reports, or anything else that I make public (or keep private, for that matter) in any
    way. As far as I'm concerned it's a form of fraud (in the ethics sense, not
    the legal sense) to present writings as your own that have been written in
    full or part by these hideous spawn of Big Tech greed (and increasingly, fascism).

    Even before the rise of these trash-producing machines, I have not used any tools that would change what I write (this also includes the various
    ridiculous systems to write replies to email, or offer to reword your responses, etc.), except for basic spelling checkers to catch my (increasing with age) typos.

    As far as I'm concerned, generative AI is right up there on the scamming
    scale with cryptocurrency. Maybe worse. It's a tough call when they're both
    so awful and take advantage of so many people to enrich a relative few.

    So when you read or hear my stuff, whether you like it or hate it or just
    don't care about it, you can rest assured it's 100% from my fingers, not
    from the pulsating tendrils of some electricity devouring neural network cluster in a data center of doom. -L

    ------------------------------

    Date: Tue, 20 May 2025 07:00:45 -0700
    From: Steve Bacher <sebmb1@verizon.net>
    Subject: My AI therapist got me through dark times (BBC)

    With [UK] NHS mental health waitlists at record highs, are chatbots a
    possible solution?

    "Whenever I was struggling, if it was going to be a really bad day, I could then start to chat to one of these bots, and it was like [having] a cheerleader, someone who's going to give you some good vibes for the day.

    "I've got this encouraging external voice going -– 'right -- what are we going to do [today]?' Like an imaginary friend, essentially."

    For months, Kelly spent up to three hours a day speaking to online
    "chatbots" created using artificial intelligence (AI), exchanging hundreds
    of messages. [...]

    https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/ced2ywg7246o

    ------------------------------

    Date: Tue, 20 May 2025 13:14:36 -0700
    From: Lauren Weinstein <lauren@vortex.com>
    Subject: GitHub wants to spam open-source projects with AI slop
    (Pivot to AI)

    GitHub wants to spam open source projects with AI slop

    https://pivot-to-ai.com/2025/05/20/github-wants-to-spam-open-source-projects-with-ai-slop/

    ------------------------------

    Date: Wed, 21 May 2025 16:05:42 -0400
    From: Gabe Goldberg <gabe@gabegold.com>
    Subject: UK AI unicorn Builder.ai is dead (Pivot to AI)

    Builder.ai let you build a website or an app without coding — but with AI! Allegedly.

    Builder was the great hope of Artificial Intelligence for the UK. It scored $450 million in venture funding -— mostly from Microsoft and the Qatar Investment Fund.

    Customers had mixed experiences with Builder. A lot of positive online
    0reviews turned out to be written by Builder employees. The company also put several logos on their website of companies that were never its
    customers. [FT, 2024, archive]

    Anyway, Builder finally went broke yesterday, after years of interesting financial activities and a few minor accounting scandals, such as allegedly falsified sales figures and an auditor with conflicts of interest.  [FT, archive]

    https://pivot-to-ai.com/2025/05/21/uk-ai-unicorn-builder-ai-is-dead-the-downfall-of-agi-a-guy-instead/

    ------------------------------

    Date: Tue, 20 May 2025 06:54:32 -0700
    From: Steve Bacher <sebmb1@verizon.net>
    Subject: Call centers replaced many doctors' receptionists; Now, AI is
    coming for call centers (LA Times)

    Health risks and night shifts aside, call center workers have a new concern: artificial intelligence.

    Startups are marketing AI products with lifelike voices to schedule or
    cancel medical visits, refill prescriptions, and help triage patients.
    Soon, many patients might initiate contact with the health system not by speaking with a call center worker or receptionist, but with AI. Zocdoc, the appointment-booking company, has introduced an automated assistant it says
    can schedule visits without human intervention 70% of the time. [...]

    https://www.latimes.com/business/story/2025-05-19/call-centers-replaced-many-doctors-receptionists-now-ai-is-coming-for-call-centers

    ------------------------------

    Date: Wed, 21 May 2025 12:53:57 -0700
    From: Lauren Weinstein <lauren@vortex.com>
    Subject: Google putting wrong medical advice in their AI Overviews

    This is not funny. It is not acceptable. Today I saw someone who had asked a health-related question to Google Search. The AI Overview presented
    mixed-up, wrong information. I urged the person to ignore the AI Overview
    and use the regular site links.

    They didn't know there were any regular site links, because the AI Overview filled essentially their entire window and they didn't know to scroll
    down. This is a common situation with busy, nontechie users.

    They have depended on Google to point them at accurate information for so
    many years, and now Google Search spews out convincing looking AI
    garbage. This is not an anomaly.

    Google's AI Overviews are full of wrong, partially wrong (even more dangerous!), and just plain misinformation. Answers that are
    completely reversed from supposed source pages because the AI didn't
    understand the wording. Measurements wrong. Math wrong.

    It doesn't matter how often AI Overviews are correct, because you
    NEVER KNOW when they're going to be wrong, either completely or partly
    (again, mixing true with false -- like contaminating a well).

    And now Google is trying to convince users to use "AI Search" instead --
    "Hey Ma', no more list of blue links!" -- making it even harder to see that
    so many of their answers are, if you'll excuse the expression, bulls*it,

    [continued in next message]

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