RISKS-LIST: Risks-Forum Digest Tuesday 1 April 2025 Volume 34 : Issue 60
ACM FORUM ON RISKS TO THE PUBLIC IN COMPUTERS AND RELATED SYSTEMS (comp.risks) Peter G. Neumann, founder and still moderator
***** See last item for further information, disclaimers, caveats, etc. ***** This issue is archived at <
http://www.risks.org> as
<
http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks/34.60>
The current issue can also be found at
<
http://www.csl.sri.com/users/risko/risks.txt>
Contents: [No April Foolishness here, but lots of Foolishness.]
*Security for ordinary folks*: Lessons from Signalgate 1 - Rules
(Rob Slade)
Even More Venmo Accounts Tied to Trump Officials in Signal Group Chat Left
Data Public (WiReD)
NSA warned of vulnerabilities in Signal app month before Houthi strike chat
(CBS News)
Bitcoin in the bush -- the crypto mine in remote Zambia (BBC News)
The Town That Went Crazy for Crypto
Trump and Xi Need a Shared Trust on AI Now (Thomas Friedman)
The Future of AI??? (2 reports via PGN)
How AI Is Changing the Way the World Builds Computers (The NY Times)
AI voice clones pose an 'existential crisis' for actors (LA Times)
AI could take your next drive-through order (LA Times)
How Google threw out safeguards in desperate push for AI at any cost (WiRed) 'Brainrot' AI on Instagram Is Monetizing the Most F*cked Up Things' You Can
Imagine -- and Lots You Can't (404Media)
The most evil AI on film (YouTube)
"Please sir, may I have some more?'' Florida wants to change laws
(CNN via Lauren Weinstein))
Utah Passes Child Safety Law Requiring Apple to Verify User Age
iThe Signal Chat -- Annotated (Lauren Weinstein)
Forks or No: How "AI" messed up survey questions
Cloakd Ransomware Hits Virginia Attorney General's Office, Disrupts
IT Systems (Hackread)
United Airlines flight to China diverted to San Francisco after
pilot forgets passport (NBC News)
Donald Trump's Government cuts funding for NZ scientists' trip to U.S.
(NZ Herald via Jim Geissman)
They Were Deactivated From Delivering. Their Finances Were Devastated.
(NYTimes)
New uses for old data (Jim Geissman)
Attorney General Bonta Urgently Issues Consumer Alert for 23andMe Customers
Customers (State of California - Department of Justice - Office of the
Attorney General, via Dave Farber)
23andMe Customers Scramble to Delete Data, Seek Assurances After Bankruptcy
(WSJ)
Re: Airport Theory Will Make You Miss Your Flight (John Levine)
Re: Not Unprecedented -- Heathrow Comes to a Standstill (David E, Ross)
After Heathrow Debacle: Who Pays for a Ruined Vacation? (Monty Solomon)
How AI Is Changing the Way the World Builds Computers (Monty Solomon)
Re: When Your Last Name Is Null, Nothing Works (Amos Shapir)
Abridged info on RISKS (comp.risks)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Thu, 27 Mar 2025 08:50:45 -0700
From: "Rob Slade, greatgrandpa and widower" <
rslade@gmail.com>
Subject: *Security for ordinary folks*: Lessons from Signalgate 1 - Rules
A couple of days after this all broke I was due to do another "security for seniors" session. We were *going* to start frauds and scams. But with this all over the news, and everybody talking about it (mostly incomplete, and
often misinformed), and with some many basic security lessons to be learned from it, I figured I should take advantage of the opportunity. So I covered the scandal, pointing out, along the way, that even though this news story
was about national and even international security, it still had lots of lessons that *everybody* could benefit from.
So, day by day, herewith some security lessons, applicable to seniors, homemakers, owners of your own business, students of security, security professionals, and all the way down to vice presidents of superpowers.
"Security for ordinary folks": Lessons from Signalgate 1 - Rules
https://fibrecookery.blogspot.com/2025/03/security-for-ordinary-folks-lessons.html
Lesson one: this is why we have information classification rules.
Okay, maybe I have to back up a bit here. A lot of ordinary folks will
think information classification, itself, only applies to governments, the military, and big corporations.
First of all, this whole story, and scandal, couldn't have happened to a
nicer guy. I mean that, quite literally. Nicer people are people who tend
to follow the rules. The MAGA camp is led by someone who not only doesn't think that the rules apply to him, he doesn't think that there *are* any
rules at all. He thinks that rules, and policies, and laws, are for
suckers. People who follow the rules are weak, and are at a disadvantage
when dealing with him. He doesn't like rules, and laws, and doesn't think
that there are any norms or standards of behavior. He likes chaos. He
likes chaos because it means that he can do pretty much anything;
Next: *Security for ordinary folks": Lessons from Signalgate 2 -
Cellphones and SCIFs*
------------------------------
Date: Fri, 28 Mar 2025 09:33:12 -0700
From: Lauren Weinstein <
lauren@vortex.com>
Subject: Even More Venmo Accounts Tied to Trump Officials in Signal Group
Chat Left Data Public (WiReD)
https://www.wired.com/story/even-more-venmo-accounts-tied-to-trump-officials-in-signal-group-chat-left-data-public/
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 26 Mar 2025 19:42:17 -0700
From: Lauren Weinstein <
lauren@vortex.com>
Subject: NSA warned of vulnerabilities in Signal app month before Houthi
(CBS News)
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/nsa-signal-app-vulnerabilities-before-houthi-strike-chat/
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 25 Mar 2025 11:18:43 -0700
From: "Jim" <
jgeissman@socal.rr.com>
Subject: Bitcoin in the bush -- the crypto mine in remote Zambia (BBC News)
We're in the far north-western tip of Zambia near the border with the DRC,
and of all the bitcoin mines I've visited - this one is the strangest.
They Were Deactivated From Delivering. Their Finances Were Devastated.
Water and electronic equipment don't usually mix well but it's precisely
the proximity to the river that's drawn bitcoiners here.
Philip's mine is plugged directly into a hydro-electric power plant that channels some of the Zambezi's torrent through enormous turbines to generate continuous, clean electricity.
More importantly for bitcoin mining -- it's cheap.
So cheap it made business sense for Philip's Kenya-based company Gridless to drag its shipping container full of delicate bitcoin mining computers across bumpy narrow roads 14 hours from the nearest major city to set up here.
Each machine makes about $5 (=A33.90) a day. More if the price of coins is high, less if to drops.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cly4xe373p4
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cly4xe373p4o
------------------------------
Date: Fri, 28 Mar 2025 21:55:31 -0600
From: Matthew Kruk <
mkrukg@gmail.com>
Subject: The Town That Went Crazy for Crypto (NY Times)
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/28/business/rainbowex-crypto-ponzi-scheme.html
Every weeknight at about 9 p.m., they said, La China turned up on the
Telegram channel of a crypto-currency exchange called RainbowEx. There, she texted instructions to buy some type of crypto -- invariably an obscure and thinly traded one, known in the industry as a memecoin -- at a particular price. The same message said to sell the coin when it reached a certain,
higher price, which it always did soon after.
It was as steady as a clock. Everyone on RainbowEx bought the coin, the
value of the coin rose, everyone sold. Up ticked the balance in their
RainbowEx accounts.
Nobody knew who La China was, where she was or whether she even existed.
She was just a photograph of a young Asian woman on RainbowEx's Telegram channel. The guy with the new blazer took out his phone and showed Mr.
Flaiman photos of La China-enabled purchases by locals. A car, a motorbike,
a television. Some people were renovating their homes.
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 26 Mar 2025 9:38:56 PDT
From: Peter Neumann <
neumann@csl.sri.com>
Subject: Trump and Xi Need a Shared Trust on AI Now (Thomas Friedman)
Thomas Friedman, *The New York Times*, Opinion, 26 Mar 2025
Two Superpowers risk a devatating competition. Cue the humanoid robots.
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 24 Mar 2025 15:25:46 PDT
From: Peter Neumann <
neumann@csl.sri.com>
Subject: The Future of AI???
Two reports should be of particular interest here.
Adversarial Machine Learning:
A Taxonomy and Terminology of Attacks and Mitigations
Apostol Vassilev, Alina Oprea, Alie Fordyce, Hyrum Anderson, Xander
Davies, Maia Hamin
A NIST Report, March 2025
https://nvlpubs.nist.gov/nistpubs/ai/NIST.AI.100-2e2025.pdf
This NIST Trustworthy and Responsible AI report provides a taxonomy of
concepts and defines terminology in the field of adversarial machine
learning (AML). The taxonomy is arranged in a conceptual hierarchy that includes key types of ML methods, life cycle stages of attack, and attacker goals, objectives, capabilities, and knowledge. This report also identifies current challenges in the life cycle of AI systems and describes
corresponding methods for mitigating and managing the consequences of those attacks. The terminology used in this report is consistent with the
literature on AML and is complemented by a glossary of key terms associated with the security of AI systems. Taken together, the taxonomy and
terminology are meant to inform other standards and future practice guides
for assessing and managing the security of AI systems by establishing a
common language for the rapidly developing AML landscape.
[While the key findings are in line with recent industry trends, some
show clear room for improvement: a whopping 43% of responders also have
no formal IT or security training in place. Download the report now to
learn more from your peers on how they’re benchmarking and measuring
cybersecurity operations. The Report Authors]
See also;
Frameworks, Tools, and Techniques: The Journey to Operational Security Effectiveness and Maturity, David Shackleford, SANS Survey, December 2023
* Over 48% of responding orgs have a hybrid SOC approach, and only 10% fully
outsource their SOC.
* 69% of respondents use a cybersecurity framework to define, measure, and
assess SOC performance.
* 74% of orgs rely on the NIST CSF as their framework of choice.
* Measuring security incidents, vulnerability assessments, and intrusion
attempts were the most popular security performance metrics.
* 61% of respondents regularly conduct cyber-readiness exercises.
* 43% of orgs do not have a formal cybersecurity training program for IT and
security professional
[As we have noted here in RISKS, the greatest challenge to the
long-term future of AI is likely to be the fundamental need for
evindence-based assurance, and finding ways to achieve it pervasively
-- especially relating to uses of AI embedded in life-critical systems
with extensive requirements for trustworthiness (including human
safety, securiity, privacy, reliability, fault-tolerance, real-time
guaranteed performance, survivability and recovery, ease of use, and
lots more, based on suitably trustworthy hardware, software, and
networks). Thus, even the two reports combined are not enough
to achieve this kind of dependability. PGN]
------------------------------
From: Monty Solomon <
monty@roscom.com>
Date: Sat, 29 Mar 2025 09:25:47 -0400
Subject: How AI Is Changing the Way the World Builds Computers (The NY Times)
Tech companies are revamping computing -— from how tiny chips are built to the way they are arranged, cooled and powered —- in the race to build artificial intelligence that recreates the human brain.
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2025/03/16/technology/ai-data-centers.html
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 24 Mar 2025 09:19:02 -0700
From: Steve Bacher <
sebmb1@verizon.net>
Subject: AI voice clones pose an 'existential crisis' for actors (LA Times)
Nearly a dozen voice actors interviewed by The LA Times said voice
replication technology is reducing paid job opportunities and stripping them
of their agency. Many found their voices cloned without their consent, knowledge or compensation.
Nick Meyer said $100,000 would have changed his life.
The 26-year-old actor said it would have “taken a lot of weight” off his shoulders and provided relief for his family. Although he’s been acting professionally for a decade, Meyer said he makes less than $10,000 a year
from acting and supplements his income with food service and retail jobs. So why would he turn down a voice-acting gig offering roughly 10 times his
annual acting salary for only 20 hours of work?
Because the job entailed recording his voice to train artificial intelligence-powered voice replication models. “I am not going to sacrifice my morality for a paycheck, no matter how big,” Meyer said.
The LA-based performer is one of many voice actors reckoning with AI’s industry disruptions. Voice cloning has become much easier, requiring just seconds of audio. This poses a host of challenges for actors who have found their voices replicated online without their consent, knowledge or compensation, reducing paid job opportunities and stripping them of their agency. [...]
https://www.latimes.com/entertainment-arts/story/2025-03-24/ai-voice-clones-replication-voice-actors-job-loss-siri-tiktok
------------------------------
Date: Sun, 23 Mar 2025 06:52:07 -0700
From: Steve Bacher <
sebmb1@verizon.net>
Subject: AI could take your next drive-through order (LA Times)
Restaurants are experimenting with AI voices to help take orders at drive-throughs and call centers.
Fast food customers might find themselves talking to an artificial
intelligence voice the next time they order tacos or pizza at a
drive-through.
Yum Brands Inc., the parent company of Taco Bell and other popular fast food chains such as Pizza Hut, KFC and Habit Burger & Grill, has teamed up with
tech juggernaut Nvidia to advance the development of AI in the restaurant industry. [...]
https://www.latimes.com/business/story/2025-03-21/ai-could-take-your-next-drive-thru-order-taco-bell-parent-yum-brands-and-nvidias-partnership-explained
------------------------------
Date: Sun, 23 Mar 2025 08:53:53 -0700
From: Lauren Weinstein <
lauren@vortex.com>
Subject: How Google threw out safeguards in desperate push for AI
The way this happens is a perfect example of what is called "groupthink" --
and this is one of the most dangerous situations possible with technology, especially with AI. These are mainly good people -- I know several of them
personally -- but they've been seduced by groupthink into a nightmare
scenario for the world at large. -L
https://www.wired.com/story/google-openai-gemini-chatgpt-artificial-intelligence/
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 25 Mar 2025 10:15:09 -0700
From: Lauren Weinstein <
lauren@vortex.com>
Subject: 'Brainrot' AI on Instagram Is Monetizing the Most F*cked Up Things `You Can Imagine -- and Lots You Can't (404Media)
https://www.404media.co/brainrot-ai-on-instagram-is-monetizing-the-most-fucked-up-things-you-can-imagine-and-lots-you-cant/?ref=daily-stories-newsletter
------------------------------
Date: Sun, 23 Mar 2025 11:19:48 -0700
From: Lauren Weinstein <
lauren@vortex.com>
Subject: The most evil AI on film (YouTube)
This scene comes after it had already attempted to use Robby the Robot to torture a young boy, "beginning with his eyes."
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OufJh-aTQu4
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 25 Mar 2025 10:58:58 -0700
From: Lauren Weinstein <
lauren@vortex.com>
Subject: "Please sir, may I have some more?'' Florida wants to change laws
Workhouses next. -L
https://www.cnn.com/2025/03/25/business/florida-child-labor-laws
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Date: Fri, 28 Mar 2025 18:36:02 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <
monty@roscom.com>
Subject: Utah Passes Child Safety Law Requiring Apple to Verify User Age
(Mac Rumnors)
https://www.macrumors.com/2025/03/26/utah-app-store-age-verification-law/
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 26 Mar 2025 11:37:09 -0700
From: Lauren Weinstein <
lauren@vortex.com>
Subject: The Signal Chat -- Annotated
[One of the most egregious security failures in history.]
~<Let me be clear about this. The White House claimed these weren't war plans and nothing there was classified information. LIES!!! These are obviously
war plans and obviously would have been highly classified. -L
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2025/03/25/us/signal-group-chat-text-annotations.html
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 27 Mar 2025 17:52:51 -0700
From: Geoff Kuenning <
geoff@cs.hmc.edu>
Subject: Forks or No: How "AI" messed up survey questions
A number of online surveys presented users with questions that offered two options for answers: Forks or No. For example: "Are you a U.S. citizen? Forks/No".
The underlying cause was deep: a popup with survey instructions somehow
caused some browsers, including Google Chrome, to detect that the page's language was Spanish even though it was written in English. Some browsers
then offered to translate, but others (including Chrome) decided to do that
for you without asking. And here's a fun fact: if you go to Google
Translate and explicitly select Spanish as the source language, sure enough
it translates "yes" as "forks".
"Artificial Intelligence" is certainly artificial but also most definitely
not intelligence.
More information, although not complete details can be found here:
https://www.pewresearch.org/decoded/2025/03/21/how-a-glitch-in-an-online-survey-replaced-the-word-yes-with-forks/
[Even in Spanish, an elephant never fork-gets. Yes! PGN]
------------------------------
Date: Fri, 28 Mar 2025 14:00:56 -0400
From: Gabe Goldberg <
gabe@gabegold.com>
Subject: Cloakd Ransomware Hits Virginia Attorney General's Office, Disrupts
IT Systems (Hackread)
Cloakd ransomware group claims attack on Virginia attorney general’s office, demands ransom for stolen data. Investigation underway. Find out the impact
and what’s being done.
https://hackread.com/cloak-ransomware-virginia-attorney-generals-office/
Nice work, AG.
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 25 Mar 2025 09:39:40 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <
monty@roscom.com>
Subject: United Airlines flight to China diverted to San Francisco after
pilot forgets passport (NBC News)
https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/united-airlines-flight-china-diverted-san-francisco-pilot-forgets-pass-rcna197942
------------------------------
Date: Sun, 23 Mar 2025 09:50:28 -0700
From: Jim Geissman <
jgeissman@socal.rr.com>
Subject: Donald Trump's Government cuts funding for NZ scientists' trip to
U.S. (NZ Herald)
22 Mar 2025 07:42 PM
* <
https://www.nzherald.co.nz/topic/donald-trump/#google_vignette>
The Trump Administration's spending cuts cancelled a $51,000 grant for a
scientific celebration.
* The event would have marked 150 years of scientific co-operation
between the United States and New Zealand.
* Universities New Zealand's Chris Whelan said there are no plans for
an alternative event.
The Donald Trump Administration's spending cuts have put put] to a
celebration of 150 years of scientific co-operation between New Zealand and
the United States. Universities New Zealand chief executive Chris Whelan
said the organisation received notification last month that a US$30,000 ($51,580) grant for a function in Washington had been cancelled. "Unfortunately, we received a letter advising us that under President
Trump's executive order re-evaluating and re-aligning the United States' foreign aid, that funding was cancelled. No other reason was given," Whelan said. He said the U.S. State Department funding included travel by a New Zealand delegation to the U.S. Whelan said the event would have marked 150 years since the US sent scientists to this country to observe the planet
Venus passing between the sun and the Earth. "The partnership dates back to the 1874 transit of Venus. The U.S. dispatched two scientific expeditions to New Zealand for the purpose. One to the Chatham Islands, another to Queenstown," he said. Whelan said Universities New Zealand had been working
on the project with the U.S. Embassy in Wellington. "It was seen as highly desirable to mark a major milestone, 150 years of scientific collaboration between our countries and a feel-good event and a good chance to publicise
New Zealand in the U.," he said. He said there were no plans at this stage
for an alternative event and people were disappointed but understood such funding could be changed with a change of Government.
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 29 Mar 2025 09:15:05 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <
monty@roscom.com>
Subject: They Were Deactivated From Delivering. Their Finances Were
Devastated. NYTimesz)
Millions of Americans earn money finding gig work through platforms like
Uber, Lyft or DoorDash. Many see their financial lives upended when their account is suddenly blocked for unclear reasons.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/29/business/uber-lyft-doordash-deactivation.html
------------------------------
Date: Wed, 26 Mar 2025 10:32:48 -0700
From: "Jim" Geissman <
jgeissman@socal.rr.com>
Subject: New uses for old data
Last summer, mining startup KoBold made a splash <
https://techcrunch.com/2025/01/02/kobold-used-ai-to-find-copper-now-investo rs-are-piling-in-to-the-tune-of-537m/> when it said it had discovered in Zambia one of the world's largest copper deposits in more than a decade.
Now, another startup, Earth AI <
https://earth-ai.com> , exclusively told TechCrunch about its own discovery: promising deposits of critical minerals
in parts of Australia that other mining outfits had ignored for decades.
While it's still not known whether they are as large as KoBold's, the news suggests that future supplies of critical minerals are likely to emerge from
a combination of field data parsed by artificial intelligence.
"The actual, real frontier [in mining] is not so much geographical as it is technological," Roman Teslyuk, founder and CEO of Earth AI, told TechCrunch.
Earth AI emerged from Teslyuk's graduate studies. Teslyuk, a native of
Ukraine, was working toward a doctorate at the University of Sydney, where
he became familiar with the mining industry in Australia. There, the
government owns the rights to mineral deposits, and it leases them in
six-year terms. Since the 1970s, he said, exploration companies are required
to submit their data to a national archive.
"For some reason, nobody's using them," he said. "If I could build an
algorithm that can absorb all that knowledge and learn from the failures and successes of millions of geologists in the past, I can make much better predictions about where to find minerals in the future."
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 24 Mar 2025 11:19:23 +0900
From: David Farber <
farber@keio.jp>
Subject: Attorney General Bonta Urgently Issues Consumer Alert for 23andMe
Customers (State of California - Department of Justice - Office of the
Attorney General)
https://oag.ca.gov/news/press-releases/attorney-general-bonta-urgently-issues-consumer-alert-23andme-customers
Bankruptcy. Uncertanty.
------------------------------
Date: Tue, 25 Mar 2025 00:02:55 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <
monty@roscom.com>
Subject: 23andMe Customers Scramble to Delete Data, Seek Assurances After
Bankruptcy (WSJ)
23andMe Customers Scramble to Delete Data, Seek Assurances After Bankruptcy
The DNA-testing company’s site was slow in responding to some deletion requests, leading customers to be uncertain about the process.
https://www.wsj.com/business/23andme-delete-data-bankruptcy-5778341f
------------------------------
Date: 24 Mar 2025 15:48:55 -0400
From: "John Levine" <
johnl@iecc.com>
Subject: Re: Airport Theory Will Make You Miss Your Flight (RISKS-34.59)
If airports weren’t already a hellscape, TikTok has found a way to make
them worse. Welcome to airport theory, a viral delusion that suggests you
can roll up to the airport 15 minutes before boarding, waltz through
security, and still make your flight with time to spare. No stress, no
waiting, just pure main character energy.
Well, you know, TikTok is where they tell you to eat detergent pods, to pour beer over yourself and go out to get a suntan, and to hold your breath until you black out which has caused at least one death of a 10 year old girl.
I have gotten from the garage to the gate in 15 minutes a few times, not deliberately (bad traffic due to an accident, or one time I missed the
Thruway exit), and not at large airports, and I do not recommend it. It is a stupid idea. But at least the worst thing that will happen is that you miss your plane.
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 22 Mar 2025 16:00:00 -0700
From: "David E. Ross" <
david@rossde.com>
Subject: Re: Not Unprecedented -- Heathrow Comes to a Standstill (RISKS-34.59)
In the summer of 2003, my wife and I traveled by AmTrak from southern California, up the Pacific coast to Seattle. We then went by Canada's Via
Rail from Vancouver to Montreal.
We were ticketed to fly home via Air Canada on a non-stop flight from Dorval Airport (now Pierre Elliot Trudeau Airport) to LAX (Los Angeles
International Airport). The morning of our departure coincided with the
"Great North-East Blackout", which affected Ontario and the Maritimes in
Canada and also New York and New England in the United States. Montreal and the rest of Quebec was no affected,
Dorval was chaos, but only relative to Air Canada. U.S. and other foreign airlines were still boarding passengers and taking off. Dorval had electricity. However, Air Canada's computer center, however, was in Toronto (Ontario) and was down.
Instead of a non-stop Air Canada flight from Montreal to Los Angeles, we
flew to Washington's Dulles and were the last passengers to board a United Airlines flight to Los Angeles. Instead of arriving home at 2:00pm, we
arrived the next morning at 2:00am.
This adventure illustrated the risk of not having a backup computer system
for critical services. Not only is a backup important, but also it must be
far from the primary system so that a disaster will not affect both systems.
------------------------------
Date: Thu, 27 Mar 2025 09:35:02 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <
monty@roscom.com>
Subject: After Heathrow Debacle: Who Pays for a Ruined Vacation?
When the airport shut down, travelers were on the hook for reservations
that could not be canceled, expensive new flights and missed events that airlines don’t reimburse for. How can you protect yourself next time?
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/03/26/travel/heathrow-travel-insurance-hotel-cruise-refund.html
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 29 Mar 2025 09:25:47 -0400
From: Monty Solomon <
monty@roscom.com>
Subject: How AI Is Changing the Way the World Builds Computers
Tech companies are revamping computing — from how tiny chips are built to
the way they are arranged, cooled and powered — in the race to build artificial intelligence that recreates the human brain.
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2025/03/16/technology/ai-data-centers.html
------------------------------
Date: Mon, 24 Mar 2025 13:09:48 +0200
From: Amos Shapir <
amos083@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: When Your Last Name Is Null, Nothing Works (RISKS-34.59)
I have seen databases which return "(null)" or something similar, to
separate it from something that may actually be a valid reply. There's no excuse for a database application which doesn't do that, nor for an
application which uses the database and doesn't make the extra effort to discern a NULL value from a legitimate one. There's a price to pay for
that, but Mr. & Mrs. Null should not be those who pay it.
------------------------------
Date: Sat, 28 Oct 2023 11:11:11 -0800
From:
RISKS-request@csl.sri.com
Subject: Abridged info on RISKS (comp.risks)
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