Menu

Blog

Page 2412

Feb 23, 2023

Ben Goertzel — Countering Objections to Mind Uploading

Posted by in categories: cybercrime/malcode, neuroscience

Ben Goertzel in response to some common objections covered in an article on io9 by George Dvorsky ‘You’ll Probably Never Upload Your Mind Into A Computer’: http://io9.com/you-ll-probably-never-upload-your-mind-into-a-computer-474941498

Objections are covered in order as they appear in the article:
1. Brain functions are not computable.
2. We’ll never solve the hard problem of consciousness.
3. We’ll never solve the binding problem.
4. Panpsychism is true.
5. Mind-body dualism is true.
6. It would be unethical to develop.
7. We can never be sure it works.
8. Uploaded minds would be vulnerable to hacking and abuse.

Continue reading “Ben Goertzel — Countering Objections to Mind Uploading” »

Feb 23, 2023

Anti-dust tech paves way for self-cleaning surfaces

Posted by in categories: solar power, space travel, sustainability

Dust is a common fact of life, and it’s more than just a daily nuisance—it can get into machinery and equipment, causing loss of efficiency or breakdowns.

Researchers at The University of Texas at Austin partnered with North Carolina-based company Smart Material Solutions Inc. to develop a new method to keep dust from sticking to surfaces. The result is the ability to make many types of materials dust resistant, from spacecraft to solar panels to household windows.

The research is published in ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces.

Feb 23, 2023

Look Up! Venus and Jupiter Are Lining Up for an Amazing Optical Illusion

Posted by in category: space

The planets will move closer and closer in the night sky until March 1.


Everything you need to know about the upcoming Venus-Jupiter conjunction.

Feb 23, 2023

The Premiere AI Conference: NVIDIA #GTC23

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

Join Us Online March 20–23, 2023

Come experience NVIDIA GTC for even more inspiring content, expert-led sessions, and a must-see keynote to accelerate your life’s work.


Register FREE. Streamed online.

Feb 23, 2023

Resemble AI Creates Synthetic Audio Watermark to Tag Deepfake Speech

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, robotics/AI, security

Synthetic speech and voice cloning startup Resemble AI has introduced an “audio watermark” to tag AI-generated speech without compromising sound quality. The new PerTh Perceptual Threshold) Watermarker embeds the sonic signature of Resemble’s synthetic media engine into a recording to mark its AI origin regardless of future audio manipulation, yet subtle enough that no human can hear it.


Audio Watermarking

Visual watermarking hides one image within another, invisible without a computer scanner in the case of particularly high-security documents. The same principle applies to audio watermarks, except it’s a very soft sound that people won’t notice but encoded with information that a computer could decipher. The concept isn’t new, but Resemble has leveraged its audio AI to make PerTh more reliable without compromising the realism of its synthetic speech creation.

Continue reading “Resemble AI Creates Synthetic Audio Watermark to Tag Deepfake Speech” »

Feb 23, 2023

Scientists grow electrodes in brain, thanks to a simple viscous gel

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, evolution, neuroscience

Blurring lines between man and machine.

A breakthrough has made way for a new paradigm in bioelectronics. Earlier, it took the implantation of physical objects to initiate electronic processes in the body. Humans have incorporated technology to enhance the human experience and take charge of their evolution. They’ve also integrated devices within them that could alternately function as organs when biological tissues fail.

Scientists have now developed a viscous gel that will be enough in the future.

Continue reading “Scientists grow electrodes in brain, thanks to a simple viscous gel” »

Feb 23, 2023

Future-ready: Australian army tests mind-controlled combat AI robodogs

Posted by in categories: military, robotics/AI

The brain signals successfully directed the robodogs toward a number of locations that the human controller picked “telepathically” by imagining them.

The Australian military is reportedly testing a unique artificial intelligence (AI) “brain robotic interface” to control “robodogs” synced with troopers’ minds.

Continue reading “Future-ready: Australian army tests mind-controlled combat AI robodogs” »

Feb 23, 2023

NASA aims to send a lander that can survive Venus’ crushing atmosphere

Posted by in category: space

Firstly, the space agency must develop a battery that can withstand Venus’ hellish conditions.

You may be surprised to learn that humans have sent several landers to Venus’ surface. The Soviet Venera missions, for example, transmitted the first-ever image from another planet on October 20, 1975, after sending its Venera 9 lander to the surface of Venus.

That mission lasted less than two hours on the planet’s surface due to the immense atmospheric pressure and scorching temperatures on Earth’s so-called evil twin.

Continue reading “NASA aims to send a lander that can survive Venus’ crushing atmosphere” »

Feb 23, 2023

Old fungus could soon be used to make new plastics

Posted by in category: materials

The fungus has been traditionally used as a fire starter.

A fungus called tinder fungus that grows on the bark of rotting beech and birch trees has been used as a fire starter for a long time, but it may just have a new use: the creation of plastics.

Researchers at the VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland proceeded to analyze the internal structure of the fungus, formally called Fomes fomentarius, to understand its strong yet lightweight consistency.

Continue reading “Old fungus could soon be used to make new plastics” »

Feb 23, 2023

New tech could transform phones into RFID readers

Posted by in categories: innovation, mobile phones

The devices would not need batteries because they can harvest power from LTE signals instead.

Radio-frequency identification (RFID) uses electromagnetic fields to automatically identify and track tags attached to objects. This is a feature that would allow you to, for instance, know everything that is in your fridge and when it expires.


A new technology developed by engineers at the University of California San Diego can allow that possibility, according to a press release published by the institution on Tuesday.

Continue reading “New tech could transform phones into RFID readers” »