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Aug 12, 2020

Deepfakes declared top AI threat, biometrics and content attribution scheme proposed to detect them

Posted by in categories: privacy, robotics/AI

Biometrics may be the best way to protect society against the threat of deepfakes, but new solutions are being proposed by the Content Authority Initiative and the AI Foundation.

Deepfakes are the most serious criminal threat posed by artificial intelligence, according to a new report funded by the Dawes Centre for Future Crime at the University College London (UCL), among a list of the top 20 worries for criminal facilitation in the next 15 years.

The study is published in the journal Crime Science, and ranks the 20 AI-enabled crimes based on the harm they could cause.

Aug 12, 2020

Bruce Dorminey

Posted by in category: futurism

Coming this week on Cosmic Controversy! I’m honored to welcome #Villanova University Professor Edward Guinan, an international expert on stellar astronomy and extrasolar planets, as my guest. We’ll be discussing the red supergiant star #Betelgeuse; our Sun over cosmic time; the mysterious star #Sirius; the North Star #Polaris; and, the potential for finding life around the Sun’s two nearest stellar neighbors. Stay tuned! brucedorminey.podbean.com

Aug 12, 2020

Scientists find vision relates to movement

Posted by in category: robotics/AI

To get a better look at the world around them, animals constantly are in motion. Primates and people use complex eye movements to focus their vision (as humans do when reading, for instance); birds, insects, and rodents do the same by moving their heads, and can even estimate distances that way. Yet how these movements play out in the elaborate circuitry of neurons that the brain uses to “see” is largely unknown. And it could be a potential problem area as scientists create artificial neural networks that mimic how vision works in self-driving cars.

To better understand the relationship between movement and vision, a team of Harvard researchers looked at what happens in one of the brain’s primary regions for analyzing imagery when animals are free to roam naturally. The results of the study, published Tuesday in the journal Neuron, suggest that image-processing circuits in the primary not only are more active when animals move, but that they receive signals from a movement-controlling region of the brain that is independent from the region that processes what the animal is looking at. In fact, the researchers describe two sets of movement-related patterns in the visual cortex that are based on head motion and whether an animal is in the light or the dark.

The movement-related findings were unexpected, since vision tends to be thought of as a feed-forward computation system in which enters through the retina and travels on neural circuits that operate on a one-way path, processing the information piece by piece. What the researchers saw here is more evidence that the visual system has many more feedback components where information can travel in opposite directions than had been thought.

Aug 12, 2020

Tesla Has Been Working On an RNA Bioreactor

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, chemistry

Tesla and CureVac have collaborated on a patent for an RNA bioreactor.

Although there are no human vaccines made with RNA, the technology could break through on COVID-19 (coronavirus).

The bioreactor works by combining chemical agents in an egg-shaped magnetic mixer.

Continue reading “Tesla Has Been Working On an RNA Bioreactor” »

Aug 12, 2020

Lower Education Levels May Decrease Survival in Multiple Myeloma

Posted by in category: biotech/medical

A study published in BMC Cancer analyzed the relationship between education level and survival in multiple myeloma and observed that patients with lower education levels may have lower survival rates.


A study observed that multiple myeloma patients with lower education levels may have lower survival rates compared to those with higher education levels.

Aug 12, 2020

Amazing footage of the Starship SN5 prototype making a 150-meter hop

Posted by in category: space travel

The footage of the tiny tiny landing legs deploying is particularly fantastic. Credit: SpaceX

Aug 12, 2020

World’s First Manned Racing Drone Does A Backflip

Posted by in category: drones

Click on photo to start video.

The world’s first manned racing drone just took its first flight… Now, this is pod racing! 🙌 🤯

Flite Test

Aug 12, 2020

This Beast of a Hydrogen-Powered Hypercar Has a 1,000 Mile Range

Posted by in category: futurism

Only 300 of these incredible things will be made. This is what’s inside them.

Aug 12, 2020

Indonesia’s Mount Sinabung volcano erupts twice in three days

Posted by in category: materials

MEDAN, Indonesia — Indonesia’s rumbling Mount Sinabung erupted Monday, sending a column of volcanic materials as high as 16,400 feet into the sky and depositing ash on villages.

It is the second eruption since Saturday after the volcano sat dormant for more than a year.

Falling grit and ash accumulated up to 2 inches in already abandoned villages on the volcano’s slopes, said Armen Putra, an official at the Sinabung monitoring post on Sumatra Island.

Aug 12, 2020

A cancer mystery more than 40 years old is solved thanks to epigenetics

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics

Before the first oncogene mutations were discovered in human cancer in the early 1980s, the 1970s provided the first data suggesting alterations in the genetic material of tumors. In this context, the prestigious journal Nature published in 1975 the existence of a specific alteration in the transformed cell: an RNA responsible for carrying an amino acid to build proteins (transfer RNA) was missing a piece, the enigmatic nucleotide ‘Y.’

After that outstanding observation, virtually no developments were made for forty-five years on the causes and consequences of not having the correct base in RNA.

In an article published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) by the group of Dr. Manel Esteller, Director of the Josep Carreras Leukaemia Research Institute, ICREA Research Professor and Professor of Genetics at the University of Barcelona has solved this mystery by observing that in the protein that generates the Y is epigenetically inactivated, causing small but highly aggressive tumors.