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List of All Articles with Tag 'h'

Warzone 2 Ranked Bans Cluster Mines and Bomb Drones
Warzone 2 Ranked Bans Cluster Mines and Bomb Drones
In response to player feedback, Treyarch Studios has banned Cluster Mines and Bomb Drones in Warzone 2 Ranked Play to make the mode more competitive.
2023-05-20 01:23
Scientists find that AI can read thoughts from monitoring your brain activity
Scientists find that AI can read thoughts from monitoring your brain activity
Scientists have revealed they had found a way to combine the technology of brain scans and artificial intelligence to transcribe “the gist” of people’s thoughts. Alex Huth, an assistant professor of neuroscience and computing science at the University of Texas at Austin, and a co-author on the new study published in Nature Neuroscience, said that ‘this is a real leap forward.’ The study was led by Huth and Jerry Tang, a doctoral student in computer science. The main development from this study is that it’s non-invasive. This means that subjects do not require surgical implants. Instead, brain activity is measured using a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) scanner. Sign up to our free Indy100 weekly newsletter In the study, individuals listened to hours of podcasts in the scanner. Then, given the participant’s consent to have their thoughts decoded, they listened to a new story and the machine-generated corresponding texts from brain activity. It’s not a word-for-word transcript. For example, when an individual heard the phrase ‘I don’t have my driver’s licence yet’, the model decoded the individual’s thoughts to read as ‘she has not even started to learn to drive yet.’ Even when participants thought up their own stories, the machine was able to decode their thoughts still. Tang acknowledged that the advancements made in the study had the potential for negative aftermath. Tang said, ‘we take very seriously the concerns that it could be used for bad purposes and have worked to avoid that.’ They ran tests that highlighted that unless the machine had been trained on an individual’s particular brain activity, it could not decode its thoughts. An individual had to allow for the machine to train their brain activity over a long period of time inside a fMRI scanner for it to work. Researchers also found that it was easy to ‘sabotage’ the machine. Three participants were told to tell a different story in their mind, or count by seven, while listening to one of the podcasts. The study highlights even more development with artificial intelligence, after the popularity of OpenAI’s Chat GPT has sparked debate around the potential of AI. Have your say in our news democracy. Click the upvote icon at the top of the page to help raise this article through the indy100 rankings.
2023-05-20 00:30
Myanmar media guide
Myanmar media guide
An overview of the media in Myanmar, including links to broadcasters and newspapers.
2023-05-19 23:48
WhatsApp faces first fine in Russia for failure to delete 'banned' content
WhatsApp faces first fine in Russia for failure to delete 'banned' content
MOSCOW Messenger service WhatsApp faces a maximum fine of 4 million roubles (51,500) after Russia accused it of
2023-05-19 23:26
EU regulators' group sides with Big Tech against telcos' network fee push
EU regulators' group sides with Big Tech against telcos' network fee push
By Foo Yun Chee BRUSSELS (Reuters) -The EU telecoms regulators' group BEREC on Friday criticised a push by telecoms providers
2023-05-19 23:24
Crypto Miners Pivoting to AI Cloud Services May Face an Uphill Battle
Crypto Miners Pivoting to AI Cloud Services May Face an Uphill Battle
Crypto miners looking to provide services for upstarts in artificial intelligence may be looking at an uphill battle,
2023-05-19 23:20
Sean Penn, backing WGA strike, says AI dispute is 'a human obscenity' at Cannes Film Festival
Sean Penn, backing WGA strike, says AI dispute is 'a human obscenity' at Cannes Film Festival
Sean Penn has strongly backed the current Hollywood screenwriters strike while speaking at the Cannes Film Festival on Friday, saying the dispute over artificial intelligence is “a human obscenity.”
2023-05-19 23:15
China Tech Megacaps in a Funk Despite Upbeat Sales: Tech Watch
China Tech Megacaps in a Funk Despite Upbeat Sales: Tech Watch
Slowdown fears are weighing on Chinese tech stocks and even upbeat sales figures from the industry’s bellwethers can’t
2023-05-19 22:29
Twitter accuses Microsoft of refusing to pay for tweets and abusing its data access
Twitter accuses Microsoft of refusing to pay for tweets and abusing its data access
Twitter is accusing Microsoft of abusing its data access privileges to its platform, in the latest sign of the social network's owner Elon Musk igniting a feud between the two tech companies.
2023-05-19 21:49
Garden Soil vs. Potting Soil: What's the Difference?
Garden Soil vs. Potting Soil: What's the Difference?
The differences between garden soil and potting soil shouldn’t be ignored.
2023-05-19 21:26
Exclusive-India's govt plans action against Google after antitrust breaches
Exclusive-India's govt plans action against Google after antitrust breaches
By Aditya Kalra and Munsif Vengattil NEW DELHI India's government plans to take action against Alphabet Inc's Google
2023-05-19 21:22
Scientists discover that humans mastered fire centuries before history suggests
Scientists discover that humans mastered fire centuries before history suggests
Humans in Europe may have mastered fire long before we previously thought. According to a study published in Scientific Reports, humans made the discovery around 245,000 years ago, up to 50,000 years earlier than scientist thought previously. Researchers studied samples from the Valdocarros II, a huge archaeological site found east of Madrid, Spain. Using chemical analysis, they found certain compounds that show things were burnt by fire in "organised" social events, rather than through accidents or wildfires. "We have found definitive evidence of things being burnt and those remains are organised into a pattern, suggesting it's humans who are making and controlling the fire. Either they were using the fire to cook or to defend themselves. Sign up to our free Indy100 weekly newsletter The spatial patterning in the fire tells us that they were encircling something, like a home or sleeping area, a living room or kitchen, or an enclosure for animals," Dr. Clayton Magill, study author and Assistant Professor at Heriot-Watt University in Scotland, said in a statement. Dr Magill added that this new work helps to fill in the gaps in our understanding of human-controlled fire and human development. "This is important because our species is defined by our use of fire," Dr Magill explained. "Being able to cook food to feed our big brains is one of the things that made us so successful in an evolutionary sense. Fire also brings protection and fosters communication and family connection. And we now have definitive, incontrovertible evidence that humans were starting and stopping fires in Europe about 50,000 years earlier than we suspected." Have your say in our news democracy. Click the upvote icon at the top of the page to help raise this article through the indy100 rankings.
2023-05-19 20:57
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