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      Sellafield nuclear waste dump to be prosecuted for alleged IT security offences

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Thursday, 28 March - 11:05


    Charges relate to four-year period between 2019 and early 2023, and follows Guardian investigation

    The Sellafield nuclear waste dump is to be prosecuted for alleged information technology security offences, the industry watchdog has said.

    The Office for Nuclear Regulation (ONR) said on Thursday that it had notified the state-owned Cumbrian nuclear company that it would be prosecuted under industry security regulations.

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      Literary Theory for Robots by Dennis Yi Tenen review – the deep roots of AI

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Thursday, 28 March - 10:00 · 1 minute

    A secret history of machine intelligence, from 14th century horoscopes to 1930s ‘plot genies’ for coming up with storylines

    Hark. The end is nigh. “In the industrial age, automation came for the shoemaker and the factory-line worker,” writes Dennis Yi Tenen near the start of Literary Theory for Robots. “Today, it has come for the writer, the professor, the physician, the programmer and the attorney.” Like the end-of-the-planet movies that pelted the multiplexes at the turn of the millennium, newspapers and – increasingly – bookshops are awash with economists, futurologists and social semioticians talking up, down and about artificial intelligence. Even Henry Kissinger, in The Age of AI (2021), spoke of “epoch-making transformations” and an imminent “revolution in human affairs”.

    Tenen, a tenured professor of English at New York’s Columbia University, isn’t nearly as apocalyptic as he initially makes out. His is an oddly titled book – do robots need literary theory? Are we the robots? – that has little in common with the techno-theory of writers such as Friedrich Kittler , Donna Haraway and N Katherine Hayles. For the most part, it’s a call for rhetorical de-escalation. Relax, he says, machines and literature go back a long way; his goal is to reconstruct “the modern chatbot from parts found on the workbench of history” using “strings of anecdote and light philosophical commentary”.

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      ‘Rental places will surge back’: readers on the fight to preserve physical media

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Thursday, 28 March - 08:05


    Readers share their thoughts on maintaining the world of DVDs and Blu-rays after a feature looking exploring the phenomenon

    At home we have been getting into the habit, when we identify (a knack in itself!) a show or movie we are confident we will want to re-watch, of ordering an inexpensive DVD copy.

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      Airbnb host increased price by 39% after booking

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Thursday, 28 March - 07:00

    We were forced to cancel when the host wanted thousands extra, but were still charged a fee

    My daughter used my credit card to book a five-month stay using Airbnb after taking up an internship in Toronto. After the host accepted the booking, she got an email saying the price for the overall stay had increased by £4,000 – a further 39%.

    Panicked, and unable to afford the extra sum, she cancelled. Airbnb has taken a £1,962 fee, plus a further £682 for cleaning and taxes. As my daughter cancelled immediately, it is extremely unlikely that a booking was lost.

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      Sam Bankman-Fried will grow old in jail. But don’t forget those who basked in his orbit | Aditya Chakrabortty

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Thursday, 28 March - 06:00

    If the high-rollers surrounding the disgraced FTX founder had any qualms about taking his money, they didn’t show it

    Later today, a man who has recently turned 32 will be hauled in front of a Manhattan judge. Already convicted of huge fraud , he knows he’s going to prison. The only question is for how long. If the US government gets its way, he will not emerge before his 80th birthday.

    This is the final disgrace of Sam Bankman-Fried. The judge, politicians and the world’s press will declare him one of the biggest swindlers in American history. They will note how within three years he built a marketplace for digital currencies, or crypto, that was worth around $32bn – and made himself the world’s richest person under 30. Still it wasn’t enough. He spent perhaps $8bn of his customers’ savings on luxury homes, risky investments and whatever else took his fancy.

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      Controversial attack ad on Sadiq Khan made solely by Tory HQ, source says

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Wednesday, 27 March - 17:02

    Spurious video on London mayor’s record on crime allegedly had no input from Tory candidate Susan Hall’s team

    The controversial Conservative attack video that portrayed London as a crime-racked hellhole was put together by the central party rather than its mayoral candidate, and has dismayed some around Susan Hall, the Guardian has learned.

    The brief but dramatic film, in which an American-accented voiceover declared the city the “crime capital of the world” and, using dubious claims, sought to blame Sadiq Khan.

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      Meta and Google accused of restricting reproductive health information

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Wednesday, 27 March - 14:41

    Report claims posts on abortion and contraception have been deleted while misinformation on the feeds of social media users in Africa, Latin America and Asia has not been tackled

    Meta and Google are accused in a new report of obstructing information on abortion and reproductive healthcare across Africa, Latin America and Asia.

    MSI Reproductive Choices (formerly Marie Stopes International) and the Center for Countering Digital Hate claim the platforms are restricting local abortion providers from advertising, but failing to tackle misinformation that undermines public access to reproductive healthcare.

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      Opening of Europe’s longest hyperloop track rekindles hype over futuristic trains

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Wednesday, 27 March - 13:57


    Operators hope Dutch test track will help prove feasibility of high-speed tube transport system

    The longest hyperloop test track in Europe has opened, raising faint hopes once more that the maglev meets vacuum tube transport technology could be the future.

    Operators said the facility would help prove the hyperloop’s feasibility, saying it could allow a 10,000km (6,200-mile) network of high-speed tubes to be in place around the continent by 2050.

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      Hackers obtain patient data from NHS Dumfries and Galloway

      news.movim.eu / TheGuardian · Wednesday, 27 March - 13:31


    Cyber-attack by Inc Ransom yielded data on at least a ‘small number’ of patients, health board says

    A hacker group is in possession of at least a “small number” of patients’ data following a cyber-attack, NHS Dumfries and Galloway has said.

    Reports emerged on Wednesday of a post by the group Inc Ransom on its darknet blog, alleging it was in possession of three terabytes of data from NHS Scotland.

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