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News Image Amazon Scraps Its God Of War Series

Plus, your first look at Herbie in Fantastic Four: First Steps.

Entertainment Read on Gizmodo
News Image You Can Now See the Code That Helped End Apartheid

John Graham-Cumming, who happens to be Cloudflare's CTO, cracked a 30-year-old encrypted file that had a role in rewriting South Africa’s history.

Politics Read on WIRED Business
News Image Dems Launch Taylor Swift Snapchat Filter to Target Young Voters for Kamala Harris

The campaign pushes users to IWillVote.com to make sure they're registered.

Entertainment Read on Gizmodo
News Image The future of the Kindle with Panos Panay

Amazon launched four new Kindles this week, maybe the biggest single launch day in the 17-year history of the company’s wildly successful e-reader. One of them even comes in color! It is very much not a coincidence that the launch happened roughly a year after Panos Panay joined the company. Panay, a longtime Microsoft executive who was for years in charge of all things Windows and Surface, is now leading the devices and services team at Amazon. His big task is Alexa and turning Amazon’s assistant into the AI platform of the future. That’s apparently coming soon. Maybe. But first: e-readers. On this episode of The Vergecast, Panay joins the show to talk about how he decided to join Amazon, why people love their Kindles so much, the S...

Business Read on The Verge Tech
News Image How to Remove and Replace Your AirTag’s Battery

Is your Apple AirTag running low on power? Here’s how to replace that battery and get back to tracking.

Politics Read on WIRED Top Stories
News Image Sick of AI hype? I have some bad news.

In Wednesday’s Future Perfect newsletter, my colleague Dylan Matthews wrote about the case for skepticism about this year’s Nobel Prize in Economics winners. His argument was that while their theories are interesting, there’s plenty of reason to doubt just how correct those theories are. For several other Nobels this year, however, my skepticism runs in the opposite direction. The Physics Nobel was awarded this year to John J. Hopfield and Geoffrey E. Hinton “for foundational discoveries and inventions that enable machine learning with artificial neural networks.”  Sign up here to explore the big, complicated problems the world faces and the most efficient ways to solve them. Sent twice a week. The award unquestionably reflects serious, impressive, world-changing work on their research topics, almost certainly some of the most impactful work out there. The hotly debated question is, well, whether this Nobel Prize in Physics should actually count as physics.  Together, Hopfield and Hinton did much of the foundational work on neural networks, which store new information by changing the weights between neurons. The Nobel committee argues that Hopfield and Hinton’s background in physics provided inspiration for their foundational AI work, and that they reasoned by analogies to molecule interactions and statistical mechanics when developing the early neural networks. Some people aren’t buying it. “Initially, I was happy to see them recognised with such a prestigious award, but once I read further and saw it was for Physics, I was a bit confused,” Andrew Lensen, an artificial intelligence researcher, told Cosmos magazine. “I think it is more accurate to say their methods may have been inspired by physics research.”  “I’m speechless. I like ML [machine learning] and ANN [artificial neural networks] as much as the next person, but hard to see that this is a Physics discovery,” tweeted physicist Jonathan Pritchard. “Guess the Nobel got hit by AI hype.” The resentment over AI stealing the spotlight only intensified when the Chemistry Nobel was announced. It went in part to Google DeepMind founder Demis Hassabis and his colleague John Jumper for AlphaFold 2, a machine-learning protein-structure predictor.  One of the hardest problems in biology is anticipating the many molecular interactions that influence how a protein printed from a given string of amino acids will fold up. Understanding protein structure better will dramatically speed drug development and foundational research.  AlphaFold, which can cut the time needed to understand protein structure by orders of magnitude, is a huge achievement and very encouraging about the eventual ability of AI models to make major contributions in this field. It’s surely Nobel-worthy — if there were a Nobel in biology. (There isn’t, so Chemistry had to do.) The Chemistry Nobel strikes me as much less of a stretch than the Physics one; inasmuch as it inspired resentful grumbling, I suspect that’s primarily because along with the Physics award, it was starting to look like a trend. “Computer science seemed to be completing its Nobel takeover,” Nature wrote after the Chemistry award was announced. The Nobels were betting on AI, declaring on one of the world’s most prestigious stages that the accomplishments of AI researchers with machine learning constituted serious, respectable, and world-class contributions to the fields that had loosely inspired them. In a world where AI is both an increasingly big deal and where a lot of people find it overhyped and extremely annoying, that’s a fraught statement.  Is AI overhyped? Yes, absolutely. There is a constant barrage of obnoxious, overstated claims about what AI can do. There are people raising absurd sums of money by tacking “AI” on to business models that don’t have much to do with AI at all. Enthusiasm for “AI-based” solutions often exceeds any understanding of how they actually work. But all of that can — and, indeed, does — coexist with AI being genuinely a very big deal. The protein-folding achievements of AlphaFold happened in the context of preexisting contests on better protein-folding prediction, because it was well understood that solving that problem really mattered. Whether or not you have any enthusiasm for chatbots and generative art, the same techniques have brought the world cheap, fast, and effective transcription and translation — making all kinds of research and communication tasks much easier.  And we’re still in the very early days of using the machine learning systems that Hinton and Hopfield first laid out the framework for. I do think some people who position themselves as “against the AI hype” are effectively leaning against the wall of an early 20th-century factory saying, “Have you gotten electricity to solve all your problems yet? No? Hmmm, guess it wasn’t such a big deal.”  It was hard in the early 20th century to anticipate where electricity would take us, but it was in fact quite easy to see that the ability to hand off major chunks of human labor to machines would matter a lot.  Similarly, it is not hard to see that AI is going to matter. So while it’s true that there is an obnoxious and enthusiastic gaggle of clueless investors and dishonest fundraisers eager to tag everything with AI, and while it’s true that companies often systematically overstate how cool their latest models are, it’s not “hype” to see AI as an enormously big deal and one of the leading scientific and intellectual contributions of our day. It’s just accurate.   The Nobel Prize committee may or may not have been trying to ride the hype train — they’re just regular people with the same range of motivations as anyone else — but the work they identified really does matter, and we all live in a world that has been enriched by it.

Politics Read on Vox
More foreign victims of sexual exploitation in Netherlands: Rapporteur

The number of foreign people who fall victim to sexual exploitation in the Netherlands increased in 2023, the National Rapporteur on Human Trafficking reports based on reports.

Crime and Courts Read on NL Times
News Image Freedom of expression also under fire in Gaza war, rights expert says

No conflict in recent times has threatened freedom of expression so far beyond its borders as the war in Gaza, an expert appointed by the UN Human Rights Council said on Friday in New York. 

Politics Read on UN News
News Image Gaza at a ‘critical juncture’ as top UN officials call for a ceasefire now

The UN Secretary-General has said the death of Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar should lead to a swift end to the year-long war in Gaza, the release of all hostages and unimpeded delivery of aid, his Deputy Spokesperson told reporters on Friday.

Crime and Courts Read on UN News
News Image Mystery still surrounds death of revered UN chief Hammarskjöld, 63 years after tragic plane crash

One of the most enduring mysteries in United Nations history – the 1961 plane crash that killed Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjöld and all on board as he sought to broker peace in the Congo – will linger on, with a new assessment announced on Friday suggesting that “specific and crucial” information continues to be withheld by a handful of Member States.

Crime and Courts Read on UN News
News Image Palestine: International law obliges Israel to end occupation, says rights panel

All States and international organizations, including the United Nations, have obligations under international law to bring to an end Israel’s unlawful presence in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, according to a new legal position paper released Friday by a top independent human rights panel.

Crime and Courts Read on UN News
News Image UN Security Council extends sanctions, arms embargo on Haiti

The UN Security Council on Friday renewed for one year the sanctions regime on Haiti – including a targeted assets freeze, travel ban and arms embargo measures – aimed at curbing the illicit flow of weapons to criminal gangs which have sown chaos across the Caribbean island nation.

Crime and Courts Read on UN News
News Image World News in Brief: UNAMA concern over migrant deaths, ‘war tactics’ in the West Bank, UN political chief underscores support for Somalia

The UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) expressed its deep concern over disturbing reports that Iranian border police opened fire on a group of Afghan migrants, resulting in deaths and injuries. 

Crime and Courts Read on UN News
News Image First Person: Football dream alive in Gaza despite ‘constant fire’

A young Gazan footballer who says he feels like he is “dying every day,” is trying to keep his dream alive of one day playing the game professionally, despite living “under constant fire.’

Local News Read on UN News
News Image Lebanon: Peacekeepers pledge to stay, doing ‘whatever they can to help’

Despite ongoing heavy shelling every day across the UN-patrolled Blue Line separating southern Lebanon and Israel, the UN peacekeeping force that's stationed there reiterated its determination on Friday to fulfil its mandate from the Security Council and assist civilians wherever possible.

Environment Read on UN News