• Risks Digest 34.68 (1/2)

    From RISKS List Owner@21:1/5 to All on Mon Jun 23 19:09:21 2025
    RISKS-LIST: Risks-Forum Digest Monday 23 June 2025 Volume 34 : Issue 68

    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/34.68>
    The current issue can also be found at
    <http://www.csl.sri.com/users/risko/risks.txt>

    Contents:
    How nuclear war could start (The Washington Post Opinion)
    Climate and Humanitarian Consequences of an even Limited
    Nuclear Exchange and the Actual Risks of Nuclear War (Webinar)
    Starlink hazard (WashPost)
    DOGE layoffs may have compromised the accuracy of government data (CNN) Slashing CISA Is a Gift to Our Adversaries (The Bulwark)
    Most Americans Believe Misinformation Is a Problem -- Federal Research Cuts
    Will Only Make the Problem Worse (PGN)
    As disinformation and hate thrive online, YouTube quietly changed
    how it moderates content (CBC)
    ChatGPT goes down -- and fake jobs grind to a halt worldwide (Pivot to AI)
    They Asked ChatGPT Questions. The Answers Sent Them Spiraling. (The NY Times) News Sites Are Getting Crushed by Google's New AI Tools (WSJ)
    Can AI safeguard us against AI? One of its Canadian pioneers thinks so (CBC) Bad brainwaves: A ChatGPT makes you stupid (Pivot to AI)
    They Asked an AI Chatbot Questions. The Answers Sent Them Spiraling
    (NYTimes)
    SSA stops reporting call-wait times and other metrics (WashPost)
    Pope Leo Takes On AI as a Potential Threat to Humanity (WSJ)
    AI Ethics Experts Set to Gather to Shape the Future of Responsible AI
    (ACM Media Center)
    Hacker Group Exposes Source Code for Iran's Cryptocurrency (Amichai Stein)o Iran Asks Citizens to Delete WhatsApp from Devices (AP)
    China Unleashes Hackers Against Russia (Megha Rajagopalan)
    China's Spy Agencies Investing Heavily in AI (Julian E. Barnes)
    Amazon Says It Will Reduce Its Workforce as AI Replaces Human Employees
    (CNN)
    ChatGPT will avoid being shut down in some life-threatenign scenarios,
    former OpenAI researcher claims (Techcrunch)
    Big Tech two-factor authentication compromised (Bloomberg)
    What could go wrong? - AllTrails launches AI route-making tool,
    worrying search-and-rescue members (National Observer)
    EU weighs sperm donor cap to curb risk of accidental incest (Steve Bacher) ChatGPT may be eroding critical thinking skills (MIT)
    Meta's Privacy Screwup Reveals How People Really See AI Chatbots (NYMag)
    Tesla blows past stopped school bus and hits kid-sized dummies in
    Full Self-Driving tests (Enadget)
    Couple steals back their own car after tracking an AirTag in it
    (AppleInsider)
    Finger Grease Mitigation for Tesla PIN Pad (Steven J. Greewood)
    San Francisco bicyclist sues over crash involving 2 Waymo cars
    (Silicon Valley)
    I lost Spectrum for about two hours (LA Times via Jim Geissman)
    How scammers are using AI to steal college financial aid (LA Times)
    U.S. air traffic control still runs on Windows 95 and floppy disks
    (Ars Technica)
    States sue to block the sale of genetic data collected by DNA testing
    company 23andMe (LA Times)
    Using Malicious Image Patches in Social Media to Hijack AI Agents
    (Steven J. Greenwald)
    Weather precision loss (Jim Geissman)
    Grief scams on Facebook (Rob Slade)
    Abridged info on RISKS (comp.risks)

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

    Date: Thu, 19 Jun 2025 01:06:17 -0400
    From: Gabe Goldberg <gabe@gabegold.com>
    Subject: How nuclear war could start (The Washington Post Opinion)

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/interactive/2025/nuclear-weapons-war-russia-china-accident/

    To understand how it could all go wrong, look at how it almost did.

    If a nuclear war happens, it could very well start by accident.

    A decision to use the most destructive weapons ever created could grow out
    of human error or a misunderstanding just as easily as a deliberate decision
    on the part of an aggrieved nation. A faulty computer system could wrongly report incoming missiles, causing a country to retaliate against its
    suspected attacker. Suspicious activity around nuclear weapons bases could
    spin a conventional conflict into a nuclear one. Military officers who routinely handle nuclear weapons could mistakenly load them on the wrong vehicle. Any of these scenarios could cause events to spiral out of control.

    Such occurrences are not just possible plots for action movies. All of them actually happened and can happen again. Humans are imperfect, so nuclear
    near misses and accidents are a fact of life for as long as these weapons exist. [...]

    In 1983, the Soviet Union shot down a civilian Korean Air Lines flight that
    had strayed over Siberia. A few weeks later, Soviet early-warning radars
    showed that a single U.S. ICBM had been launched toward the U.S.S.R. At a
    time of high tension, and given the fear within the Soviet leadership of a
    U.S. first strike, such a launch could easily have triggered a massive counterattack. However, the watch officer, Col. Stanislav Petrov, had been trained that any U.S. attack would probably involve massive strikes, and he later stated that he considered a smaller strike — like the one his early-warning systems showed — to be illogical and therefore likely to be an error of some kind. He proved to be right. Would all Soviet watch officers
    have been willing to make the same call?

    [*The New York Times front page on Saturday 21 Jun 2025 had a rather
    oxymoronic item -- Trump accosting Tulsi Gabbard (Director of National
    Intelligence) for striking fear in the (Japanese) populace with a video
    outlining the horrors of nuclear war. PGN]

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

    Date: Wed, 18 Jun 2025 23:32:44 +0200
    From: diego latella <diego.latella@actiones.eu>
    Subject: Climate and Humanitarian Consequences of an even Limited
    Nuclear Exchange and the Actual Risks of Nuclear War (Webinar)

    Open webinar – June 26 – 4pm (CET) with

    David Ellwood (Council of the Pugwash Conferences on Science and World
    Affairs)

    Paolo Cotta Ramusino (Former Secretary General of Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs)
    "The Actual Risks of Nuclear War"
    Moderated by Mieke Massink - CNR ISTI; GI-STS, Pisa
    (The official language of the webinar is English)

    The event is organized by: Gruppo Interdisciplinare su Scienza, Tecnologia e Società (GI-STS) dell’Area della Ricerca di Pisa del CNR

    In cooperation with: [...]

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

    Date: Sat, 7 Jun 2025 06:19:34 -0700
    ?From: "Jim" <jgeissman@socal.rr.com>
    Subject: Starlink hazard (WashPost)

    White House security staff warned Musk's Starlink is a security risk

    Starlink satellite connections in the White House bypass controls meant to
    stop leaks and hacking.

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2025/06/07/starlink-white-house-security-doge-musk/

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

    Date: Fri, 6 Jun 2025 07:19:07 -0700
    From: "Jim" <jgeissman@socal.rr.com>
    Subject: DOGE layoffs may have compromised the accuracy of government data
    (CNN)

    The Consumer Price Index <https://www.cnn.com/2025/05/13/economy/us-cpi-consumer-inflation-april> is more than just the most widely used inflation gauge and a measurement of Americans' purchasing power.

    Its robust data plays a key role in the US economy's trajectory as well as monthly mortgage payments, Social Security checks, financial aid packages, business contracts, pay negotiations and curiosity salves for those who
    wonder what Kevin McCallister's $19.83 grocery bill in "Home Alone" might
    cost today.

    However, this gold standard piece of economic data has become a little less precise recently: The Bureau of Labor Statistics posted a notice on
    Wednesday <https://www.bls.gov/cpi/notices/2025/collection-reduction.htm> stating that it stopped collecting data in three not-so-small cities
    (Lincoln, Nebraska; Buffalo, New York; and Provo, Utah) and increased "imputations" for certain items (a statistical technique that, when boiled
    down to very rough terms, essentially means more educated guesses).

    The BLS notice states that the collection reductions "may increase the volatility of subnational or item-specific indexes" and are expected to have "minimal impact" on the overall index.

    https://www.cnn.com/2025/06/05/economy/cpi-data-bls-reductions

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

    Date: Thu, 5 Jun 2025 07:13:16 -0700
    From: Steve Bacher <sebmb1@verizon.net>
    Subject: Slashing CISA Is a Gift to Our Adversaries (The Bulwark)

    Maybe this is "political," but it's an essential read for anyone who cares about cyberattack prevention.

    An opinion piece from Mark Hertling, commander of U.S. Army Europe from 2011
    to 2012.

    https://www.thebulwark.com/p/slashing-cisa-is-a-gift-to-our-adversaries-cyber-attacks-warfare-security-estonia

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

    Date: Thu, 19 Jun 2025 7:56:25 PDT
    From: Peter Neumann <neumann@csl.sri.com>
    Subject: Most Americans Believe Misinformation Is a Problem --
    Federal Research Cuts Will Only Make the Problem Worse

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

    Date: Sat, 14 Jun 2025 22:50:25 -0600
    From: Matthew Kruk <mkrukg@gmail.com>
    Subject: As disinformation and hate thrive online, YouTube quietly changed
    how it moderates content (CBC)

    https://www.cbc.ca/news/entertainment/youtube-content-moderation-rules-1.75= 59931

    Change allows more content that violates guidelines to remain on platform if determined to in public interest

    YouTube, the world's largest video platform, appears to have changed its moderation policies to allow more content that violates its own rules to
    remain online.

    The change happened quietly in December, according to The New York Times,
    which reviewed training documents for moderators indicating that a video
    could stay online if the offending material did not account for more than 50 per cent of the video's duration =E2=80=94 that's double what it was pri= or
    to the new guidelines.

    YouTube, which sees 20 million videos uploaded a day, says it updates its guidance regularly and that it has a "long-standing practice of applying exceptions" when it suits the public interest or when something is presented
    in an educational, documentary, scientific or artistic context.

    "These exceptions apply to a small fraction of the videos on YouTube, but
    are vital for ensuring important content remains available," YouTube spokesperson Nicole Bell said in a statement to CBC News this week.

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

    Date: Wed, 11 Jun 2025 17:30:49 -0400
    From: Gabe Goldberg <gabe@gabegold.com>
    Subject: ChatGPT goes down -- and fake jobs grind to a halt worldwide

    ChatGPT suffered a worldwide outage from 06:36 UTC Tuesday morning. The
    servers weren't totally down, but queries kept returning errors. OpenAI
    finally got it mostly fixed later in the day. [OpenAI, archive]

    But you could hear the screams of the vibe coders, the marketers, and the LinkedIn posters around the world. The Drum even ran a piece about marketing teams grinding to a halt because their lying chatbot called in sick. [Drum]

    https://pivot-to-ai.com/2025/06/11/chatgpt-goes-down-and-fake-jobs-grind-to-a-halt-worldwide/

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

    Date: Wed, 18 Jun 2025 15:38:03 -0400
    From: Gabe Goldberg <gabe@gabegold.com>
    Subject: They Asked ChatGPT Questions. The Answers Sent Them Spiraling.
    (The New York Times)

    Generative AI chatbots are going down conspiratorial rabbit holes and
    endorsing wild, mystical belief systems. For some people, conversations with the technology can deeply distort reality.

    Before ChatGPT distorted Eugene Torres’s sense of reality and almost killed him, he said, the artificial intelligence chatbot had been a helpful, timesaving tool.

    Mr. Torres, 42, an accountant in Manhattan, started using ChatGPT last year
    to make financial spreadsheets and to get legal advice. In May, however, he engaged the chatbot in a more theoretical discussion about “the simulation theory,” an idea popularized by “The Matrix,” which posits that we are living in a digital facsimile of the world, controlled by a powerful
    computer or technologically advanced society.

    “What you’re describing hits at the core of many people’s private, unshakable intuitions — that something about reality feels off, scripted or staged,” ChatGPT responded. “Have you ever experienced moments that felt like reality glitched?”

    Not really, Mr. Torres replied, but he did have the sense that there was a wrongness about the world. He had just had a difficult breakup and was
    feeling emotionally fragile. He wanted his life to be greater than it
    was. ChatGPT agreed, with responses that grew longer and more rapturous as
    the conversation went on. Soon, it was telling Mr. Torres that he was “one
    of the Breakers — souls seeded into false systems to wake them from within.”

    At the time, Mr. Torres thought of ChatGPT as a powerful search engine that knew more than any human possibly could because of its access to a vast
    digital library. He did not know that it tended to be sycophantic, agreeing with and flattering its users, or that it could hallucinate, generating
    ideas that weren’t true but sounded plausible.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2025/06/13/technology/chatgpt-ai-chatbots-conspiracies.html?unlocked_article_code=1.Ok8.ha88.yNPHjmiCI`pD3&smid=url-share

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

    Date: Wed, 11 Jun 2025 08:44:30 -0700
    From: Steve Bacher <sebmb1@verizon.net>
    Subject: News Sites Are Getting Crushed by Google's New AI Tools (WSJ)

    Chatbots are replacing Google’s traditional search, devastating traffic for some publishers.

    https://www.wsj.com/tech/ai/google-ai-news-publishers-7e687141?st=6toUwy&reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink

    This is supposed to be a free link, but just in case it doesn't work, here's the text of the article by Isabella Simonetti and Katherine Blunt.

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

    The AI armageddon is here for online news publishers.

    Chatbots are replacing Google searches, eliminating the need to click on
    blue links and tanking referrals to news sites. As a result, traffic that publishers relied on for years is plummeting.

    Traffic from organic search to HuffPost’s desktop and mobile websites fell
    by just over half in the past three years, and by nearly that much at the Washington Post, according to digital market data firm Similarweb.

    Business Insider cut about 21% of its staff last month, a move CEO Barbara
    Peng said was aimed at helping the publication “endure extreme traffic drops outside of our control.” Organic search traffic to its websites declined by 55% between April 2022 and April 2025, according to data from Similarweb.

    At a companywide meeting earlier this year, Nicholas Thompson, chief
    executive of the Atlantic, said the publication should assume traffic from Google would drop toward zero and the company needed to evolve its business model.

    Google’s introduction last year of AI Overviews, which summarize search results at the top of the page, dented traffic to features like vacation
    guides and health tips, as well as to product review sites. Its U.S.
    rollout last month of AI Mode, an effort to compete directly with the likes
    of ChatGPT, is expected to deliver a stronger blow. AI Mode responds to user queries in a chatbot-style conversation, with far fewer links.

    “Google is shifting from being a search engine to an answer engine,” Thompson said in an interview with The Wall Street Journal. “We have to develop new strategies.”

    The rapid development of click-free answers in search “is a serious threat
    to journalism that should not be underestimated,” said William Lewis, the Washington Post’s publisher and chief executive. Lewis is former CEO of the Journal’s publisher, Dow Jones.

    The Washington Post is “moving with urgency” to connect with previously overlooked audiences and pursue new revenue sources and prepare for a “post-search era,” he said.

    At the New York Times, the share of traffic coming from organic search to
    the paper’s desktop and mobile websites slid to 36.5% in April 2025 from almost 44% three years earlier, according to Similarweb.

    The Wall Street Journal’s traffic from organic search was up in April compared with three years prior, Similarweb data show, though as a share of overall traffic it declined to 24% from 29%.

    Sherry Weiss, chief marketing officer of Dow Jones and The Wall Street
    Journal, said that as the search landscape changes, the company is focusing
    on building trust with readers and earning habitual traffic.

    “As the referral ecosystem continues to evolve, we’re focused on ensuring customers come to us directly out of necessity,” she said.

    Google executives have said the company remains committed to sending traffic
    to the web, and that people who click on links after seeing AI Overviews
    tend to spend more time on those sites. The search giant also said it
    elevates links to news sites and doesn’t necessarily show AI Overviews when users search for trending news. Queries for content included in older
    articles and lifestyle stories, however, may produce an overview.

    Publishers have been squeezed by emerging technology since the dawn of the Internet.

    Digital news decimated once-lucrative print publications funded by
    classifieds, advertising and subscription revenue.

    Social-media platforms such as Facebook and Twitter helped funnel online traffic to publishers, but ultimately pivoted away from giving priority to news. Search was a stalwart traffic driver for more than a decade, despite
    some turbulence as Google tweaked its powerful algorithm.

    Generative AI is now rewiring how the internet is used altogether.

    “AI was not the thing that was changing everything, but it will be going forward. It’s the last straw,” said Neil Vogel, the chief executive of Dotdash Meredith, which is home to brands including People and Southern
    Living.

    When Dotdash merged with Meredith in 2021, Google search accounted for
    around 60% of the company’s traffic, Vogel said. Today, it is about one-third. Overall traffic is growing, thanks to efforts including
    newsletters and the MyRecipes recipe locker.

    Many online news outlets were already facing bleak trends such as declining public trust and fierce competition. With search traffic dwindling, they are putting an even greater emphasis on connecting directly with readers through businesses such as live conferences.

    The Atlantic is working on building those reader relationships with an
    improved app, more issues of the print magazine and an increased investment
    in events, Thompson said in a recent interview. The company has said subscriptions and advertising revenue are on the rise.

    Leaders at Politico and Business Insider—both owned by Axel Springer—also have been emphasizing audience engagement and connecting with readers.

    While publishers contend with how AI is changing search, they are also
    seeking ways to protect their copyright material. The large language models that underpin the new generation of chatbots are trained on data hoovered up from the open web, including news articles.

    Some media companies have embarked on legal battles against particular AI startups, while also signing licensing deals with other ones. The New York Times, for instance, sued OpenAI and Microsoft for copyright infringement,
    and recently announced an AI licensing agreement with Amazon. The Wall
    Street Journal’s parent company, News Corp, has a content deal with OpenAI and a lawsuit pending against Perplexity.

    Meanwhile, the generative AI race is becoming a significant threat to Google’s core search business.

    Though Google said it has seen an increase in total searches on Apple
    devices, an Apple executive said in federal court last month that Google searches in Safari, the iPhone maker’s browser, had recently fallen for the first time in two decades.

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

    Date: Sun, 8 Jun 2025 19:05:34 -0600
    From: Matthew Kruk <mkrukg@gmail.com>
    Subject: Can AI safeguard us against AI? One of its Canadian pioneers
    thinks so (CBC)

    https://www.cbc.ca/radio/asithappens/ai-safety-non-profit-1.7553839

    When Yoshua Bengio first began his work developing artificial intelligence,
    he didn't worry about the sci-fi-esque possibilities of them becoming self-aware and acting to preserve their existence.

    That was, until ChatGPT came out.

    "And then it kind of blew [up] in my face that we were on track to build machines that would be eventually smarter than us, and that we didn't know
    how to control them," Bengio, a pioneering AI researcher and computer
    science professor at the Universit=C3=A9 de Montr=C3=A9al, told As It Happe=
    ns host
    Nil K=C3=B6ksal.

    The world's most cited AI researcher is launching a new research non-profit organization called LawZero to "look for scientific solutions to how we can design AI that will not turn against us."

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

    Date: Mon, 16 Jun 2025 16:22:53 -0400
    From: Gabe Goldberg <gabe@gabegold.com>
    Subject: Bad brainwaves: A ChatGPT makes you stupid (Pivot to AI)

    This strongly suggests it’s imperative to keep students away from chatbots
    in the classroom — so they’ll actually learn.

    This also explains people who insist you use the chatbot instead of thinking and will not shut up about it. They tried thinking once and they didn’t like it.

    https://pivot-to-ai.com/2025/06/16/bad-brainwaves-chatgpt-makes-you-stupid/

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

    Date: Mon, 16 Jun 2025 09:30:25 -0700
    From: Steve Bacher <sebmb1@verizon.net>
    Subject: They Asked an AI Chatbot Questions. The Answers Sent Them
    Spiraling. (NYTimes)

    Generative AI chatbots are going down conspiratorial rabbit holes and
    endorsing wild, mystical belief systems. For some people, conversations with the technology can deeply distort reality.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2025/06/13/technology/chatgpt-ai-chatbots-conspiracies.html

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

    Date: Fri, 20 Jun 2025 18:06:23 -0700
    From: "Jim" <jgeissman@socal.rr.com>
    Subject: SSA stops reporting call-wait times and other metrics

    The changes are the latest sign of the agency's struggle with website
    crashes, overloaded servers and long lines at field offices amid Trump cutbacks.

    Social Security has stopped publicly reporting its processing times for benefits, the 1-800 number's current call wait time and numerous other performance metrics, which customers and advocates have used to track the agency's struggling customer service programs.

    The agency removed a menu of live phone and claims data from its website earlier this month, according to Internet Archive records. It put up a new
    page this week that offers a far more limited view of the agency's customer service performance.

    The website also now urges customers to use an online portal for services rather than calling the main phone line or visiting a field office - two options that many disabled and elderly people with limited mobility or
    computer skills rely on for help. The agency had previously considered
    cutting phone services and then scrapped those plans amid an uproar.

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2025/06/20/social-security-wait-times-cuts/

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

    Date: Fri, 20 Jun 2025 11:19:18 -0400 (EDT)
    From: ACM TechNews <technews-editor@acm.org>
    Subject: Pope Leo Takes On AI as a Potential Threat to Humanity (WSJ)

    Margherita Stancati, Drew Hinshaw, Keach Hagey, et al., *The Wall Street Journal* (06/17/25), via ACM TechNews

    This week, Google, Meta, IBM, Anthropic, Cohere, and Palantir executives took part in a two-day international conference at the Vatican on AI, ethics, and corporate governance. Some tech leaders hoped to avoid a binding international treaty on AI
    supported by the Vatican, and observers said the conference could set the tone for future interactions between Pope Leo and the tech industry on the matter of regulation.

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

    Date: Fri, 20 Jun 2025 11:19:18 -0400 (EDT)
    From: ACM TechNews <technews-editor@acm.org>
    Subject: AI Ethics Experts Set to Gather to Shape the Future of Responsible
    AI (ACM Media Center)

    ACM Media Center (06/18/25), via ACM TechNews

    The 2025 ACM Conference on Fairness, Accountability, and Transparency (FAccT 2025), taking place June 23-26 in Athens, Greece, will address how
    algorithmic systems are reshaping the world and what it takes to ensure
    these AI tools do so justly. Said ACM President Yannis Ioannidis, "The unprecedented advances and rapid integration of AI and data technologies
    have created an urgent need for a scientific and public conversation about
    AI ethics."

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

    Date: Fri, 20 Jun 2025 11:19:18 -0400 (EDT)
    From: ACM TechNews <technews-editor@acm.org>
    Subject: Hacker Group Exposes Source Code for Iran's Cryptocurrency
    (Amichai Stein)

    Amichai Stein, *The Jerusalem Post* (Israel) (06/19/25), via ACM TechNews

    Israel-linked hacker group Gonjeshke Darande (Predatory Sparrow) released
    the source code and internal information of Nobitex, Iran's largest cryptocurrency exchange. According to the group, the company assists the
    regime in funding Iranian terrorism and uses virtual currencies to bypass sanctions. Gonjeshke Darande previously announced that it stole $48 million
    in cryptocurrency from the exchange, and claimed responsibility for a cyberattack on the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps-controlled Bank Sepah.

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

    Date: Fri, 20 Jun 2025 18:06:23 -0700
    From: "Jim" <jgeissman@socal.rr.com>
    Subject: Iran Asks Citizens to Delete WhatsApp from Devices (AP)

    Kelvin Chan and Barbara Ortutay, Associated Press (06/17/25),
    via ACM TechNews

    Iranian state television has called on citizens to delete WhatsApp from
    their smartphones, claiming the app collects user information to send to Israel. In response, WhatsApp, which employs end-to-end encryption to
    prevent service providers in the middle from reading messages, issued a statement that read, "We do not track your precise location, we don't keep
    logs of who everyone is messaging, and we do not track the personal messages people are sending one another."

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

    Date: Fri, 20 Jun 2025 18:06:23 -0700
    From: "Jim" <jgeissman@socal.rr.com>
    Subject: China Unleashes Hackers Against Russia (Megha Rajagopalan)

    Megha Rajagopalan, The New York Times (06/19/25),
    via ACM TechNews

    Since the beginning of the war in Ukraine, groups linked to the Chinese government have repeatedly hacked Russian companies and government
    agencies. While China appears to have plenty of domestic scientific and military expertise, Chinese military experts have lamented that its troops
    lack battlefield experience. Some defense insiders say China sees Russia's
    war in Ukraine as a chance to collect information about modern warfare
    tactics and Western weaponry, and what works against them.

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

    Date: Fri, 20 Jun 2025 11:19:18 -0400 (EDT)
    From: ACM TechNews <technews-editor@acm.org>
    Subject: China's Spy Agencies Investing Heavily in AI (Julian E. Barnes)

    Julian E. Barnes, *The New York Times* (06/17/25), via ACM TechNews

    A report by researchers at Recorded Future's Insikt Group details
    investments in AI by Chinese spy agencies to develop tools that could
    improve intelligence analysis, help military commanders develop operational plans, and generate early threat warnings. The researchers found that China
    is probably using a mix of large language models, including Meta and OpenAI, along with domestic models from DeepSeek, Zhipu AI, and others.

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

    Date: Fri, 20 Jun 2025 11:19:18 -0400 (EDT)
    From: ACM TechNews <technews-editor@acm.org>
    Subject: Amazon Says It Will Reduce Its Workforce as AI Replaces Human
    Employees (CNN)

    Ramishah Maruf and Alicia Wallace, CNN (06/17/25), via ACM TechNews

    Amazon CEO Andy Jassy said in a June 17 blog post that the rollout of generative AI agents will change how work is performed, enabling the company
    to shrink its workforce in the future. Jassy said, "We will need fewer
    people doing some of the jobs that are being done today, and more people
    doing other types of jobs." Employees should view AI as "teammates we can
    call on at various stages of our work, and that will get wiser and more
    helpful with more experience," according to Jassy.

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

    Date: Sat, 14 Jun 2025 06:55:13 -0700
    From: Steve Bacher <sebmb1@verizon.net>
    Subject: ChatGPT will avoid being shut down in some life-threatening
    scenarios, former OpenAI researcher claims (Techcrunch)

    A former OpenAI researcher published new research claiming that the
    company's AI models will go to great lengths to stay online.

    https://techcrunch.com/2025/06/11/chatgpt-will-avoid-being-shut-down-in-some-life-threatening-scenarios-former-openai-researcher-claims/

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

    Date: Fri, 20 Jun 2025 11:19:18 -0400 (EDT)
    From: ACM TechNews <technews-editor@acm.org>
    Subject: Big Tech two-factor authentication compromised (Bloomberg)

    Ryan Gallagher. Crofton Black and Gabriel Geiger. Bloomberg (06/16/25), via
    ACM TechNews

    Concerns are being raised about the middlemen that send two-factor authentication codes to consumers via text on behalf of Big Tech companies, popular apps, banks, encrypted chat platforms, and other senders. An
    industry whistleblower has revealed around 1- million such messages have
    passed through Fink Telecom Services, a Swiss company that cybersecurity researchers have linked to incidents in which the codes were intercepted and used to infiltrate private online accounts. Critics of the industry point to
    a lack of regulation allowing such companies to operate without a license.

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

    Date: Fri, 20 Jun 2025 08:02:07 -0700
    From: Lauren Weinstein <lauren@vortex.com>
    Subject: What could go wrong? - AllTrails launches AI route-making tool,
    worrying search-and-rescue members

    What could go wrong? - AllTrails launches AI route-making tool,
    worrying search-and-rescue members

    https://www.nationalobserver.com/2025/06/17/news/alltrails-ai-tool-search-rescue-members

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

    Date: Thu, 19 Jun 2025 23:43:42 +0000 (UTC)
    From: Steve Bacher <sebmb1@verizon.net>
    Subject: EU weighs sperm donor cap to curb risk of accidental incest

    And now for something completely different - an item which has nothing to d o with AI. ;-)

    Eight countries want to discuss an EU limit on the number of children
    conceived from a single sperm donor -- to prevent future generations from unwitting incest and psychological harms.

    Donor-conceived births are rising across Europe as fertility rates decline
    and assisted reproduction becomes more widely accessible -- including for same-sex couples and single women. But with many countries struggling to recruit enough local donors, commercial cryobanks are increasingly shipping reproductive cells known as gametes -- sperm or egg -- across borders, sometimes from the same donor to multiple countries.

    Most EU countries have national limits on how many children can be conceived from one donor -- ranging from one in Cyprus to 10 in France, Greece,
    Italy and Poland. However, there is no limit for cross-border donations, increasing the risk of potential health problems linked to a single donor,
    as well as a psychological impact on children who discover they have doze ns or even hundreds of half-siblings.

    [Ia this an egg-cell-ent move? PGN]

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

    Date: Thu, 19 Jun 2025 08:07:28 -0700
    From: Lauren Weinstein <lauren@vortex.com>
    Subject: ChatGPT may be eroding critical thinking skills (MIT)

    https://time.com/7295195/ai-chatgpt-google-learning-school/

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

    Date: Thu, 19 Jun 2025 01:43:14 +0000 (UTC)
    From: Steve Bacher <sebmb1@verizon.net>
    Subject: Meta's Privacy Screwup Reveals How People Really See AI Chatbots
    (NYMag)


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