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Microsoft has released security updates with the June 2022 cumulative Windows Updates to address a critical Windows zero-day vulnerability known as Follina and actively exploited in ongoing attacks.

“Microsoft strongly recommends that customers install the updates to be fully protected from the vulnerability. Customers whose systems are configured to receive automatic updates do not need to take any further action,” Microsoft said in an update to the original advisory.

“Microsoft recommends installing the updates as soon as possible,” the company further urged customers in a post on the Microsoft Security Response Center.

Internet infrastructure firm Cloudflare said today that it mitigated a 26 million request per second distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack, the largest HTTPS DDoS attack detected to date.

The record-breaking attack occurred last week and targeted one of Cloudflare’s customers using the Free plan.

The threat actor behind it likely used hijacked servers and virtual machines seeing that the attack originated from Cloud Service Providers instead of weaker Internet of Things (IoT) devices from compromised Residential Internet Service Providers.

One such competitor, LaMDA, is the work of Google’s AI division. Built on Transformer – the company’s open-source neural network architecture – it can produce non-generic, open-ended dialogue after training on 1.56 trillion words of multi-content, public data and web text. By contrast, a typical chatbot is dependent on topic-specific datasets and has a limited conversation flow. LaMDA has 137 billion parameters, which can be thought of as the individual “synapses” combining to form the AI.

The sheer scale and complexity of models like LaMDA is leading some experts to ask profound questions about the nature of AI. In February, the Chief Scientist and Co-Founder of OpenAI, one of the leading research labs for artificial intelligence, claimed that the latest generation of neural networks are now large enough to be “slightly conscious”.

This month, another expert in machine learning has spoken out. Blake Lemoine, Senior Software Engineer at Google, believes that a form of self-awareness might be starting to emerge from the billions of connected parameters.

As artificial intelligence and deep learning techniques become increasingly advanced, engineers will need to create hardware that can run their computations both reliably and efficiently. Neuromorphic computing hardware, which is inspired by the structure and biology of the human brain, could be particularly promising for supporting the operation of sophisticated deep neural networks (DNNs).

Researchers at Graz University of Technology and Intel have recently demonstrated the huge potential of neuromorphic computing hardware for running DNNs in an experimental setting. Their paper, published in Nature Machine Intelligence and funded by the Human Brain Project (HBP), shows that neuromorphic computing hardware could run large DNNs 4 to 16 times more efficiently than conventional (i.e., non-brain inspired) computing hardware.

“We have shown that a large class of DNNs, those that process temporally extended inputs such as for example sentences, can be implemented substantially more energy-efficiently if one solves the same problems on neuromorphic hardware with brain-inspired neurons and neural network architectures,” Wolfgang Maass, one of the researchers who carried out the study, told TechXplore. “Furthermore, the DNNs that we considered are critical for higher level cognitive function, such as finding relations between sentences in a story and answering questions about its content.”

Also from 0 to 80% in 5.2 minutes. When it comes to electric vehicles, the main concern is the range anxiety related to mileage per charge and charging time.


Enovix’s 3D Silicon Lithium-ion battery. Enovix

When it comes to electric vehicles, the main concern is the range anxiet y related to mileage per charge and charging time.

Now a company from the U.S. seems to have a solution for charging time.

Elon Musk said deploying Starlink at sea ‘will be relatively easy.’

SpaceX’s Starlink internet is living up to its billing as a service that will be available almost anywhere on Earth, including in the air and out at sea.

That’s because the satellite internet service may soon be available for passengers aboard Royal Caribbean Group cruise ships, according to a blog post from the company.