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Apr 24, 2024

OpenAI’s new ‘instruction hierarchy’ could make AI models harder to fool

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

1/ OpenAI researchers have proposed a new instruction hierarchy approach to reduce the vulnerability of large language models (LLMs) to prompt injection attacks and jailbreaks.


OpenAI researchers propose an instruction hierarchy for AI language models. It is intended to reduce vulnerability to prompt injection attacks and jailbreaks. Initial results are promising.

Language models (LLMs) are vulnerable to prompt injection attacks and jailbreaks, where attackers replace the model’s original instructions with their own malicious prompts.

Continue reading “OpenAI’s new ‘instruction hierarchy’ could make AI models harder to fool” »

Apr 24, 2024

Xaira launches with $1bn for AI drug discovery and development

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

Xaira has recruited a group of researchers who developed the leading models for protein and antibody design while in Baker’s lab. The company aims advance these models and develop new methods that can “connect the world of biological targets and engineered molecules to the human experience of disease.”

“Driven by growing data sets and new methods, there has been accelerating progress in artificial intelligence and its applications to medicine, biology and chemistry, including seminal work from David Baker’s lab at the Institute for Protein Design,” said Foresight’s Dr Vikram Bajaj. “In starting Xaira, we have brought together incredible multidisciplinary talent and capabilities at the right time to reimagine our entire approach, from drug discovery to clinical development.”

Boasting proficiency in handling vast and multidimensional datasets, Xaira claims it will enable comprehensive characterization of disease biology at various levels, from molecular to clinical. Drawing from Illumina’s functional genomics R&D effort and integrating a key proteomics group from Interline Therapeutics, the company aims to gain new insights into disease mechanisms.

Apr 24, 2024

Mark Zuckerberg laid out 3 ways Meta will make money from its huge AI investments

Posted by in categories: economics, robotics/AI

The Meta CEO is spending massively on AI. In a call with analysts, he explained how these huge investments can pay off in the future.

Apr 24, 2024

The Strange Mystery of the Hubble Tension

Posted by in category: cosmology

An exploration of the mystery of the Hubble Tension in Cosmology. My Patreon Page: https://www.patreon.com/johnmichaelgodierMy Event Horizon Channel:

Apr 24, 2024

Why is There Plutonium in This Star? Przybylski’s Star with David Kipping

Posted by in category: space

Is HD 101,065 or Przybylski’s Star salted with Plutonium? David Kipping of Cool Worlds lab joins John Michael Godier to discuss the search for exomoons and te…

Apr 24, 2024

A Scientist Says He Has the Evidence That We Live in a Simulation

Posted by in category: futurism

The “Second Law of Infodynamics” could prove it.

Apr 24, 2024

Breakthrough Demo of 3D DNA Industrial Nanorobots Manufacturing

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

DNA nanostructures can perform some of the complex robotic fabrication process for manufacturing and self-replication. Building things and performing work with nanorobots has been a major technical and scientific goal. This has been done and published in the peer reviewed journal Science. Nadrian C. “Ned” Seeman (December 16, 1945 – November 16, 2021) was an American nanotechnologist and crystallographer known for inventing the field of DNA nanotechnology. He contributed enough to this work published in 2023 to be listed as a co-author.

Seeman’s laboratory published the synthesis of the first three-dimensional nanoscale object, a cube made of DNA, in 1991. This work won the 1995 Feynman Prize in Nanotechnology. The concept of the dissimilar double DNA crossover introduced by Seeman, was important stepping stone towards the development of DNA origami. The goal of demonstrating designed three-dimensional DNA crystals was achieved by Seeman in 2009, nearly thirty years after his original elucidation of the idea.

The concepts of DNA nanotechnology later found further applications in DNA computing, DNA nanorobotics, and self-assembly of nanoelectronics. He shared the Kavli Prize in Nanoscience 2010 with Donald Eigler for their development of unprecedented methods to control matter on the nanoscale.

Apr 24, 2024

Quantum forces used to automatically assemble tiny device

Posted by in category: quantum physics

The very weak forces of attraction caused by the Casimir effect can now be used to manipulate microscopic gold flakes and turn them into a light-trapping tool.

By Karmela Padavic-Callaghan

Apr 24, 2024

Mark Zuckerberg appeared to take a shot at Apple’s Vision Pro

Posted by in category: augmented reality

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg seemed to take a hit at Apple’s Vision Pro in Meta’s first-quarter earnings call on Wednesday.

Zuckerberg said he didn’t think augmented reality glasses would make it in the mainstream market until it had “full holographic displays.” The comment appears to show his skepticism of the potential success of a product like Apple’s Vision Pro.

Apr 24, 2024

Why animals run faster than their robot doppelgängers… for now

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

The sum is greater than its parts.

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