

London’s Evening Standard reports that top intelligence figures see Russia as the prime suspect. The U.K.’s Electoral Commission, which oversees elections in the country, has admitted falling victim to a very serious cyberattack that exposed millions of voters’ personal data. As the Guardian reports, X is accusing the climate NGO of giving the CCDH its credentials to access X’s Brandwatch post-monitoring tool. Elon Musk’s X, which is suing the Center for Countering Digital Hate for allegedly trying to scare advertisers away from the former Twitter, has dragged the European Climate Foundation into the suit. Coincidentally, The Register reports that Amazon is running more than half the Arm-based server processors in current deployment. Reuters previously reported that Arm was also talking to Intel, Alphabet, and Nvidia about potential investments. According to Reuters, the Nasdaq flotation is set to take place in September. Amazon is reportedly considering becoming an anchor investor in Arm, once the chip-design giant is spun out of current owner SoftBank in a planned IPO. There’s some more Atlanta, some more ATL. Tetris Kelly: Any tease Ciara: Just know there’s more Atlanta in this thing.

systems” should be able to opt out of this happening.Īmazon and Arm. Tetris Kelly: And do we got any other collabs on it Ciara: We do. systems should be allowed to freely train on copyrighted content under a new fair use exception in Australia’s copyright law, and that “entities that prefer their data not to be trained in using A.I. The Guardian reports that Google argued generative A.I. Google espoused quite a different approach in its response to an Australian government consultation on A.I. Copyright holders would get paid (how much isn’t clear Grimes takes a 50% cut of royalties generated by A.I.-Grimes songs), and artists wouldn’t be part of the scheme unless they opt in. According to the Financial Times, the music-publishing juggernaut is in talks with Google about creating a tool that would let people use its artists’ voices or lyrics to make new, A.I.-generated tracks. When fellow Canadian Drake saw a fake song by A.I.-Drake go viral earlier this year, he wasn’t impressed, commenting: “This is the final straw A.I.” His label, Universal Music Group, had the track removed from streaming services by lodging copyright claims and talked about its artists’ rights being violated.īut now Universal seems set to embrace the trend. Tetris’ creators reveal the game’s greatest unsolved mysteries From random number generators to the origin of 'the Tetris song.'.
