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Oct 30, 2023
ServiceNow Data Exposure: A Wake-Up Call for Companies
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in category: business
ServiceNow exposes sensitive data due to misconfigurations. Learn how this could’ve jeopardized your business and the steps to ensure your data is secure.
Oct 30, 2023
Breaking the Quantum Limit: From Einstein-Bohr Debates to Achieving “Unattainable” Efficiency
Posted by Paul Battista in categories: computing, engineering, quantum physics
Researchers at the University of Stuttgart have demonstrated that a key ingredient for many quantum computation and communication schemes can be performed with an efficiency that exceeds the commonly assumed upper theoretical limit — thereby opening up new perspectives for a wide range of photonic quantum technologies.
Quantum science not only has revolutionized our understanding of nature, but is also inspiring groundbreaking new computing, communication, and sensor devices. Exploiting quantum effects in such ‘quantum technologies’ typically requires a combination of deep insight into the underlying quantum-physical principles, systematic methodological advances, and clever engineering. And it is precisely this combination that researchers in the group of Prof. Stefanie Barz at the University of Stuttgart and the Center for Integrated Quantum Science and Technology (IQST) have delivered in recent study, in which they have improved the efficiency of an essential building block of many quantum devices beyond a seemingly inherent limit.
Historical foundations: from philosophy to technology.
Oct 30, 2023
Decoding how the brain understands sentences in real-time
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in categories: biotech/medical, robotics/AI
🧠📖🔍
Researchers examine how the brain processes language by using intracranial recordings in epilepsy patients during reading tasks, revealing the neural networks responsible for semantic integration and distinguishing between semantic coherence and task-based referentiality. The study pinpoints specific brain regions activated during sentence processing and offers new insights into the spatiotemporal dynamics of language understanding.
Oct 30, 2023
Extracellular Matrix-Based Biomaterials for Cardiovascular Tissue Engineering
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in categories: bioengineering, biotech/medical, chemistry, life extension
Regenerative medicine and tissue engineering strategies have made remarkable progress in remodeling, replacing, and regenerating damaged cardiovascular tissues. The design of three-dimensional (3D) scaffolds with appropriate biochemical and mechanical characteristics is critical for engineering tissue-engineered replacements. The extracellular matrix (ECM) is a dynamic scaffolding structure characterized by tissue-specific biochemical, biophysical, and mechanical properties that modulates cellular behavior and activates highly regulated signaling pathways. In light of technological advancements, biomaterial-based scaffolds have been developed that better mimic physiological ECM properties, provide signaling cues that modulate cellular behavior, and form functional tissues and organs.
Oct 30, 2023
ExelaStealer: A New Low-Cost Cybercrime Weapon Emerges
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in category: cybercrime/malcode
🚨 ExelaStealer, a dangerous info-stealing malware, has hit the scene, offering hackers a low-cost entry point for malicious attacks.
Learn more in this article:
Researchers warn of ExelaStealer, a new information stealer targeting Windows systems. It steals sensitive data like passwords, credit card numbers.
Oct 30, 2023
How Different Animals React to Zero Gravity 😱 #frog #dog #cat #mice #pigeons #animals
Posted by Magaly Santiago in category: futurism
Randomly Interesting.
Dog floats, cats frefall, pigeons try to fly but at some point one floats, frog goes crazy…and rats/mice create their own “gravity”.
Oct 30, 2023
Hackers Using MSIX App Packages to Infect Windows PCs with GHOSTPULSE Maware
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in category: cybercrime/malcode
🔒 Beware! A new cyber threat is using bogus MSIX Windows app packages for popular software like Google Chrome, Microsoft Edge, Brave, Grammarly, and Cisco Webex to spread a dangerous malware called GHOSTPULSE.
Learn more ➜.
Cyber criminals are using fake MSIX Windows app packages of popular software to deliver GHOSTPULSE malware loader.
Oct 30, 2023
Inspired by the human brain — how IBM’s latest AI chip could be 25 times more efficient than GPUs by being more integrated — but neither Nvidia nor AMD have to worry just yet
Posted by Genevieve Klien in category: robotics/AI
The NorthPole processor embeds a small amount of memory into each of its 256 cores, which are connected together in a way similar to the way parts of the brain are connected together with white matter. This means the chip mitigates the bottleneck entirely.
IBM’s NorthPole is more of a proof of concept than a fully functioning chip that can compete with the likes of AMD and Nvidia. It only includes 224MB of RAM, for example, which is nowhere near enough the scale required for AI or to run large language models (LLMs).
The chip can also just run pre-programed neural networks trained on separate systems. But its unique architecture means the real standout is the energy efficiency it can boast. The researchers claim that if NorthPole was created today with state-of-the-art manufacturing standards, it would be 25 times more efficienct than the best GPUs and best CPUs.
Oct 30, 2023
Exclusive: G7 to agree AI code of conduct for companies
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: economics, privacy, robotics/AI, security
BRUSSELS, Oct 29 (Reuters) — The Group of Seven industrial countries will on Monday agree a code of conduct for companies developing advanced artificial intelligence systems, a G7 document showed, as governments seek to mitigate the risks and potential misuse of the technology.
The voluntary code of conduct will set a landmark for how major countries govern AI, amid privacy concerns and security risks, the document seen by Reuters showed.
Leaders of the Group of Seven (G7) economies made up of Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Britain and the United States, as well as the European Union, kicked off the process in May at a ministerial forum dubbed the “Hiroshima AI process”.