Tech
AI could pose ‘more urgent’ threat than climate change: AI pioneer


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AI pioneer Geoffrey Hinton speaks at the Thomson Reuters Financial and Risk Summit in Toronto, Canada, December 4, 2017. /Reuters
AI pioneer Geoffrey Hinton speaks at the Thomson Reuters Financial and Risk Summit in Toronto, Canada, December 4, 2017. /Reuters
Artificial intelligence (AI) could pose a “more urgent” threat to humanity than climate change, AI pioneer Geoffrey Hinton told Reuters in an interview on Friday.
Geoffrey Hinton, widely known as one of the “godfathers of AI,” recently announced he had quit Alphabet after a decade at the firm, saying he wanted to speak out on the risks of the technology without it affecting his former employer.
Hinton’s work is considered essential to the development of contemporary AI systems. In 1986, he co-authored the seminal paper “Learning representations by back-propagating errors”, a milestone in the development of the neural networks undergirding AI technology. In 2018, he was awarded the Turing Award in recognition of his research breakthroughs.
But he is now among a growing number of tech leaders publicly espousing concern about the possible threat posed by AI if machines were to achieve greater intelligence than humans and take control of the planet.
“I wouldn’t like to devalue climate change. I wouldn’t like to say, ‘You shouldn’t worry about climate change.’ That’s a huge risk too,” Hinton said. “But I think this might end up being more urgent.”
Microsoft-backed OpenAI fired the starting pistol on a technological arms race in November, when it made AI-powered chatbot ChatGPT available to the public. It soon became the fast-growing app in history, reaching 100 million monthly users in two months.
In April, Twitter CEO Elon Musk joined thousands in signing an open letter calling for a six-month pause in the development of systems more powerful than OpenAI’s recently-launched GPT-4.
Signatories included Stability AI CEO Emad Mostaque, researchers at Alphabet-owned DeepMind, and fellow AI pioneers Yoshua Bengio and Stuart Russell.
While Hinton shares signatories concern that AI may prove to be an existential threat to mankind, he disagreed with pausing research.
“It’s utterly unrealistic,” he said. “I’m in the camp that thinks this is an existential risk, and it’s close enough that we ought to be working very hard right now, and putting a lot of resources into figuring out what we can do about it.”
In the European Union, a committee of lawmakers responded to the Musk-backed letter, calling on U.S. President Joe Biden to convene a global summit on the future direction of the technology with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen.
Last week, the committee agreed a landmark set of proposals targeting generative AI, which would force companies like OpenAI to disclose any copyright material used to train their models.
Meanwhile, Biden held talks with a number of AI company leaders, including Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman at the White House, promising a “frank and constructive discussion” on the need for companies to be more transparent about their systems.
“The tech leaders have the best understanding of it, and the politicians have to be involved,” said Hinton. “It affects us all, so we all have to think about it.”





Tech
New Security Warning Issued For Google's 1.8 Billion Gmail Users – Forbes


06/05 Update below. This post was originally published on June 3
The security of Gmail has always been one of its biggest selling points, but now one of its most important new security features is actively being used by hackers to scam users
Gmail’s new blue checkmark sender verification system — as it should work
Introduced last month, the Gmail checkmark system highlights verified companies and organizations to users with a blue checkmark. The idea is to help users discern which emails are legitimate and which may have been sent by impersonators running scams. Unfortunately, scammers have tricked the system.
Scammers hacking Gmail’s new sender verification system
Chris Plummer
Spotted by cybersecurity engineer Chris Plummer, scammers have found a way to convince Gmail that their fake brands are legitimate. Thereby using the confidence the checkmark system is supposed to instill against Gmail users.
“The sender found a way to dupe @gmail ’s authoritative stamp of approval, which end users are going to trust,” explains Plummer. “This message went from a Facebook account, to a UK netblock, to O365, to me. Nothing about this is legit.”
Plummer reports that Google initially dismissed his discovery as “intended behaviour” before his tweets about it went viral, and the company acknowledged the error. In a statement to Plummer, Google wrote:
“After taking a closer look we realized that this indeed doesn’t seem like a generic SPF vulnerability. Thus we are reopening this and the appropriate team is taking a closer look at what is going on.
We apologize again for the confusion and we understand our initial response might have been frustrating, thank you so much for pressing on for us to take a closer look at this!
We’ll keep you posted with our assessment and the direction that this issue takes.
Regards, Google Security Team”
Plummer highlights that Google has now listed the flaw as a ‘P1’ (top priority) fix, which is currently “in progress.”
Immense credit goes to Plummer, not just for his discovery, but for the lengths he went to to make Google acknowledge the problem. That said, until Google has a fix, the Gmail checkmark verification system remains broken and is being used by hackers and spammers to trick you with the exact thing it was meant to combat. Stay vigilant.
06/05 Update: security researchers are beginning to understand how Gmail’s checkmark verification system is being tricked and how it applies to other email services. In a blog post, debugger Jonathan Rudenberg revealed he was able to replicate the hack on Gmail, explaining:
“Gmail’s BIMI implementation only requires SPF to match, the DKIM signature can be from any domain. This means that any shared or misconfigured mail server in a BIMI-enabled domain’s SPF records can be a vector for sending spoofed messages with the full BIMI ✅ treatment in Gmail…
BIMI is worse than the status quo, as it enables super-powered phishing based on a single misconfiguration in the extremely complicated and fragile stack that is email.”
Rudenberg also published results for BIMI implementations on other major email services, stating:
- iCloud: properly checks that DKIM matches the From domain
- Yahoo: only attaches BIMI treatment to bulk sends with high reputation
- Fastmail: vulnerable but also supports Gravatar and uses the same treatment for both so the impact is minimal
- Apple Mail + Fastmail: vulnerable with a dangerous treatment
Yes, this means Apple Mail and Fastmail users must also be vigilant, though they don’t run the same verified checkmark system as Gmail. There has been a highly critical response to this vulnerability from the security community, with questions raised about how this was allowed to happen and how poorly implemented the Gmail verification method is. Google needs a fix ASAP.
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Tech
What's Trending Today: Apple WWDC Event, Hollywood Deal, Unruly Delta Air Passenger, Zhang Wins LPGA – Financial Post


Article content
(Bloomberg) — Welcome to Social Buzz, a daily column looking at what’s trending on social media platforms. I’m Caitlin Fichtel, an editor on Bloomberg’s Breaking News team, which monitors everything from company statements to tweets from some of the most prominent people in the financial world. Here’s your daily look at what the internet is talking about.
Article content
Apple Inc.’s next big thing is finally here, with the company set to announce its mixed-reality headset at its Worldwide Developers Conference, better known as WWDC, on Monday. The headset has the potential to usher in a new era: It could kick off the shift to a different interface that upends how people work, play games and entertain themselves. Investors will be keen to see how it all plays out with shares of the tech behemoth trading higher this morning, putting them on pace to close at a record high ahead of this product launch.
Hollywood’s Deal
The Directors Guild of America reached a tentative agreement with the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers, which represents Hollywood studios, a victory for one of several entertainment industry unions seeking adjusted contracts this summer. The tentative agreement reached Saturday will allocate a 5% wage increase in the first year of contract, 4% in the second year and 3.5% in the third year, according to a statement from the union, DGA. The deal also says that generative AI cannot replace duties performed by members as the technology isn’t considered a person.
Article content
Unruly Passenger
A passenger on a Delta Air Lines Inc. flight from Paris, France, to Detroit, Michigan, is facing criminal charges after his disruptive behavior caused the plane to be diverted to Canada, CNN reported, citing police. The 34-year-old man was acting in an “unruly manner” and was believed to be under the influence of alcohol according to the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. He was arrested by the RCMP and is facing charges of endangering an aircraft.
Dame Jacinda Ardern
Former Prime Minister of New Zealand Jacinda Ardern was awarded the title of dame for her service to the country, The New York Times reported. The accolade — Dame Grand Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit — was given to Ardern for her work during the coronavirus pandemic and the terrorist attacks in Christchurch.
LPGA Winner
Rose Zhang won the LPGA Tour, becoming the first player to win in a pro debut in 72 years. Her stunning win drew congratulatory tweets from other professional sports players including Tiger Woods: “Incredible few weeks for Rose Zhang, defends her NCAA title and then wins in her Pro debut.”
Terminal users can sign up to receive this daily piece in their inbox by clicking here.
—With assistance from Mark Gurman, Ryan Vlastelica and Alicia Diaz.
Tech
Apple expected to reveal mixed-reality headset at developer conference – The Globe and Mail

The Apple logo on March 1. The company is expected to unveil a mixed-reality headset at its annual software developer conference on Monday.DADO RUVIC/Reuters
Apple Inc AAPL-Q is expected to unveil a mixed-reality headset at its annual software developer conference on Monday, its first big move into a new product category since the introduction of the Apple Watch nine years ago.
The launch will see Apple test a market crowded with devices that have yet to gain traction with consumers and put it in direct competition with Facebook-owner Meta Platforms META-Q.
Like Meta’s Quest Pro from last year and Quest 3 announced last week, Apple’s device is likely to blend a video feed from the outside world with a virtual world displayed on screens inside the headset.
Analysts expect Apple’s headset to come with premium features including a high-quality display and hand-tracking so it can be controlled without an external controller. It’s also likely to cost much more than the planned $500 Quest 3.
Investors and tech fans alike will be focusing on how much Apple’s view of the virtual reality market overlaps with Meta’s. Meta Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg has outlined his vision for using headsets to dip in and out of a “metaverse” where people can meet virtually to work, play and spend.
In addition to Meta, Sony Group Corp and ByteDance-owned Pico both recently released virtual reality devices.
Research firm IDC said companies sold a total of 8.8 million headsets last year, down 20.9 per cent from 2021. In the first quarter of 2023, sales more than halved.
Apple’s presentation on Monday is mostly aimed at sparking the imaginations of the thousands of software developers who will stream into Apple Park for a keynote address at 1 p.m. Eastern Time (1700 GMT).
Apple will also deliver updates on its operating systems for iPhones, iPads and Mac computers.
Investors will also look for updates on CarPlay, Apple’s software for vehicles, which the company said last year would start to power more dashboard functions.
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