Latest posts
Nov 25, 2024
Robots on the road: Austin’s ever evolving autonomous vehicle network
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in categories: robotics/AI, transportation
At some point in the early 1900s, cars started showing up among all the horses in Austin. It must have been a strange time, fraught with concerns about how vehicles and horses would share the streets.
Somehow, we got through it — although, occasionally, you can still spot a horse downtown.
But a new dynamic is taking shape now. While autonomous vehicles are nothing new for Austin — they’ve been tested here for nearly a decade — many people are still being caught off guard when a car with no one in it cruises by.
Nov 25, 2024
Scammers exploit tiny typos to trick people into sending money to their crypto wallets
Posted by Omuterema Akhahenda in categories: blockchains, cryptocurrencies, cybercrime/malcode, economics
A team of cybersecurity researchers at Stony Brook University has uncovered a new way for scammers to steal from unsuspecting cryptocurrency users. They have posted a paper to the arXiv preprint server describing the new crypto scam and how users can protect themselves.
Cryptocurrency is a type of digital currency run on a secure online platform. One example is Coinbase. Crypto currency is stored in a crypto wallet. In this new study, the team in New York reports that scammers have found a way to get people to redirect crypto payments away from intended recipients and toward wallets held by the scammers.
The researchers call the scam typosquatting. It involves setting up Blockchain Naming Systems (BNS) domain names that are similar to those used by well-known entities. It exploits the use of simple word-based addresses rather than the complicated and hard-to-remember letter and digit codes commonly associated with crypto wallets.
Nov 24, 2024
AI and human writers share stylistic fingerprints: New work by researchers detects writing patterns of LLMs
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in categories: education, robotics/AI
People write with personal style and individual flourishes that set them apart from other writers. So does AI, including top programs like Chat GPT, new Johns Hopkins University-led research finds.
A new tool can not only detect writing created by AI, it can predict which large language model created it, findings that could help identify school cheaters and the language programs favored by people spreading online disinformation.
“We’re the first to show that AI-generated text shares the same features as human writing, and that this can be used to reliably detect it and attribute it to specific language models,” said author Nicholas Andrews, a senior research scientist at Johns Hopkins’ Human Language Technology Center of Excellence.
Nov 24, 2024
Why the [expletive] can’t we travel back in time?
Posted by Paul Battista in categories: cosmology, mathematics, physics, time travel
Observations of the cosmic microwave background, leftover light from when the Universe was only 380,000 years old, reveal that our cosmos is not rotating. Infinitely long cylinders don’t exist. The interiors of black holes throw up singularities, telling us that the math of GR is breaking down and can’t be trusted. And wormholes? They’re frighteningly unstable. A single photon passing down the throat of a wormhole will cause it to collapse faster than the speed of light. Attempts to stabilize wormholes require exotic matter (as in, matter with negative mass, which isn’t a thing), and so their existence is just as debatable as time travel itself.
This is the point where physicists get antsy. General relativity is telling us exactly where time travel into the past can be allowed. But every single example runs into other issues that have nothing to do with the math of GR. There is no consistency, no coherence among all these smackdowns. It’s just one random rule over here, and another random fact over there, none of them related to either GR or each other.
If the inability to time travel were a fundamental part of our Universe, you’d expect equally fundamental physics behind that rule. Yet every time we discover a CTC in general relativity, we find some reason it’s im possible (or at the very least, implausible), and the reason seems ad hoc. There isn’t anything tying together any of the “no time travel for you” explanations.
Nov 24, 2024
Agent Trust Trust Game Demo by camel-ai
Posted by Cecile G. Tamura in category: robotics/AI
❓How does AgentTrust align with HumanTrust?
Project page: https://agent-trust.camel-ai.org paper : https://arxiv.org/abs/2402.04559 Slides: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1J2ilsM HF 🤗
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Nov 24, 2024
Insanely bright light bursts from a black hole pair shock scientists
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in category: cosmology
Scientists detect two giant black holes flashing light a billion light-years away.
Astronomers have identified two giant black holes causing strange flashes of light at about one billion light years away from Earth. The flashes or light bursts are occurring at regular intervals, but what’s causing them is even more surprising.
The researchers suggest that the black hole pair is swirling within a vast cloud of gas, and their interaction with the gas cloud is actually sparking the unusual flashes —- marking it as the first observation of its kind.
Nov 24, 2024
Engineered living materials: Scientists 3D print with bio-ink
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in categories: 3D printing, materials
Scientists 3D-print EPLM using bioink and living cells.
Using a 3D printer and a bioink, scientists create an “engineered plant living material” (EPLM) that harnesses the power of cells.
Nov 24, 2024
Fusion power is getting closer—no, really
Posted by Shubham Ghosh Roy in category: nuclear energy
Two developments in 2025 will mark a decisive shift in the decades-old quest to generate cheap and abundant energy from nuclear fusion.
Nov 24, 2024
Did Scientists Revive an Extinct Animal or Just Breed a Less Stripey Zebra?
Posted by Arthur Brown in category: futurism
A near four-decade quest to bring the quagga back is being heralded as a success, but not everyone is impressed.