Menu

Blog

Page 7453

Aug 5, 2020

Deepfakes are the most worrying AI crime, researchers warn

Posted by in categories: information science, robotics/AI, terrorism

Deepfakes are the most concerning use of AI for crime and terrorism, according to a new report from University College London.

The research team first identified 20 different ways AI could be used by criminals over the next 15 years. They then asked 31 AI experts to rank them by risk, based on their potential for harm, the money they could make, their ease of use, and how hard they are to stop.

Deepfakes — AI-generated videos of real people doing and saying fictional things — earned the top spot for two major reasons. Firstly, they’re hard to identify and prevent. Automated detection methods remain unreliable and deepfakes also getting better at fooling human eyes. A recent Facebook competition to detect them with algorithms led researchers to admit it’s “very much an unsolved problem.”

Aug 5, 2020

The mathematician who helped to reshape physics

Posted by in categories: mathematics, physics

Barry Simon linked a phenomenon that had shocked physicists to topology, the branch of mathematics that studies shapes.

Aug 5, 2020

Researchers discover treatment option for rare genetic disorder

Posted by in categories: biotech/medical, genetics, health

Researchers from the Icahn School of Medicine used a novel genetic sequencing technology to identify the genetic cause of—and a treatment for—a previously unknown severe auto inflammatory syndrome affecting an 18-year-old girl since infancy.

The technology, tailored to the patient’s own genetic code at a single cell level, helped the researchers characterize an unknown mutation in a gene called JAK1 that caused the patient’s immune system to be permanently turned on, resulting in rashes over much of her skin, growth abnormalities, kidney failure, allergic hypersensitivities, and an unusual inflammatory condition throughout the digestive tract.

The study, led by Dusan Bogunovic, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Microbiology, and Pediatrics, at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, faculty member of The Mindich Child Health and Development Institute and the Precision Immunology Institute at Mount Sinai, and Director of the Center for Inborn Errors of Immunity, was published in the August 3 issue of the journal Immunity. The discovery points toward new ways to study how genetic diseases manifest and presents a model of personalized diagnosis and treatment for patients with genetic diseases.

Aug 5, 2020

Professor’s milestone in nuclear physics seeks to understand the universe itself

Posted by in categories: physics, space

A nuclear physics professor from Florida International University was among a team of researchers that proposed something so out of this world, colleagues first hesitated to accept it was possible.

In 1993, they boldly predicted how the densest materials in the universe—known to exist only in rare neutron —could be made here on Earth. Ultimately, their research was published in Physical Review C, a leading focused on nuclear .

It spawned a wave of follow up research that in 2006 confirmed their prediction was true. For the tiniest sliver of a second, researchers at the Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility in Virginia were able to briefly create the material that exists inside a neutron star.

Aug 5, 2020

Immortalism vs Deathism: Should we Live Forever?

Posted by in category: life extension

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gwylNmYrjoo&feature=share

And older vid but it addresses various anti-life extension topics.


PATREON https://www.patreon.com/transhumania

Continue reading “Immortalism vs Deathism: Should we Live Forever?” »

Aug 5, 2020

Four companies will square off to win money to build Skyborg drone prototypes

Posted by in categories: drones, economics, military

Not all the companies that won Skyborg contracts are assured to score orders to build prototypes.

Aug 5, 2020

Department of Energy unveils blueprint for quantum internet in event at University of Chicago

Posted by in categories: internet, law, quantum physics

Nationwide effort to build quantum networks and usher in new era of communications.

In a news conference today at the University of Chicago, the U.S. Department of Energy unveiled a report that lays out a blueprint strategy for the development of a national quantum internet, bringing the United States to the forefront of the global quantum race and ushering in a new era of communications. This report provides a pathway to ensure the development of the National Quantum Initiative Act, which was signed into law by President Trump in December 2018.

Continue reading “Department of Energy unveils blueprint for quantum internet in event at University of Chicago” »

Aug 5, 2020

Liquid Air Energy Storage: A Power Grid Battery Using Regular Old Ambient Air

Posted by in categories: energy, sustainability

When you think of renewable energy, what comes to mind? We’d venture to guess that wind and solar are probably near the top of the list. And yes, wind and solar are great as long as the winds are favorable and the sun is shining. But what about all those short and bleak winter days? Rainy days? Night time?

Unfavorable conditions mean that storage is an important part of any viable solution that uses renewable energy. Either the energy itself has to be stored, or else the means to produce the energy on demand must be stored.

One possible answer has been right under our noses all along — air. Regular old ambient air can be cooled and compressed into a liquid, stored in tanks, and then reheated to its gaseous state to do work.

Aug 5, 2020

Propelling Exploration: Drones Are Going Interplanetary

Posted by in categories: drones, space

face_with_colon_three circa 2019.


Drones have already conquered Earth, and now they’re heading out into the solar system.

NASA announced yesterday (June 27) that it will launch a life-hunting rotorcraft called Dragonfly toward Saturn’s huge moon Titan in 2026. If all goes according to plan, Dragonfly will land on the hazy, frigid satellite in 2034 and then spend several years flying around, gathering a variety of data and snapping amazing photos of the exotic landscape.

Aug 5, 2020

How Bits of Quantum Gravity Can Buzz

Posted by in categories: particle physics, quantum physics

Anti gravity can be made from gravitons.


New calculations show how hypothetical particles called gravitons would give rise to a special kind of noise.