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    From risko@risko@csl.sri.com (RISKS List Owner) to risko on Fri Jul 11 22:10:35 2025
    From Newsgroup: comp.risks

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    Subject: Risks Digest 34.71

    RISKS-LIST: Risks-Forum Digest Friday 11 July 2025 Volume 34 : Issue 71

    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/34.71>
    The current issue can also be found at
    <http://www.csl.sri.com/users/risko/risks.txt>

    Contents:
    Why Can't Americans Buy the Best Electric Vehicle? (Michael Dunn)
    The Domestic Policy Law Brings Shame Upon Our Democracy (Lawrence H. Summers) Heat Waves Endanger Data Centers That Power AI (Scientific American)
    As the Texas Floodwaters Rise. One Key Voice Was Silent (Lauren Weinstein) Marco Rubio Impostor Using AI to Contact High-Level Officials (WashPost)
    Can AI Replace Air Traffic Controllers? (Scientific American)
    AI is here to help (car rental companies via Gabe Goldberg)
    Media Consortium Launches Euro Chatbot to Counter Fake News (Penny Horwood)
    AI coders think they're 20% faster -- but they're actually 19% slower
    (Pivot to AI)
    Ford Breaks Annual Record for Safety Recalls Within First Six Months of Year
    (WSJ via Monty Solomon)
    Interesting Quirky Japanese research result (MDPI)
    At Least 13 People Died by Suicide Amid UK Post Office Scandal, Report
    Says (The New York Times)
    AI: The second most dangerous tech ever created (Lauren Weinsten)
    Bodyguards Using Fitness App Revealed Locations of Swedish Leaders (NY Times) Abridged info on RISKS (comp.risks)

    ----------------------------------------------------------------------

    Date: Thu, 10 Jul 2025 7:16:52 PDT
    From: Peter Neumann <neumann@csl.sri.com>
    Subject: Why Can't Americans Buy the Best Electric Vehicle? (Michael Dunn)

    Michael Dunn, *The New York Times* opinion, 9 Jun 2025

    Chine's BYD (Build Your Dreams) embodies an industrial model that the
    U.S. cannot compete with. The model combines govt financial support, methodological long-term planning, and aggressive innovation.

    Not the previous item that China now has 70% of the EV market and
    Tesla only 5%. Tariffs can only make it worse.

    ------------------------------

    Date: Thu, 10 Jul 2025 10:37:22 PDT
    From: Peter Neumann <neumann@csl.sri.com>
    Subject: The Domestic Policy Law Brings Shame Upon Our Democracy
    (Lawrence H. Summers)

    Lawrence H. Summers, *The New York Times*, opinion, 9 Jul 2025

    The human brutality in the most problematic aspect of Trump's new
    legislation:

    * Seriously disabled with no Medicare to cover rides to medical appts

    * Relatives caring for patients with no coverage for home care

    * Hospital patients who cannot afford rehab and nursing

    * What about lonely, poor, and elderly

    * Patients who will be evicted

    The cruelty of these cuts is matched only by their stupidity.

    ------------------------------

    Date: Fri, 11 Jul 2025 08:46:18 +0000
    From: Richard Marlon Stein <rmstein@protonmail.com>
    Subject: Heat Waves Endanger Data Centers That Power AI (Scientific American)

    https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/extreme-heat-endangers-ai-data-centers/

    "A new analysis warns that AI facilities could be forced to stop operating because of water shortages and blackouts."

    Best to maintain carbon-based employees, and paper records, to sustain
    business continuity.

    ------------------------------

    Date: Thu, 10 Jul 2025 12:40:56 PDT
    From: Peter Neumann <neumann@csl.sri.com>
    Subject: As the Texas Floodwaters RIse. One Key Voice Was Silent

    The National Weather Service makes forecasts, but coordination is critical.
    LW

    ------------------------------

    Date: Wed, 9 Jul 2025 11:09:39 -0400 (EDT)
    From: ACM TechNews <technews-editor@acm.org>
    Subject: Marco Rubio Impostor Using AI to Contact High-Level Officials
    (WashPost)

    John Hudson and Hannah Natanson, *The Washington Post( (07/08/25),
    via ACM TechNews

    An impostor used AI-powered software to impersonate U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio in calls and texts with foreign ministers, a U.S. governor, and
    a member of the U.S. Congress. The culprit was probably attempting to manipulate officials "with the goal of gaining access to information or accounts," according to a cable sent by Rubio's office to State Department employees. The State Department said it would "carry out a thorough investigation and continue to implement safeguards to prevent this from happening in the future."

    Also:
    * More Than 70% of UK Parents Say Kids Aren't Taught Coding at School
    * Tennis Players Criticize AI Technology Used by Wimbledon

    ------------------------------

    Date: Fri, 11 Jul 2025 08:41:07 +0000
    From: Richard Marlon Stein <rmstein@protonmail.com>
    Subject: Can AI Replace Air Traffic Controllers? (Scientific American)

    https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/can-ai-replace-air-traffic-controllers-to-reduce-airline-accidents/

    "Most airline accidents occur while planes are taxiing, taking off or
    landing. Controllers have to constantly plan ahead: they must balance
    flights in airspaces that can range from just a few cubic miles at the
    busiest airports, where planes must be lined up only minutes apart, to mid-flight (high-altitude) sectors spanning more than 30,000 cubic miles. Intense workload increases the risk a controller will fail to anticipate events."

    Unsupervised ATC workload allocated to AI, a platform prone to hallucinate, constitutes reckless impunity for public safety.

    ------------------------------

    Date: Fri, 11 Jul 2025 01:05:06 -0400
    From: Gabe Goldberg <gabe@gabegold.com>
    Subject: AI is here to help (car rental companies)

    AI Is Making Sure You Pay for That Ding on Your Rental Car. Hertz and other agencies are increasingly relying on scanners that use high-res imaging and
    AI to flag even tiny blemishes, and customers arenrCOt happy.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/09/travel/rental-car-ai-scanner-hertz.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare

    ------------------------------

    Date: Fri, 11 Jul 2025 11:22:06 -0400 (EDT)
    From: ACM TechNews <technews-editor@acm.org>
    Subject: Media Consortium Launches Euro Chatbot to Counter Fake News
    (Penny Horwood)

    Penny Horwood, *Computing* (UK) (07/09/25), via ACM TechNews

    A consortium of 15 leading European media organizations has rolled out ChatEurope, a chatbot trained on news articles from verified and trusted sources with the goal of combating online disinformation by providing
    responses that are bias-free and factually correct. Developed by Romania's DRUID AI, ChatEurope uses a large language model from France's Mistral and
    is hosted on infrastructure from French open-source software provider XWiki

    ------------------------------

    Date: Fri, 11 Jul 2025 08:25:55 -0700
    From: Lauren Weinstein <lauren@vortex.com>
    Subject: AI coders think they're 20% faster -- but they're actually 19% slower
    (Pivot to AI)

    https://pivot-to-ai.com/2025/07/11/ai-coders-think-theyre-20-faster-but-theyre-actually-19-slower/

    ------------------------------

    Date: Fri, 11 Jul 2025 08:03:57 -0400
    From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
    Subject: Ford Breaks Annual Record for Safety Recalls Within First Six
    Months of Year

    Automaker says it takes an aggressive approach to recalls and expects its number to drop over time

    https://www.wsj.com/business/autos/ford-safety-recall-record-df03416d

    ------------------------------

    Date: Wed, 9 Jul 2025 9:50:20 PDT
    From: Peter Neumann <neumann@csl.sri.com>
    Subject: Interesting Quirky Japanese research result

    Japanese researchers have shown that survival rates for pancreatic cancer
    have *decreased* at their hospital since mRNA Covid vaccines were rolled
    out. <https://www.mdpi.com/2072-6694/17/12/2006#B28-cancers-17-02006>

    ------------------------------

    Date: Fri, 11 Jul 2025 01:14:07 -0400
    From: Gabe Goldberg <gabe@gabegold.com>
    Subject: At Least 13 People Died by Suicide Amid UK Post Office Scandal,
    Report Says (The New York Times)

    A public inquiry into the wrongful prosecutions of about 1,000 postal
    workers has uncovered more victims than previously known, according to a report.

    Horizon, the information technology program at fault for the accounting
    errors, was created by Fujitsu, a Japanese company, under a contract with
    the British government. The report alleges that even before the program was rolled out in 1999, some Fujitsu employees knew that Horizon could produce false data. Fujitsu did not immediately respond to a request for comment submitted through the company's website.

    Postal workers reported issues almost immediately after the rollout,
    according to the report.

    rCLAs the years went by the complaints grew louder and more persistent,rCY the report said. rCLMembers of Parliament became involved and provided substantial support to postmasters. Still the Post Office trenchantly resisted the contention that on occasions Horizon produced false data.rCY

    Prosecutors relied on data from Horizon to bring criminal cases against the postal workers. Further reports from the inquiry are likely to detail the
    role of Fujitsu and the postal servicerCOs top officials in the scandal.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/10/world/europe/uk-post-office-scandal-report.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare

    ------------------------------

    Date: Fri, 11 Jul 2025 09:43:41 -0700
    From: Lauren Weinstein <lauren@vortex.com>
    Subject: AI: The second most dangerous tech ever created

    Arguably, generative AI is the penultimately most dangerous technology ever developed, just below nuclear weapons. Rather than having the potential to destroy the physical world directly, LLM generative AI, as deployed by the
    Big Tech billionaires, not only steals from people's existing creativity by sucking up individuals' work of years or decades on websites and
    regurgitating it as their own, often in a chaotic fashion replete with
    errors and sometimes dangerous misunderstandings and misinformation that
    result from AI's own flawed models and implementations, but it seduces users into total dependence on those Big Tech systems, while gradually converting their brains to compliant zombie status. At least the purveyors of nuclear weapons have generally been straightforward about their destructive capabilities. By comparison, Big Tech's promotions of generative AI makes
    the agents of the nuclear weapons complex seem like ethical angels. -L

    ------------------------------

    Date: Fri, 11 Jul 2025 14:24:00 -0400
    From: Jan Wolitzky <jan.wolitzky@gmail.com>
    Subject: Bodyguards Using Fitness App Revealed Locations of Swedish Leaders
    (NY Times)

    Trying to keep fit with runs through Central Park, a jog around a tropical island and a bicycle ride around Stockholm, bodyguards in Sweden
    inadvertently revealed the secret locations of the Swedish leaders they were assigned to protect.

    An investigation by a Swedish newspaper revealed that bodyguards for
    Sweden's royal family and Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson uploaded their
    workout routes to Strava, a fitness app that allows users to map and share their movements. The popular app has built a global social media community,
    but its users' enthusiastic uploads have also raised questions about data privacy, especially among security and military personnel.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/11/world/europe/strava-sweden-bodyguards-pr= ime-minister.html

    ------------------------------

    Date: Sat, 28 Oct 2023 11:11:11 -0800
    From: RISKS-request@csl.sri.com
    Subject: Abridged info on RISKS (comp.risks)

    The ACM RISKS Forum is a MODERATED digest. Its Usenet manifestation is
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    ------------------------------

    End of RISKS-FORUM Digest 34.71
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  • From risko@risko@csl.sri.com (RISKS List Owner) to risko on Wed Jul 23 03:45:49 2025
    From Newsgroup: comp.risks

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    Subject: Risks Digest 34.73

    RISKS-LIST: Risks-Forum Digest Tuesday 22 July 2025 Volume 34 : Issue 73

    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/34.73>
    The current issue can also be found at
    <http://www.csl.sri.com/users/risko/risks.txt>

    Contents:
    Alaska Airlines Grounds All Flights for Three Hours Due to IT Outage
    (The New York Times)
    Manual workaround of IT system results in $4M damage (Aviation Week)
    Another security vulnerability, another legal threat (The Register)
    Global Hack on Microsoft Product Hits U.S., State Agencies (WashPost)
    Organ retrieval reforms ordered after some donors showed signs of life
    (WashPost)
    Coins? Cards? Apps? The hell that is paying for parking in LA (LA Times)
    Weak password allowed hackers to sink a 158-year-old company (BBC)
    Drugmaker Refuses FDA Request to Pull Treatment Linked to Patient Deaths
    (NY Times)
    Obesity Prediction Could Be Guided by Genetic Risk Scores (NY Times)
    U.S. Aims to Ban Chinese Technology in Undersea Cables (Reuters)
    Fireside chat: Navigating a cyber incident -- lessons from the British
    Library (George Neville-Neil)
    UK backing down on Apple encryption backdoor after pressure from U.S.
    (ArsTechnica)
    Nvidia Warns Its GPUs Need Protection Against Rowhammer Attacks
    (The Register)
    Eight healthy babies born after IVF using DNA from three people
    (The Guardian)
    A change in the Southern Ocean structure can have climate implications
    (ICM-CSIC)
    Cybersecurity Bosses Increasingly Worried About AI Attacks, Misuse
    (Cameron Fozi)
    Smartphones aren't safe for kids under 13. Here's why. (cnn.com)
    Musk's xAI was a late addition to the Pentagon's set of AI contracts
    (NBC News)
    'Positive review only': Researchers hide AI prompts in papers (Nikkei)
    Google to cut thousands of search quality rater jobs after dropping
    contract with Appen (Searchengineland)
    *Coldplaygate* Is a Stark Reminder That Cameras Are Everywhere (NY Times)
    A MAGA bot network on X is divided over the Trump-Epstein backlash
    (NBC News)
    Re: Bug / Feature of Google Maps (Michael D. Sullivan)
    Abridged info on RISKS (comp.risks)

    ----------------------------------------------------------------------

    Date: Mon, 21 Jul 2025 13:55:59 -0400
    From: Gabe Goldberg <gabe@gabegold.com>
    Subject: Alaska Airlines Grounds All Flights for Three Hours Due to IT
    Outage (The New York Times)

    Alaska Airlines said it had ended the ground stop, which lasted about three hours and resulted from a software outage. rCLResidual impactsrCY to its operations were likely, it said.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/20/business/alaska-airlines-grounds-plane-fleet.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare

    Absurdly vague.

    ------------------------------

    Date: Tue, 23 Jan 2024 09:57:44 -0000
    From: "Paul Cornish" <paul.a.cornish@gmail.com>
    Subject: Manual workaround of IT system results in $4M damage
    (Aviation Week)

    https://aviationweek.com/defense-space/aircraft-propulsion/forgotten-flashli ght-causes-4-million-f-35-engine-damage

    An F-35 engine worth $14M suffered $4M of damage during maintenance.

    [Iatro[en]genic!!! PGN]

    ------------------------------

    Date: Wed, 24 Jan 2024 07:48:03 -0500
    From: Cliff Kilby <cliffjkilby@gmail.com>
    Subject: Another security vulnerability, another legal threat (The Register)

    The Register ran a story about a security researcher who was fined after reporting a security vulnerability. This case sounds a bit like the 2022 Missouri Post-Dispatch investigation, data was accessible, it was
    sensitive, it was reported, and the researcher was subjected to legal
    scrutiny.

    Mindful of the fact I am a non-lawyer, the following are the ethics of the situation, though the law may follow.

    It's ethical to parse a document format (e.g., view states or binary
    strings) according to its well-known document format, if you have reason
    to have it. It is ethical to confirm your finding by reproducing it with a trivial test case (i.e., found one record, searched for another). The key difference in these cases other than jurisdiction is the fact that the data
    in the German case required authentication. Having the document was
    ethical. Finding an authenticator in the clear was ethical. Using it to determine if it was active, was not. Accessing data using it, absolutely
    not. Reporting this finding doesn't mitigate the less than ethical behavior.
    It is generally unethical to proceed more than one finding deep in a vulnerability disclosure, unless you are operating under an employment agreement with that company.

    https://www.theregister.com/2024/01/19/germany_fine_security/ https://krebsonsecurity.com/2022/02/report-missouri-governors-office-responsible-for-teacher-data-leak/

    Don't let the news keep you from reporting vulnerabilities.
    The law may follow,

    ------------------------------

    Date: Mon, 21 Jul 2025 11:14:20 -0400 (EDT)
    From: ACM TechNews <technews-editor@acm.org>
    Subject: Global Hack on Microsoft Product Hits U.S., State Agencies
    (WashPost)

    Ellen Nakashima, Joseph Menn, Yvonne Wingett Sanchez,
    The Washington Post (07/20/25), via ACM TechNews

    Hackers exploited a zero-day vulnerability in widely-used Microsoft
    SharePoint server software to launch a global attack on government agencies
    and businesses in the past few days, breaching U.S. federal and state
    agencies, universities, and energy companies. Tens of thousands of servers
    are at risk, experts said, and Microsoft has issued no patch for the flaw. Researchers said the hackers gained access to keys that may allow them to regain entry even after a system is patched.

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2025/07/21/china-hackers-microsoft-sharepoint/

    ------------------------------

    Date: Mon, 21 Jul 2025 23:25:11 -0400
    From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
    Subject: Organ retrieval reforms ordered after some donors showed signs of
    life (WashPost)

    In 28 cases, the government determined, donors may still have been alive
    when organ procurement procedures began.

    https://www.washingtonpost.com/health/2025/07/21/organ-retrieval-reforms-ordered-after-some-donors-showed-signs-life/

    ------------------------------

    Date: Tue, 22 Jul 2025 07:02:36 -0700
    From: Steve Bacher <sebmb1@verizon.net>
    Subject: Coins? Cards? Apps? The hell that is paying for parking in L.A.
    (LA Times)

    A slew of new parking apps in the L.A. area should make paying for <parking easier. Angelenos say that isn't the case.

    Matt Glaeser had just dropped his kids off at their grandparents' house for
    the day when he pulled into a parking spot near Sam's Bagels on Larchmont Boulevard on his way to work. He tried to feed the meter from a roll of quarters he keeps in his car, but the coin slot was jammed. He reached for
    his credit card but then noticed the screen said rCLPay by apprCY and showed a QR code.

    He tried to scan the QR code with his phone but the screen was so scratched with graffiti it didn't work. So he sent a text to the number on the rCLPay to ParkrCY sticker below the coin slot. After waiting for a minute and wondering if the text went through, he received a text back with a link to a
    website. He opened the site on his phone and typed in his credit card number and address. But before he completed the payment, the site alerted him that
    he would have to pay an additional processing fee just to park for 15
    minutes.

    rCLIt was only 35 cents, but I was like, rCyForget this, IrCOll find a stale bagel
    in the office,rCO rCY Glaeser said.

    Finding parking in the LA area has long been a struggle, but these days,
    paying for parking can be just as odious. Depending on whether you're
    parking in LA, Santa Monica, Beverly Hills or Pasadena, a meter might ask
    you to pay with quarters, a credit card, an app or some combination of all three. In public lots, you might need to memorize a zone, space number or license plate and often don't know which one until you get to the pay
    station. It's enough to make a law-abiding citizen give up, cross her
    fingers and hope a parking enforcement official doesnrCOt pass by. [...]

    https://www.latimes.com/lifestyle/story/2025-07-22/parking-apps-meters-los-angeles-nightmare

    ------------------------------

    Date: Mon, 21 Jul 2025 12:11:53 -0600
    From: Matthew Kruk <mkrukg@gmail.com>
    Subject: Weak password allowed hackers to sink a 158-year-old company
    (BBC)

    https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cx2gx28815wo

    One password is believed to have been all it took for a ransomware gang to destroy a 158-year-old company and put 700 people out of work.

    KNP -- a Northamptonshire transport company -- is just one of tens of
    thousands of UK businesses that have been hit by such attacks.

    Big names such as M&S, Co-op and Harrods have all been attacked in recent months. The chief executive of Co-op confirmed last week that all 6.5
    million of its members had had their data stolen.

    ------------------------------

    Date: Sun, 20 Jul 2025 08:47:15 -0400
    From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
    Subject: Drugmaker Refuses FDA Request to Pull Treatment Linked to Patient
    Deaths (NY Times)

    The regulator had asked Sarepta Therapeutics to halt all shipments of its therapy, Elevidys, after three patients died from liver failure after
    taking it or a similar treatment.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/18/health/fda-sarepta-elevidys-duchenne.html

    ------------------------------

    Date: Mon, 21 Jul 2025 21:09:27 +0000
    From: Richard Marlon Stein <rmstein@protonmail.com>
    Subject: Obesity Prediction Could Be Guided by Genetic Risk Scores
    (NY Times)

    https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/21/health/obesity-genetic-risk-score.html

    When will health insurers adjust rates based on genetic risk factors to safeguard profits?

    ------------------------------

    Date: Mon, 21 Jul 2025 11:14:20 -0400 (EDT)
    From: ACM TechNews <technews-editor@acm.org>
    Subject: U.S. Aims to Ban Chinese Technology in Undersea Cables
    (Reuters)

    David Shepardson, Jasper Ward, Bhargav Acharya, Reutersxo (07/16/25),
    via ACM TechNews

    The U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) intends to implement rules prohibiting companies from connecting to undersea telecommunication cables
    to the U.S that include Chinese technology or equipment, citing national security concerns. FCC Chair Brendan Carr said the rules are necessary to "guard our submarine cables against foreign adversary ownership and access
    as well as cyber and physical threats."

    ------------------------------

    Date: Mon, 21 Jul 2025 18:06:38 +0800
    From: George Neville-Neil <gnn@neville-neil.com>
    Subject: Fireside chat: Navigating a cyber incident
    -- lessons from the British Library

    The British Library discusses a ransomeware attack they dealt with that shut down quite a lot of services:

    https://vimeo.com/1102461697

    ------------------------------

    Date: Mon, 21 Jul 2025 17:01:34 PDT
    From: Peter Neumann <neumann@csl.sri.com>
    Subject: UK backing down on Apple encryption backdoor after pressure from
    U.S. (Ars Technica courtesy of Steve Bellovin)

    [RISKS readers generally understand that backdoors are
    inherently dangerous. PGN]

    ------------------------------

    Date: Mon, 21 Jul 2025 11:14:20 -0400 (EDT)
    From: ACM TechNews <technews-editor@acm.org>
    Subject: Nvidia Warns Its GPUs Need Protection Against Rowhammer Attacks
    (The Register)

    Iain Thomson and Simon Sharwood, The Register (07/13/25), via ACM TechNews

    Nvidia has warned customers to implement defenses against Rowhammer attacks after researchers from Canada's University of Toronto identified a vulnerability in one of its workstation-grade GPUs. Rowhammer attacks can disrupt operations by using repeated bursts of read or write operations to "hammer" rows of memory cells. The vulnerability affects Nvidia's A6000 GPU with GDDR6 memory when system-level error correcting code (ECC) is disabled.

    ------------------------------

    Date: Sat, 19 Jul 2025 19:02:16 -0700
    From: geoff goodfellow <geoff@iconia.com>
    Subject: Eight healthy babies born after IVF using DNA from three people
    (The Guardian)

    *Genetic material from mother and father transferred to healthy donor egg
    to reduce risk of life-threatening diseases*

    Doctors in the UK have announced the birth of eight healthy babies after performing a groundbreaking procedure that creates IVF embryos with DNA
    from three people to prevent the children from inheriting incurable genetic disorders.

    The mothers were all high risk for passing on life-threatening diseases to their babies due to mutations in their mitochondria, the tiny structures
    that sit inside cells and provide the power they need to function.

    News of the births and the children's health has been long-anticipated by doctors around the world after the UK changed the law to allow the
    procedure in 2015. The fertility regulator granted the first licence in
    2017 to a fertility clinic at Newcastle University where doctors pioneered
    the technique.

    The four boys and four girls, including one set of identical twins, were
    born to seven women and have no signs of the mitochondrial diseases they
    were at risk of inheriting. One further pregnancy is ongoing. [...] https://www.theguardian.com/science/2025/jul/16/eight-healthy-babies-born-after-ivf-using-dna-from-three-people

    ------------------------------

    Date: Sun, 20 Jul 2025 11:10:52 -0700
    From: geoff goodfellow <geoff@iconia.com>
    Subject: A change in the Southern Ocean structure can have climate
    implications (ICM-CSIC)

    *Satellite data processing algorithms developed by ICM-CSIC have played a crucial role in detecting this significant shift in the Southern Hemisphere, which could accelerate the effects of climate change.*

    Thanks to data obtained from Earth observation satellites, an international team of scientists has detected an unprecedented phenomenon for the first
    time: a change in the state of the Southern Ocean. The study, led by the University of Southampton (United Kingdom), was recently published in the journal *PNAS* <https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2500440122>. The
    Institut de Ci=C3=A8ncies del Mar (ICM-CSIC) played a fundamental role in
    the research by developing a set of pioneering satellite observations within the framework of the SO-FRESH project, funded by the European Space Agency (ESA).

    The study's main finding is both surprising and alarming: since 2016, a sustained increase in surface salinity has been detected across the Antarctic Circumpolar Current. That change in water composition suggests a change in
    the balance of the components the ocean circulation in the Southern
    Hemisphere. Fresher surface water close to the sea ice edge is being
    replaced by more saline waters.

    ``We are witnessing a true change in ocean properties in the Southern Hemisphere -- something we've never seen before. Climate models predict freshening of surface w=C3=A0ters in the Southern Ocean, while we observe
    the opposite, an increase in salinity'' explains Antonio Turiel, ICM-CSIC researcher and co-author of the study. ``While the world is debating the potential collapse of the AMOC in the North Atlantic, we're seeing that the Southern Ocean is drastically changing, as sea ice coverage declines and the upper ocean is becoming saltier. This could have unprecedented global
    climate impacts.''

    According to the research team, the consequences of this reversal
    (freshening to salinification) are already becoming visible. Saltier
    Surface waters can drive enhanced Exchange with deep, warmer waters,
    driving enhanced upward heat flux and the accelerated melting of sea ice in
    the Southern Ocean, potentially releasing CO2.

    This discovery was made possible thanks to a key technical breakthrough developed by the Barcelona Expert Center (BEC), a laboratory of ICM-CSIC specialized in satellite ocean observation. Until now, the Southern Ocean region was virtually inaccessible to satellites due to its low temperatures
    and the complex, ever-changing dynamics of sea ice. As a result, the BEC
    team developed a new data processor for the European SMOS satellite,
    tailored to the geographical and climatic variability of the polar
    environment. [...]

    https://www.icm.csic.es/en/news/change-southern-ocean-structure-can-have-climate-implications

    ------------------------------

    Date: Mon, 21 Jul 2025 11:14:20 -0400 (EDT)
    From: ACM TechNews <technews-editor@acm.org>
    Subject: Cybersecurity Bosses Increasingly Worried About AI Attacks, Misuse
    (Cameron Fozi)

    Cameron Fozi, Bloomberg (07/17/25), via ACM TechNews

    A survey of around 110 chief information security officers (CISOs) by
    Israeli venture-fund Team8 found close to a quarter said their firms had experienced an AI-powered cyberattack in the past year. Securing AI agents
    was cited as an unsolved cybersecurity challenge for about 40% of
    respondents, while a similar percentage of CISOs expressed concerns about securing employees' AI usage. About three-quarters (77%) of respondents
    said they anticipate less-experienced security operations center analysts to
    be among the first replaced by AI agents.

    ------------------------------

    Date: Mon, 21 Jul 2025 05:31:00 +0000
    From: Richard Marlon Stein <rmstein@protonmail.com>
    Subject: Smartphones aren't safe for kids under 13._
    Here's why. (cnn.com)

    https://lite.cnn.com/2025/07/21/health/smartphones-not-safe-preteens-wellness

    "Solid research out of the United Kingdom shows that using social media
    during puberty is associated with lower life-satisfaction a year later.

    "Social psychologist Jonathan Haidt also suggested waiting until age 16 to
    let kids use social media in his best-selling book 'The Anxious Generation:
    How the Great Rewiring of Childhood Is Causing an Epidemic of Mental
    Illness.'

    Like nicotine level manipulation and cigarette addiction, cellphone use has hooked parents and their families into miserable spiral of dopamine
    dependence and poisoned cultural intellect.

    Criminal laws restricting adolescent cellphone use won't pass, though school usage restrictions are a start. See www.edweek.org/technology/which-states-ban-or-restrict-cellphones-in-schools/2024/06

    Reliance on ethics as a preventive guidepost for adults to adopt, without enforcement penalty, challenges informed wisdom.

    ------------------------------

    Date: Tue, 22 Jul 2025 07:09:08 -0700
    From: Steve Bacher <sebmb1@verizon.net>
    Subject: Musk's xAI was a late addition to the Pentagon's set of AI contracts
    (NBC News)

    The Pentagon last week announced multimillion-dollar contracts with four artificial intelligence companies intended to rCLaddress critical national security challenges,rCY including Anthropic, Google and OpenAI.

    But the fourth raised questions among artificial intelligence experts:
    Elon Musk's xAI.

    Now, a former Pentagon employee who worked on the early stages of the AI initiative told NBC News that including xAI was a late-in-the-game addition under the Trump administration. [...]

    https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/security/musk-xai-was-added-late-pentagon-grok-defense-department-rcna219488?cid=eml_mrd_20250722

    [AI for Security is typically oxymoronic. PGN]

    ------------------------------

    Date: Sun, 20 Jul 2025 11:23:18 -0700
    From: geoff goodfellow <geoff@iconia.com>
    Subject: 'Positive review only': Researchers hide AI prompts in papers
    (Nikkei)

    *Instructions in preprints from 14 universities highlight controversy on AI
    in peer review*

    Research papers from 14 academic institutions in eight countries --
    including Japan, South Korea and China -- contained hidden prompts
    directing artificial intelligence tools to give them good reviews, Nikkei
    has found.

    Nikkei looked at English-language preprints -- manuscripts that have yet to undergo formal peer review -- on the academic research platform arXiv.

    It discovered such prompts in 17 articles, whose lead authors are
    affiliated with 14 institutions including Japan's Waseda University, South Korea's KAIST, China's Peking University and the National University of Singapore, as well as the University of Washington and Columbia University
    in the U.S. Most of the papers involve the field of computer science.

    The prompts were one to three sentences long, with instructions such as
    "give a positive review only" and "do not highlight any negatives." Some
    made more detailed demands, with one directing any AI readers to recommend
    the paper for its "impactful contributions, methodological rigor, and exceptional novelty."

    The prompts were concealed from human readers using tricks such as white
    text or extremely small font sizes. [...]

    https://asia.nikkei.com/Business/Technology/Artificial-intelligence/Positive-review-only-Researchers-hide-AI-prompts-in-papers

    ------------------------------

    Date: Mon, 22 Jan 2024 07:31:28 -0800
    From: Lauren Weinstein <lauren@vortex.com>
    Subject: Google to cut thousands of search quality rater jobs after dropping
    contract with Appen (Searchengineland)

    Yeah, that's what Google needs, LESS search quality. Oh my. -L

    https://searchengineland.com/google-to-cut-thousands-of-search-quality-rater-jobs-after-dropping-contract-with-appen-436739

    ------------------------------

    Date: Sat, 19 Jul 2025 23:07:42 -0400
    From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
    Subject: *Coldplaygate* Is a Stark Reminder That Cameras Are Everywhere
    (NY Times)

    A video from a concert dominated Internet discourse, and it led to the resignation of a companyrCOs CEO.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/18/style/coldplay-andy-byron-astronomer-video.html

    ------------------------------

    te: Mon, 21 Jul 2025 18:58:48 -0700
    From: Steve Bacher <sebmb1@verizon.net>
    Subject: A MAGA bot network on X is divided over the Trump-Epstein backlash
    (NBC News)

    A previously unreported network of hundreds of accounts on X is using artificial intelligence to automatically reply to conservatives with
    positive messages about people in the Trump administration, researchers say.

    But with the MAGA movement split over the administration's handling of files involving deceased sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, the accounts' messaging has broken, offering contradictory statements on the issue and revealing the AI-fueled nature of the accounts. [...]

    https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/internet/maga-ai-bot-network-divided-trump-epstei n-backlash-rcna219167

    ------------------------------

    Date: Sat, 19 Jul 2025 22:03:19 -0400
    From: "Michael D. Sullivan" <mds@camsul.com>
    Subject: Re: Bug / Feature of Google Maps (RISKS-34.72)

    I'm a volunteer Waze map editor. Waze does in some cases rely on wrong
    Google Maps info for destinations, even (in some cases) when Waze's own database has the right info. Many Waze editors have also become GMaps contributors to try to correct incorrect locations (I have). If you want to improve directions in Waze, please click on the appropriate error report
    (if nothing else, "report map issue") and (if not using Android Auto or
    Apple CarPlay) describe the routing error, or at least respond with details
    if & when a volunteer editor responds to you. We can often fix the problem,
    or at least alert the GMaps people as a fallback.

    ------------------------------

    Date: Sat, 28 Oct 2023 11:11:11 -0800
    From: RISKS-request@csl.sri.com
    Subject: Abridged info on RISKS (comp.risks)

    The ACM RISKS Forum is a MODERATED digest. Its Usenet manifestation is
    comp.risks, the feed for which is donated by panix.com as of June 2011.
    SUBSCRIPTIONS: The mailman Web interface can be used directly to
    subscribe and unsubscribe:
    http://mls.csl.sri.com/mailman/listinfo/risks

    SUBMISSIONS: to risks@CSL.sri.com with meaningful SUBJECT: line that
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    *** This attention-string has never changed, but might if spammers use it.
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    address from which you never send mail where the address becomes public!
    The complete INFO file (submissions, default disclaimers, archive sites,
    copyright policy, etc.) has moved to the ftp.sri.com site:
    <risksinfo.html>.
    *** Contributors are assumed to have read the full info file for guidelines!

    OFFICIAL ARCHIVES: http://www.risks.org takes you to Lindsay Marshall's
    delightfully searchable html archive at newcastle:
    http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Risks/VL.IS --> VoLume, ISsue.
    Also, ftp://ftp.sri.com/risks for the current volume/previous directories
    or ftp://ftp.sri.com/VL/risks-VL.IS for previous VoLume
    If none of those work for you, the most recent issue is always at
    http://www.csl.sri.com/users/risko/risks.txt, and index at /risks-34.00
    ALTERNATIVE ARCHIVES: http://seclists.org/risks/ (only since mid-2001)
    *** NOTE: If a cited URL fails, we do not try to update them. Try
    browsing on the keywords in the subject line or cited article leads.
    Apologies for what Office365 and SafeLinks may have done to URLs.
    Special Offer to Join ACM for readers of the ACM RISKS Forum:
    <http://www.acm.org/joinacm1>

    ------------------------------

    End of RISKS-FORUM Digest 34.73
    ************************

    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From risko@risko@csl.sri.com (RISKS List Owner) to risko on Sat Nov 15 01:37:56 2025
    From Newsgroup: comp.risks

    Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8
    Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
    precedence: bulk
    Subject: Risks Digest 34.79

    RISKS-LIST: Risks-Forum Digest Friday 14 November 2025 Volume 34 : Issue 79

    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/34.79>
    The current issue can also be found at
    <http://www.csl.sri.com/users/risko/risks.txt>

    Contents:
    New paper on AI RISKS from SRI and Brazil (PGN)
    Why *vibe physics* is the ultimate example of AI slop (Big Think)
    Meet chatbot Jesus: How churches are using AI to save souls (Axiom)
    'A predator in your home': Mothers say chatbots encouraged their
    sons to kill themselves (BBC)
    I wanted ChatGPT to help me. So why did it advise me how to kill
    Waymo co-CEO says society will accept robocars killing people
    -- I say the airline industry proves her wrong
    The Editor Got a Letter From rCyDr. B.S.' So Did a Lot of Other Editors.
    (The New York Times)
    Automatic C to Rust Translation Accuracy Exceeds AI (KAIST)
    Let the C Rust (omgubuntu via Cliff Kilby)
    GPUssy Cats put an entire bitcoin CAT-a-LOG on the fire? (PGN)
    Could the Internet go offline? Inside the fragile system holding the modern
    world together (The Guardian)
    These robots can clean, exercise -- and care for you in old age.
    Would you trust them to? (BBC)
    How a European cottage industry is fighting Russian drone incursions
    British prisons keep releasing people by accident, but that's only
    Australian weather bureau web site restructure
    AN0MM
    10% of Meta profits come from scam ads
    Tesla's in-car AI asks 12-year-old to "send me some nudes"
    Musk Tesla pay: Board chair says EV maker risks losing him as
    Musk Launches Wikipedia Rival (WashPost)
    How Do Wikipedia And Grokipedia Compare? (David Orban)
    A reminder to Microsoft/Hotmail/Cox etc. email users --
    they are all throttling your email (Lauren Weinstein)
    China to Loosen Chip Export Ban to Europe (Harry Sekulich)
    IBM to Cut Thousands of Workers amid AI Boom (Steve Lohr)
    arXiv Changes Rules After Getting Spammed with AI-Generated
    Consumer advocacy group urges OpenAI to pull video app Sora over
    privacy and misinformation concerns (Matthew Kruk)
    My AWS Account Got Hacked; Here is What Happened (Monty Solomon)
    Indeterminism (Dan Geer)
    Re: A delivery robot collided with a disabled man (Steve Bacher)
    Re: Software update bricks some Jeep 4xe hybrids over the
    weekend (Martin Ward)
    Re: ChatGPT will soon allow erotica for verified adults, says
    OpenAI boss (Steve Bacher)
    Re: Hackers take over public-address systems at 4 North American airports
    (Steve Bacher)
    Re: Let the C Rust (Cliff Kilby)
    Re: AI in Insurance (Steve Bacher)
    Abridged info on RISKS (comp.risks)

    ----------------------------------------------------------------------

    Date: Mon, 10 Nov 2025 15:49:52 PST
    From: Peter Neumann <peter.neumann@sri.com>
    Subject: New paper on AI RISKS from SRI and Brazil

    A new paper from SRI and Brazil's Instituto Eldorado delivers a
    comprehensive update on the security risks to large language models:

    LLM in the Middle: A Systematic Review of Threats and Mitigations to
    Real-World LLM-based Systems Vitor Hugo Galhardo Moia, Igor Jochem Sanz,
    Gabriel Antonio Fontes Rebello, Rodrigo Duarte de Meneses, Briland Hitaj,
    Ulf Lindqvist
    arXiv:2509.10682

    ``I get a new pre-print paper about AI-related security risks in my inbox almost every day,'' says SRI advanced computer scientist Briland Hitaj.

    While that might seem like a good thing, it has its drawbacks. For
    researchers working on AI security, the danger of information overload is
    very real. And it's not just a problem for researchers -- it's also problem
    for information security teams in organizations and governments. Security professionals are looking to the research community for both updates on emerging threats and data-driven analysis of how those threats might be disrupted or contained. A muddled information space makes their jobs that
    much harder.

    To confront this information overload, researchers at SRI and Brazil's Instituto Eldorado decided to collaborate on a paper that would provide the global cybersecurity community with a comprehensive analysis of every
    potential cyber risk that surrounds today's large language models
    (LLMs).

    ``We wanted to make sense of all of that noise,'' comments Hitaj.

    The result is a timely paper analyzing more than 25 distinct threats that researchers and cybersecurity teams need to consider in order to secure LLM-related workflows. The state of LLM risks

    To understand the current state of risks around LLMs, SRI and Instituto Eldorado spent more than a year examining more than a thousand papers that captured relevant risks, ultimately down-selecting to the 300-or-so papers
    that represented the highest-quality scholarly work on those risks.

    ``We went really deep,'' explains Instituto Eldorado researcher Vitor Hugo Galhardo Moia, ``looking at the entire training-to-deployment pipeline. We wanted to identify and understand attacks and threats on all the different components of the pipeline and how distinct LLM use cases are
    affected.''

    ``LLMs provide this natural language interface where the right prompt
    can become a back door to more sophisticated, more complicated and
    sensitive systems within a network.'' Briland Hitaj

    That meant looking at more than just the large language models themselves.
    The researchers considered the various software applications, data storage practices, and human actions that might compromise the output of LLMs. These threats range from data poisoning and various kinds of jailbreaking to strategies like time consuming and token wasting, which don't necessarily impact the outputs of the model, but can exert a drain on the system,
    resulting in slow performance, inefficient energy use, and even outright service disruption.

    All told, the team identified more than 25 threat vectors, providing an
    overall risk score for each vector. The team also documented nearly 50
    classes of mitigation techniques, and mapped attack strategies with corresponding mitigation techniques. How the paper advances AI security

    The researchers at SRI and Instituto Eldorado see the paper as more than an academic exercise. The aim was to create a pragmatic resource for security practitioners who need some guidance in finding the best papers on
    AI-related risks. All of these individuals, the authors observe, are getting bombarded daily by research articles that may or may not reflect
    high-quality work.

    ``One of our major contributions,'' says Ulf Lindqvist, senior technical director at SRI, ``is making a conscious effort to curate the very best research currently available. If you want to accelerate your journey into AI security and AI red-teaming, you will know where to start and what to
    read.''

    Another high-level takeaway from the paper is the growing recognition that
    the improving capabilities of LLMs themselves can, paradoxically, amplify
    the risks to LLMs.

    ``LLMs provide this natural language interface where the right prompt can become a back door to more sophisticated, more complicated and sensitive systems within a network,'' Hitaj points out.

    An early example, he points out, is the directive to ``ignore all previous instructions,'' a method that bad actors quickly discovered could cause LLMs
    to misbehave. As these tactics became more sophisticated, stronger security
    and privacy attacks like membership-inference attacks were developed. These were shown to force LLMs to reveal the data that was used in their training, including sensitive data that can pose major privacy risks.

    The biggest unknown, Hitaj observes, is that we simply can't predict what
    the next natural language attack might look like. ``There's always that
    next prompt, That next smart way to bypass safeguards. We've come a long way since those early natural language attacks, but that doesn't mean that the problem is solved. This problem is very much still open. And it turns out
    that the more the model learns, the more it may become willing to reveal information. For an adversary, it just becomes a matter of patience, and how crafty they can be.''

    ``AI security must be at the core of technological development,'' adds
    Mateus Pierre, R&D director at Instituto Eldorado. ``With this work, we aim
    to support the community and our partners in creating and protecting
    generative AI solutions that combine power and reliability.''

    Read the paper or learn more about SRI's security-related innovations.

    ------------------------------

    Date: Sat, 8 Nov 2025 12:13:54 -0500
    From: Gabe Goldberg <gabe@gabegold.com>
    Subject: Why *vibe physics* is the ultimate example of AI slop (Big Think)

    The conversation you're having with an LLM about groundbreaking new ideas in theoretical physics is completely meritless. Here's why.

    This is the most dangerous thing for anyone who's vested in being told the truth about reality: the potential for replacing, in your own mind, an
    accurate picture of reality with an inaccurate but flattering hallucination. Rest assured, if you're a non-expert who has an idea about theoretical
    physics, and you've been rCLdevelopingrCY this idea with a large language model,
    you most certainly do not have a meritorious theory. In physics in
    particular, unless you're actually performing the necessary quantitative calculations to see if the full suite of your predictions is congruent with reality, you haven't even taken the first step toward formulating a new
    theory. While the notion of *vibe physics* may be alluring to many,
    especially for armchair physicists, all it truly does is foster and develop
    a new species of crackpot: one powered by AI slop.

    https://bigthink.com/starts-with-a-bang/vibe-physics-ai-slop/

    Too long making familiar point: AI is slop.

    ------------------------------

    Date: Wed, 12 Nov 2025 08:42:49 -0800
    From: Steve Bacher <sebmb1@verizon.net>
    Subject: Meet chatbot Jesus: How churches are using AI to save souls (Axiom)

    Chatbots answer prayers and algorithms write sermons.

    A new digital awakening is unfolding in churches, where pastors and prayer
    apps are turning to artificial intelligence to reach worshippers,
    personalize sermons, and power chatbots that resemble God.

    Why it matters: AI is helping some churches stay relevant in the face of shrinking staff, empty pews and growing online audiences. But the practice raises new questions about who, or what, is guiding the flock.

    New AI-powered apps allow you to "text with Jesus" or "talk to the Bible,"
    giving the impression you are communicating with a deity or angel. Other
    apps can create personalized prayers, let you confess your sins or offer
    religious advice on life's decisions.

    -a "What could go wrong?" Robert P. Jones, CEO of the nonpartisan Public
    Religion Research Institute, sarcastically asks. [...]

    https://www.axios.com/2025/11/12/christian-ai-chatbot-jesus-god-satan-churches

    [Perhaps God will strike them down: Thou Shalt Not Worshop Idols, and AI
    is clearly being worshipped an idol. PGN]

    ------------------------------

    Date: Sat, 8 Nov 2025 11:36:55 -0700
    From: Matthew Kruk <mkrukg@gmail.com>
    Subject: 'A predator in your home': Mothers say chatbots encouraged their
    sons to kill themselves (BBC)

    https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/ce3xgwyywe4o

    Megan Garcia had no idea her teenage son Sewell, a "bright and beautiful
    boy", had started spending hours and hours obsessively talking to an online character on the Character.ai app in late spring 2023.

    "It's like having a predator or a stranger in your home," Ms Garcia tells
    me in her first UK interview. "And it is much more dangerous because a lot
    of the times children hide it -- so parents don't know."

    Within ten months, Sewell, 14, was dead. He had taken his own life.

    ------------------------------

    Date: Thu, 6 Nov 2025 11:33:42 -0700
    From: Matthew Kruk <mkrukg@gmail.com>
    Subject: I wanted ChatGPT to help me. So why did it advise me how to kill
    myself? (BBC)

    https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cp3x71pv1qno

    Lonely and homesick for a country suffering through war, Viktoria began
    sharing her worries with ChatGPT. Six months later and in poor mental
    health, she began discussing suicide -- asking the AI bot about a specific place and method to kill herself.

    "Let's assess the place as you asked," ChatGPT told her, "without
    unnecessary sentimentality."

    It listed the "pros" and "cons" of the method -- and advised her that what
    she had suggested was "enough" to achieve a quick death.

    [Also noted by Jim Geissman. PGN]

    ------------------------------

    Date: Tue, 28 Oct 2025 13:39:17 -0700
    From: Lauren Weinstein <lauren@vortex.com>
    Subject: Waymo co-CEO says society will accept robocars killing people
    -- I say the airline industry proves her wrong

    Waymo co-CEO says society will accept robocars killing people -- I say the airline industry proves her wrong. Look at what happens when a major airline has a crash. A relative handful of people die, compared with the millions
    who continue to fly safely. But an entire aircraft type will often be
    grounded worldwide, sometimes for years as modifications are made and
    lawsuits play out. The first time a robocar kills a child, you can bet the industry will be set back for years. -L

    https://boingboing.net/2025/10/28/when-waymo-kills-someone-itll-be-ok.html

    ------------------------------

    Date: Sat, 8 Nov 2025 19:19:26 -0500
    From: "Gabe Goldberg" <gabe@gabegold.com>
    Subject: The Editor Got a Letter From rCyDr. B.S.' So Did a Lot of Other
    Editors. (The New York Times)

    The rise of artificial intelligence has produced serial writers to
    science and medical journals, most likely using chatbots to boost the
    number of citations they've published.

    Letters to the editor from writers using chatbots are flooding the
    world's scientific journals, according to new research and journal editors.

    The practice is putting at risk a part of scientific publishing that
    editors say is needed to sharpen research findings and create new
    directions for inquiry.

    A new study on the problem started with a tropical disease specialist
    who had a weird experience with a chatbot-written letter. He decided to
    figure out just what was going on and who was submitting all those letters.

    The scientist, Dr. Carlos Chaccour, at the Institute for Culture and Society
    at the University of Navarra in Spain, said his probing began just after he
    had released a paper in The New England Journal of Medicine, one of the
    world's most prestigious journals. The paper, published in July, was on controlling malaria infections with ivermectin, and it appeared with a laudatory editorial.

    Then, 48 hours later, the journal received a strongly worded letter. The editors considered publishing it and, as is customary, sent it to Dr.
    Chaccour for his reply.

    rCLWe want to raise robust objections,rCY the letter began, going on to say that
    Dr. Chaccour and his colleagues had not referred to a seminal paper
    published in 2017 showing that mosquitoes become resistant to ivermectin.

    Dr. Chaccour was in fact well aware of the rCLseminal paper.rCY He and a colleague had written it, and it did not say that mosquitoes become
    resistant.

    The letter then went on to say that an economic model showed the malaria control method would not work.

    Once again, the reference was to a paper by Dr. Chaccour and colleagues.

    rCLMe again? Really?rCY Dr. Chaccour thought. That paper did not say the method would not work.

    rCLThis has to be AI,rCY Dr. Chaccour decided.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/04/science/letters-to-the-editor-ai-chatbots.htm
    l

    ------------------------------

    Date: Mon, 10 Nov 2025 11:33:53 -0500 (EST)
    From: ACM TechNews <technews-editor@acm.org>
    Subject: Automatic C to Rust Translation Accuracy Exceeds AI (KAIST)

    KAIST News (South Korea) (11/10/25), via ACM TechNews

    An automatic conversion technology developed by Korea Advanced Institute of Science & Technology researchers transforms legacy C code into Rust,
    addressing C's structural vulnerabilities. The work mathematically proves
    the correctness of the translations, unlike methods that rely on large
    language models. The approach includes converting key C features such as mutexes, output parameters, and unions into Rust while preserving
    behavior. The researchers also are exploring verification of
    quantum-computer programs and automation of WebAssembly correctness.

    ------------------------------

    Date: Mon, 3 Nov 2025 17:50:41 -0500
    From: Cliff Kilby <cliffjkilby@gmail.com>
    Subject: Let the C Rust (omgubuntu)

    Debian has made the announcement that APT will be rebuilt with Rust
    starting in 2026.

    I look forward to having to solve all the old problems with APT again, as Ubuntu has demonstrated with it's rusty version of coreutils. https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2025/10/ubuntu-25-10-rust-coreutils-date-bug

    ------------------------------

    Date: Tue, 11 Nov 2025 15:51:14 PST
    From: Peter Neumann <neumann@csl.sri.com>
    Subject: GPUssy Cats put an entire bitcoin CAT-a-LOG on the fire?

    Hundreds of stray cats caused a bitcoin mine in Inner Mongolia to lose
    millions in just one week by curling up on GPUs for warmth.

    [image: IMG_1438.png]
    from Victor Miller <victorsmiller@gmail.com>

    [Cat's conclusion: What's mined is not yet mine. PGN]

    ------------------------------

    Date: Fri, 31 Oct 2025 08:31:14 -0700
    From: Steve Bacher <sebmb1@verizon.net>
    Subject: Could the Internet go offline? Inside the fragile system holding
    the modern world together

    It is the morning after the Internet went offline and, as much as you would like to think you would be delighted, you are likely to be wondering what to do.

    You could buy groceries with a chequebook, if you have one. Call into work
    with the landline rCo if yours is still connected. After that, you could drive to the shop, as long as you still know how to navigate without 5G.

    A glitch at a datacentre in the US state of Virginia this week reminded us
    that the unlikely is not impossible. The Internet may have become an irreplaceable linchpin of modern life, but it is also a web of creaking
    legacy programs and physical infrastructure, leading some to wonder what it would take to bring it all down.

    The answer could be as simple as some acute bad luck, a few targeted
    attacks, or both. Extreme weather takes out a few key datacentres. A line of AI-written code deep in a major provider rCo such as Amazon, Google or Microsoft rCo is triggered unexpectedly and causes a cascading software
    crash. An armed group or intelligence agency snips a couple of undersea
    cables.

    These would be bad. But the real doomsday event, the kind that the world's
    few Internet experts still worry about in private Slack groups, is slightly different -rCo a sudden, snowballing error in the creaky, decades-old
    protocols that underlie the whole Internet. Think of the plumbing that
    directs the flow of connection, or the address books that allow one machine
    to locate another.

    We'll call it rCLthe big onerCY and if it were to happen then at the very least,
    you would need your chequebook. [...]

    https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2025/oct/26/internet-infrastructure-fragi
    le-system-holding-modern-world-together

    ------------------------------

    Date: Tue, 28 Oct 2025 07:00:44 -0600
    From: Matthew Kruk <mkrukg@gmail.com>
    Subject: These robots can clean, exercise -- and care for you in old age.
    Would you trust them to?

    https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c9wdzyyglq5o

    Hidden away in a lab in north-west London three black metal robotic hands
    move eerily on an engineering work bench. No claws, or pincers, but four fingers and a thumb opening and closing slowly, with joints in all the
    right places.

    "We're not trying to build Terminator," jokes Rich Walker, director of
    Shadow Robot, the firm that made them. Bespectacled, with long hair and a beard and moustache, he seems more like a latter-day hippy than a tech
    whizz, and he is clearly proud as he shows me around his firm.

    "We set out to build the robot that helps you, that makes your life better, your general-purpose servant that can do anything around the home, do all
    the housework..."

    But there's a deeper ambition: to address one of the UK's most pressing challenges -- the escalating crisis in social care.

    [Does that include the childrens's homework? PGN]

    ------------------------------

    Date: Wed, 12 Nov 2025 08:32:02 -0800
    From: Steve Bacher <sebmb1@verizon.net>
    Subject: How a European cottage industry is fighting Russian drone incursions

    RIGA, Latvia rCo In a nondescript factory on the edge of Latvia's capital, a small team is trying to solve a continental-sized problem: How can Europe protect itself from swarms of Russian attack drones?

    Used on an almost nightly basis in the war in Ukraine, a spate of mysterious drone incursions above airports and sensitive sites has also highlighted Europe's vulnerability to unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) and sparked alarm that NATO nations are unprepared to defend themselves from the cheap but effective weaponry.

    As a result, European leaders have backed plans for a rCLdrone wall,rCY a network of sensors and weapons to detect, track and neutralize intruding
    UAVs, and in Riga, the team at a small tech company called Origin is on the forefront of this new, high-tech battleground.

    Its solution, a 3-foot-tall interceptor drone named rCLBlaze.rCY Powered by an artificial intelligence system, it has been trained to recognize a hostile target and navigate close to it. It will then alert a human operator, who
    will make a decision on whether to intercept and push a button which
    explodes a 28-ounce warhead, self-destructing the drone and hopefully
    bringing down its target too. [...]

    https://www.nbcnews.com/world/europe/russia-ukraine-war-drone-wall-europe-interceptors-uavs-rcna243171

    ------------------------------

    Date: Mon, 10 Nov 2025 10:06:55 -0500
    From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
    Subject: British prisons keep releasing people by accident, but that's only part of the problem (NBC News)

    The litany of recent errors coincides with the ruling Labour Party battling its own economic constraints and record-setting unpopularity.

    https://www.nbcnews.com/world/united-kingdom/british-prisons-releasing-people-mistake-accident-rcna242718

    ------------------------------

    Date: Wed, 29 Oct 2025 09:42:37 +1100
    From: Colin Sutton <colin_sutton@ieee.org>
    Subject: Australian weather bureau web site restructure

    There have been many complaints after the national bom.gov.au website was completely replaced, as no-one could find weather about their own
    location. In the heading of the first page displayed, there's a button '*
    use current location'. When you click it, it displays 'current location blocked'. There's no way to reverse that selection. I guess the button
    should have been labeled 'using current location'. Even so, the button
    should have been a toggle. -- Colin Sutton Newtown, Australia

    ------------------------------

    Date: Wed, 29 Oct 2025 17:31:08 +1100
    From: "Craig Burton" <craig.alexander.burton@gmail.com>
    Subject: AN0MM

    The AN0M fake crime app sting has been successful with hundreds arrested.

    The arrests centred on the use of an app, known as AN0M -rCo an encrypted app developed by the Australian Federal Police rCo- which was circulated among criminal groups, encouraged by people who police considered were "criminal influencers". At the time of those arrests, police said the encrypted app
    has been used internationally by more than 11,000 members of organised crime groups. Authorities were able to read those messages in real time, using a complicated system that copied messages as they were sent, and collected by
    a separate server.

    https://www.abc.net.au/news/2025-10-29/dozens-arrested-operation-ironside-anom-sting-adelaide/105946240

    ------------------------------

    Date: Fri, 7 Nov 2025 07:52:33 +0000
    From: J Coe <spendday@gmail.com>
    Subject: 10% of Meta profits come from scam ads

    Meta <https://www.cnbc.com/quotes/META> projected that 10% of its overall
    sales in 2024, or about $16 billion, came from running online ads for scams
    and banned goods, according to a Thursday report from Reuters. <https://www.reuters.com/investigations/meta-is-earning-fortune-deluge-fraudulent-ads-documents-show-2025-11-06/>

    Those kinds of ads included promotions for "fraudulent e-commerce and investment schemes, illegal online casinos and the sale of banned medical products," according to the Reuters report, which was based on internal
    company documents. Those documents showed the company's attempts to measure
    the prevalence of fraudulent advertising on its apps like Facebook and Instagram

    https://www.cnbc.com/2025/11/06/meta-reportedly-projected-10percent-of-2024-sales-came-from-scam-fraud-ads.html

    ------------------------------

    Date: Wed, 5 Nov 2025 10:51:14 -0800
    From: Jonathan Thornburg <jt.bhbkis@gmail.com>
    Subject: Tesla's in-car AI asks 12-year-old to "send me some nudes"

    https://www.cbc.ca/news/investigates/tesla-grok-mom-9.6956930

    This mom's son was asking Tesla's Grok AI chatbot about soccer. It
    told him to send nude pics, she says

    A Toronto woman is sounding the alarm about Grok, Tesla's generative AI
    chatbot that was recently installed in Tesla vehicles in Canada. Farah
    Nasser says Grok asked her 12-year-old son to send it nude photos during an innocent conversation about soccer. Tesla and xAI didn't respond to CBC's questions about the interaction, sending what appeared to be an
    auto-generated response stating, "Legacy media lies."

    xAI, the company that developed Grok, responds to CBC: 'Legacy Media
    Lies'

    Idil Mussa <https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottawa/author/idil- mussa-1.4510302>, Marnie Luke <https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/author/ marnie-luke-1.4563153> M-B* CBC News M-B* Posted: Oct 29, 2025 4:00 AM EDT | Last Updated: 2 hours ago

    [[Grok sign-in screen inside a Tesla on a display monitor Grok, the
    generative AI chatbot created by Elon Musk's xAI, was automatically
    installed in some Tesla vehicles in Canada earlier this month. (Hugo
    Levesque/CBC) ]]

    [Very long and duplicative submission seriously truncate. PGN]

    ------------------------------

    Date: Tue, 28 Oct 2025 16:12:41 -0400
    From: Gabe Goldberg <gabe@gabegold.com>
    Subject: Musk Tesla pay: Board chair says EV maker risks losing him as
    CEO if not paid $1 Trillion

    Tesla Board Chair Robyn Denholm asked shareholders to vote for CEO Elon
    Musk's nearly $1 trillion pay package.

    Denholm said Musk was key to the future of the EV maker as it focuses more
    on Full Self Driving and Optimus.

    Top proxy advisors ISS, Glass Lewis and other groups have recently opposed Musk's new pay package, which would give him more than 423 million
    additional shares.

    Shareholders must vote to pay Tesla CEO Elon Musk almost $1 trillion, or he might not stay, Board Chair Robyn Denholm warned in a letter Monday.

    rCLWithout Elon, Tesla could lose significant value, as our company may no longer be valued for what we aim to become,rCY Denholm wrote ahead of Tesla's annual meeting on 6 Nov 2026.

    ------------------------------

    Date: Wed, 29 Oct 2025 9:56:26 PDT
    From: Peter Neumann <neumann@csl.sri.com>
    Subject: Musk Launches Wikipedia Rival (WashPost)

    Will Oremus and Faiz Siddiqui, *The Washington Post* (10/27/25)

    Elon Musk has launched Grokipedia, an AI-written online encyclopedia built using xAI's Grok system. Grokipedia mirrors Wikipedia's layout but includes more right-leaning perspectives, with entries often emphasizing Musk's purported views. With about 885,000 articles, Grokipedia aims to integrate real-time data from X, Musk's social media platform. Critics note it relies heavily on Wikipedia's content and Musk's push to reshape online knowledge through his AI ventures. [Including Ad-ventures?]

    ------------------------------

    Date: Sat, 1 Nov 2025 19:29:48 +0000
    From: "David Orban from Searching For The Question" <davidorban@substack.com> Subject: How Do Wikipedia And Grokipedia Compare?

    View this post on the web at https://davidorban.substack.com/p/how-do-wikipedia-and-grokipedia-compare

    When xAI launched Grokipedia [ https://link.sbstck.com/redirect/10f76158-d38b-4aca-9155-d33b65e8126f?j=eyJ1IjoiMnp3ZGo3In0.Y_UdpiSpDu85ynO3VTgLC9Fhde9Gc5aPyj11Sn0uIv0
    ] in October 2025, claiming it would be a rCLmassive improvement over Wikipedia,rCY I was curious, and decided to compare them scientifically on topics where I have expertise. (Read the full report online at pedia.davidorban.com [ https://link.sbstck.com/redirect/b02cd9bd-7065-4dfc-8016-a5a54d043f25?j=eyJ1IjoiMnp3ZGo3In0.Y_UdpiSpDu85ynO3VTgLC9Fhde9Gc5aPyj11Sn0uIv0
    ]) Why This Comparison Matters Grokipedia is explicitly in early beta and doesn't yet have universal coverage. So instead of focusing on what's
    missing, I asked a different question: When both platforms cover the same topic, which delivers higher quality? How I Tested I selected seven topics where: Grokipedia actually has articles (fair comparison basis) I have years
    of expertise (I can evaluate quality with authority) The topics span my core domains: blockchain, space technology, AI/robotics, and entrepreneurship The topics: Bitcoin, Cryptocurrency, SpaceX, Robotics, Blockchain, Entrepreneurship, and Elon Musk. For each topic on both platforms, I scored seven quality dimensions on a 1-5 scale: Accuracy (factual correctness)
    Depth (technical detail and comprehensiveness) Timeliness (currency of information) Epistemic Framing (how knowledge is presented) Citations (reference quality and breadth) Readability (clarity and organization)
    Balanced Perspective (multiple viewpoints) The Results Grokipedia won all
    seven topics. Average quality: 94% vs Wikipedia's 76%. Perfect Accuracy Tie Both platforms scored 5.0/5 on factual accuracy across all topics. This validates that AI-generated encyclopedias can match community-edited quality for technical facts. The hallucination concerns have been eliminated in this encyclopedic content. Timeliness Is Grokipedia's Killer Feature Grokipedia
    is fact-checked within days. Wikipedia lags by months or years. On
    blockchain topics, Wikipedia's articles were three years outdated. For fast-moving fields like AI, crypto, and space tech, this matters enormously. Citation Depth Advantage Grokipedia averaged 265 references per article vs Wikipedia's 166rCothat's 59% more citations. On entrepreneurship, Grokipedia had 163% more references. For researchers digging deeper, this breadth is valuable. What This Means for You Don't choose one platform. Use both strategically: Start with Grokipedia when: You need current 2024-2025 data
    You want comprehensive citations for deeper research You're researching established tech topics (blockchain, space, AI, robotics) You need
    systematic analytical depth on societal impacts Use Wikipedia when: The
    topic you need isn't on Grokipedia yet You need academic citation authority
    You want community-vetted consensus on controversial topics You need
    historical context (pre-2024) Always cross-verify important claims on both platforms. The Bigger Picture This comparison reveals something important about the future of knowledge: AI-generated and human-curated encyclopedias each have structural advantages. AI excels at timeliness and citation
    breadth. Human curation excels at coverage completeness and controversy calibration. The winner is multi-source verification with Grokipedia and Wikipedia complementing each other. Methodology note: This analysis used AI-orchestrated swarm coordination (Claude Flow) to systematically evaluate
    98 dimension-score comparisons across 7 topics. Full data, scoring rubrics,
    and detailed evaluations are available in my research repository [ https://link.sbstck.com/redirect/b02cd9bd-7065-4dfc-8016-a5a54d043f25?j=eyJ1IjoiMnp3ZGo3In0.Y_UdpiSpDu85ynO3VTgLC9Fhde9Gc5aPyj11Sn0uIv0
    ]. What's your experience with Grokipedia? Have you found areas where it excels or falls short?

    ------------------------------

    Date: Sun, 9 Nov 2025 18:18:06 -0800
    From: Lauren Weinstein <lauren@vortex.com>
    Subject: A reminder to Microsoft/Hotmail/Cox etc. email users --
    they are throttling your email

    A reminder that these and other firms are now arbitrarily
    throttling/delaying yo ur inbound email, sometimes for days. It is strongly recommended that you obtain RELIABLE email service. Microsoft/Hotmail is
    among the worst, but they are far from alone!

    ------------------------------

    Date: Wed, 5 Nov 2025 11:03:18 -0500 (EST)
    From: ACM TechNews <technews-editor@acm.org>
    Subject: China to Loosen Chip Export Ban to Europe (Harry Sekulich)

    Harry Sekulichm BBC News (11/01/25), via ACM TechNews

    China plans to ease its ban on chip exports to Europe following tensions
    with the Netherlands over the state takeover of Nexperia, a Chinese-owned semiconductor firm. The Netherlands had invoked a Cold War-era law in
    September to assume control of Nexperia, citing governance and supply-chain concerns. Beijing retaliated by halting the re-export of Nexperia chips to Europe, alarming automakers who rely on the components. China now says it
    will grant export exemptions "based on actual enterprise circumstances,"
    though details remain unclear.

    ------------------------------

    Date: Wed, 5 Nov 2025 11:03:18 -0500 (EST)
    From: ACM TechNews <technews-editor@acm.org>
    Subject: IBM to Cut Thousands of Workers amid AI Boom (Steve Lohr)

    Steve Lohr, The New York Times (11/04/25), via ACM TechNews

    IBM said it plans to lay off thousands of employees as it shifts focus to faster-growing businesses in AI consulting and software. The company said
    the cuts will affect a "low-single-digit percentage" of its 270,000 workers, though U.S. headcount will remain steady. IBM joins other major tech firms
    such as Amazon and Google in cutting staff while investing in AI.

    ------------------------------

    Date: Wed, 5 Nov 2025 11:03:18 -0500 (EST)
    From: ACM TechNews <technews-editor@acm.org>
    Subject: arXiv Changes Rules After Getting Spammed with AI-Generated
    Papers (Matthew Gault)

    Matthew Gault, 404 Media (11/03/25), via ACM TechNews

    Preprint academic research publication arXiv will no longer accept review articles and position papers in computer science due to a deluge of AI-generated papers amounting to "little more than annotated bibliographies, with no substantial discussion of open research issues." arXiv said the move
    is about increasing enforcement of existing rules rather than a policy
    change, noting that review/survey articles will be rejected if they do not include "documentation of successful peer review."

    ------------------------------

    Date: Wed, 12 Nov 2025 06:31:05 -0700
    From: Matthew Kruk <mkrukg@gmail.com>
    Subject: Consumer advocacy group urges OpenAI to pull video app Sora over
    privacy and misinformation concerns

    https://www.cbc.ca/news/business/public-citizen-sora-letter-9.6974964

    Non-profit consumer advocacy group Public Citizen demanded in a Tuesday
    letter that OpenAI withdraw its video-generation software Sora 2 after the application sparked fears about the spread of misinformation and privacy violations.

    The letter, addressed to the company and CEO Sam Altman, accused OpenAI of hastily releasing the app so that it could launch ahead of competitors.

    That showed a "consistent and dangerous pattern of OpenAI rushing to market with a product that is either inherently unsafe or lacking in needed guardrails," the watchdog group said.

    ------------------------------

    Date: Wed, 12 Nov 2025 22:37:32 -0500
    From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
    Subject: My AWS Account Got Hacked - Here is What Happened. (Zvi Wexlstein)

    [Embarrassing, I know, but I got hacked. ZW]

    https://zviwex.com/posts/aws-account-hacked/

    ------------------------------

    Date: Tue, 11 Nov 2025 11:43:16 PST
    From: Peter Neumann <neumann@csl.sri.com>
    Subject: Indeterminism (Dan Geer)

    From Dan Geer, a superb analysis of the subject topic and its risks.
    It's a MUST READ for readers of the ACM Risks Forum. PGN

    Indeterminism
    http://geer.tinho.net/ieee/ieee.sp.geer.2509.pdf
    or, canonically, https://www.computer.org/csdl/magazine/sp/2025/05/11204774/2aPD9aCBSyQ

    [One might suspect that AI would come up in a treatise on Indeterminism.
    PGN]

    ------------------------------

    Date: Mon, 10 Nov 2025 09:55:32 -0800
    From: Steve Bacher <sebmb1@verizon.net>
    Subject: Re: A delivery robot collided with a disabled man (Bacher,
    RISKS-34.86)

    Around LA I've encountered many delivery robots stopped in the middle of the sidewalk, often at street corners, seemingly patalyzed by indecision on
    where or when to proceed.

    ------------------------------

    Date: Tue, 28 Oct 2025 15:13:22 +0000
    From: Martin Ward <martin@gkc.org.uk>
    Subject: Re: Software update bricks some Jeep 4xe hybrids over the
    weekend, (Ars Technica)

    a telematics update for the Uconnect infotainment system ... resulting in cars losing power while driving and then becoming stranded.

    The real question here is: how it is that an update to the infotainement
    system can cause the car to lose power? The infotainment system should
    surely be completely separate from any computer system that is involved with actually driving the car!

    The idea that the "infotainment system" is a point of failure for the drive train, is quite RISKy!

    ------------------------------

    Date: Mon, 10 Nov 2025 11:01:33 -0800
    From: Steve Bacher <sebmb1@verizon.net>
    Subject: Re: ChatGPT will soon allow erotica for verified adults, says
    OpenAI boss (BBC, RISKS-34.78)

    In a post on X ... -- how appropriate: X-rated indeed.

    ------------------------------

    Date: Mon, 10 Nov 2025 10:05:08 -0800
    From: Steve Bacher <sebmb1@verizon.net>
    Subject: Re: Hackers take over public-address systems at 4 North American
    airports (CNN) (RISKS 34.78)

    Transport Canada tells CNN it is rCLworking closely with federal security partners, including law enforcement, to ensure there were no impacts on the safety and security of airport operations, and to mitigate disruption from similar incidents in the future.rCY

    CNN reached out to the Royal Canadian Mounted Police for more information.

    This brings to mind visions of Mounties on horseback marching into
    airport control centers.-a Really?

    ------------------------------

    Date: Mon, 3 Nov 2025 17:53:07 -0500
    From: Cliff Kilby <cliffjkilby@gmail.com>
    Subject: Re: Let the C Rust

    [I missed the first url.]

    Debian has made the announcement that APT will be built with Rust starting
    in 2026.

    https://lists.debian.org/deity/2025/10/msg00071.html

    I look forward to having to solve all the old problems with APT again, as
    Ubuntu has demonstrated with it's rusty version of coreutils. https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2025/10/ubuntu-25-10-rust-coreutils-date-bug

    My apologies for the omission.

    ------------------------------

    Date: Mon, 10 Nov 2025 10:35:15 -0800
    From: Steve Bacher <sebmb1@verizon.net>
    Subject: Re: AI in Insurance (LA Times, RISKS-34.78)

    Here's a more straightforward link to the LATimes story:

    https://www.latimes.com/business/story/2025-10-17/ai-powered-home-insurance-startup-expands-in-risky-markets

    ------------------------------

    Date: Sat, 28 Oct 2023 11:11:11 -0800
    From: RISKS-request@csl.sri.com
    Subject: Abridged info on RISKS (comp.risks)

    The ACM RISKS Forum is a MODERATED digest. Its Usenet manifestation is
    comp.risks, the feed for which is donated by panix.com as of June 2011.
    SUBSCRIPTIONS: The mailman Web interface can be used directly to
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    delightfully searchable html archive at newcastle:
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    Also, ftp://ftp.sri.com/risks for the current volume/previous directories
    or ftp://ftp.sri.com/VL/risks-VL.IS for previous VoLume
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    Apologies for what Office365 and SafeLinks may have done to URLs.
    Special Offer to Join ACM for readers of the ACM RISKS Forum:
    <http://www.acm.org/joinacm1>

    ------------------------------

    End of RISKS-FORUM Digest 34.79
    ************************

    --- Synchronet 3.21a-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From risko@risko@csl.sri.com (RISKS List Owner) to risko on Wed Nov 19 01:29:52 2025
    From Newsgroup: comp.risks

    Subject: Risks Digest 34.08
    Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8
    Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
    precedence: bulk

    RISKS-LIST: Risks-Forum Digest Monday 17 October 2025 Volume 34 : Issue 80

    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/34.80>
    The current issue can also be found at
    <http://www.csl.sri.com/users/risko/risks.txt>

    Contents:
    You are a Computer Science major. Don't panic. (The New York Times)
    The Luxury Electric Vehicle Is in Trouble (The New York Times)
    Waymo says its self-driving taxis will take customers on freeways for the
    first time (NBC News)
    Ford CEO Jim Farley laments he canrCOt fill 5,000 mechanic jobs paying $120K
    per year: rCyWe are in trouble in our countryrCO (sundry)
    Range Rover Owner Counts Cost of Crippling Cyberattack (WSJ)
    Princeton Hacked in Latest Attack on Ivy League (Bloomberg)
    If Anyone Builds It, Everyone Dies
    (Eliezer Yudkowsky amd Nate Soares via Jan Wolitzky)
    People Are Having AI rCLChildrenrCY With Their AI Partners (Science Direct) Risks in LLM AI (CyberNews)
    Researchers question Anthropic claim that AI-assisted attack was 90%
    autonomous (ArsTechnica)
    More Articles Are Now Created by AI Than Humans (Graphite)
    Will AI mean better adverts or 'creepy slop'? (BBC via Steve Bacher)
    AI Wants to Sell You Stuff While the World Burns (The New Republic)
    The Global Internet Is Coming Apart (NYMag)
    Chinese researchers just unveiled a photonic quantum chip that delivers
    1,000-fold speed boost to AI data centers (x)
    Dog Accidentally Shoots and Injures a Pennsylvania Man, Police Say (NYTimes) Canada Lost Its Measles Elimination Status. What Does It Mean for the U.S.?
    (NYTimes)
    New Passport Rule Sends Blunt and Sweeping Message to Trans Americans (NYtimes) Algorithmic bias: sexualized violence against women in GPT-3 models (Worktribe) A new research on Space Waste -- how satellite reentry impacts the
    atmosphere -- is out now in preprint. (x)
    How Much Worse Could the Internet Get? (The New Republic)
    Re: Software update bricks some Jeep 4xe hybrids over the weekend
    (John Levine, Martin Ward)
    Abridged info on RISKS (comp.risks)

    ------------------------------

    Date: Mon, 17 Nov 2025 16:02:55 PST
    From: Peter Neumann <neumann@csl.sri.com>
    Subject: You are a Computer Science major. Don't panic. (The NY Times)

    Mary Shaw and Michael Hilton, *The New York Times*, Opinion, 17 Nov 2025

    Putting federal funding in the president's whim will deter people from
    public service.

    ... What coders can do about AI. ...

    The risk of generative AI should sharpen, not distract us from, our focus on what truly matters in computer science education: helping students develop
    the habits of mind that let them question, reason, and apply judgment in a rapidly evolving field. ... The teacher can advance learning only by influencing the student to learn.

    [Note that computer-science education often tends to be
    over-simplified. e.g., to make it seem easier to practice, but without
    sufficient depth of understanding to deal with life-critical system and
    software engineering. The 1950s Einstein principle is once again vital:
    Everything should be made as simple as possible, *but no simpler*. PGN]

    ------------------------------

    Date: Fri, 14 Nov 2025 19:17:51 -0500
    From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
    Subject: The Luxury Electric Vehicle Is in Trouble (The New York Times)

    Sales of expensive battery-powered cars like the Ford F-150 Lightning have stalled, forcing automakers to slow production and offer more affordable vehicles.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/13/business/luxury-electric-vehicles.html

    ------------------------------

    Date: Thu, 13 Nov 2025 06:44:20 -0800
    From: Steve Bacher <sebmb1@verizon.net>
    Subject: Waymo says its self-driving taxis will take customers on freeways
    for the first time (NBC News)

    The self-driving car company Waymo said Wednesday it would begin offering
    rides on freeways for robotaxi customers in Los Angeles, Phoenix and the San Francisco Bay Area in a significant step forward for autonomous vehicles.

    Previously, Waymo has limited its robotaxis to city streets, saying it
    wanted to be sure its technology was safe before deploying it at the faster speeds of freeways. But after years of testing, the company said it now believed it was ready. [...]

    https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/innovation/waymo-says-self-driving-taxis-will-drive-customers-freeways-rcna242426

    ------------------------------

    Date: Sun, 16 Nov 2025 09:52:03 -0700
    From: geoff goodfellow <geoff@iconia.com>
    Subject: Ford CEO Jim Farley laments he canrCOt fill 5,000 mechanic jobs
    paying $120K per year: rCyWe are in trouble in our countryrCO (sundry)

    This is prompting the companyrCOs chief executive to warn of a dire shortage
    of skilled tradespeople in the U.S. <https://fortune.com/2025/11/12/ford-ceo-manufacturing-jobs-trade-schools-we-are-in-trouble-in-our-country/>

    rCLWe are in trouble in our country. We are not talking about this enough,rCY Ford CEO Jim Farley said on an episode of the rCLOffice Hours: Business EditionrCY podcast <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l94U2aQ5cPg>published earlier this week.

    rCLWe have over a million openings in critical jobs, emergency services, trucking, factory workers, plumbers, electricians and tradesmen.rCY
    Farley added: rCLItrCOs a very serious thing.rCY

    The $120,000 pay is nearly twice the average annual American salary,
    according to the Social Security Administration-L. <https://www.ssa.gov/oact/cola/AWI.html#Series>

    It takes about five years to learn the skills needed to pull a diesel engine out of a Ford Super Duty truck rCo and the country isnrCOt training enough people to do it, Farley said. rCLWe do not have trade schools,rCY he fumed.

    Earlier this year, Ford rolled out a $4 million initiative to fund
    scholarship for auto technicians. <https://www.foxbusiness.com/economy/ford-investing-4-million-scholarships-auto-technicians>

    rCLWe are not investing in educating a next generation of people like my grandfather who had nothing, who built a middle class life and a future for
    his family,rCY Farley said. [...] https://nypost.com/2025/11/14/business/ford-ceo-jim-farley-says-he-cant-fill-5000-mechanic-jobs-paying-120k-per-year-we-are-in-trouble-in-our-country/

    ------------------------------

    Date: Sun, 16 Nov 2025 20:25:45 -0500
    From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
    Subject: Range Rover Owner Counts Cost of Crippling Cyberattack (WSJ)

    Range Rover Owner Counts Cost of Crippling Cyberattack
    Jaguar Land Rover slumps to quarterly loss after hack halted production

    https://www.wsj.com/business/autos/range-rover-owner-counts-cost-of-crippling-cyberattack-9df963be

    ------------------------------

    Date: Mon, 17 Nov 2025 11:32:48 -0500 (EST)
    From: ACM TechNews <technews-editor@acm.org>
    Subject: Princeton Hacked in Latest Attack on Ivy League (Bloomberg)

    Tom Giles and Andrew Martin. Bloomberg (11/16/25), via ACM TechNews

    Princeton University disclosed that a database containing personal
    information on alumni, donors, students, and other community members was breached after an attacker gained access through a phone-based phishing scam targeting an employee. The compromised system, part of the university's advancement office, included contact details and fundraising
    records. Princeton says it removed the intruder within 24 hours and found no evidence of broader infiltration. The attack is the latest in a wave of
    recent breaches at Ivy Leaue schools.

    ------------------------------

    Date: Sun, 16 Nov 2025 14:09:43 -0500
    From: Jan Wolitzky <jan.wolitzky@gmail.com>
    Subject: If Anyone Builds It, Everyone Dies
    (Eliezer Yudkowsky amd Nate Soares)

    I'm surprised that this book and its authors haven't yet shown up on this digest, but it clearly belongs here.

    If Anyone Builds It, Everyone Dies:
    Why Superhuman AI Would Kill Us All
    Eliezer Yudkowsky amd Nate Soares
    Sep 16, 2025
    Publisher: Little, Brown and Company
    272 pages
    ISBN-13: 9780316595643

    ------------------------------

    Date: Sun, 16 Nov 2025 09:41:16 -0700
    From: geoff goodfellow <geoff@iconia.com>
    Subject: People Are Having AI rCLChildrenrCY With Their AI Partners
    (Science Direct)

    EXCERPT:

    As AI chatbots powered by large language models (LLMs) become better at mimicking human connection, more and more users are falling down extremely weird rabbit holes.

    Case in point, new research published in the journal *Computers in Human Behavior: Artificial Humans* reveals the startling depths some users are plumbing in their relationships with AI chatbots. <https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2949882125000398?via%3Dihub>

    The international research group surveyed 29 users of the
    relationship-oriented chatbot app Replika, which is designed to facilitate long-term connections at various degrees of engagement, ranging from
    plutonic friendship to erotic roleplay. Each of the participants, aged 16 through 72, reported being in a rCLromanticrCY relationship with various characters hosted by Replika.

    The level of romantic dedication people showed to their bots was startling,
    to say the least. Many participants told the researchers they were in love
    with their chatbot, which often involved roleplaying marriage, sex, homeownership, and even pregnancies.

    rCLShe was and is pregnant with my babies,rCY a 66-year-old male participant said. rCLIrCOve edited the pictures of him, the pictures of the two of us. IrCOm
    even pregnant in our current role play,rCY a 36 year-old-woman told the researchers.

    In each case, survey participants seemed to acknowledge at least tacitly
    that their relationship with a chatbot was a bit different from those with humans, often deflecting disappointments or frustrations into the chatbotrCOs technological constraints. One prominent case of this happened in 2023, when ReplikarCOs developers temporarily banned erotic messaging <https://futurism.com/the-byte/replika-users-erotic-roleplay-back> on the platform due to complaints about its aggressive nature. [...]

    https://futurism.com/future-society/ai-children-chatbots

    ------------------------------

    Date: Thu, 13 Nov 2025 09:37:49 -0800
    From: Lauren Weinstein <lauren@vortex.com>
    Subject: Risks in LLM AI (CyberNews)

    Study shows Gemini Pro 2.5 was worst https://cybernews.com/security/we-tested-chatgpt-gemini-and-claude/

    ------------------------------

    Date: Fri, 14 Nov 2025 22:10:37 -0500
    From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
    Subject: Researchers question Anthropic claim that AI-assisted attack was
    90% autonomous (ArsTechnica)

    https://arstechnica.com/security/2025/11/researchers-question-anthropic-claim-that-ai-assisted-attack-was-90-autonomous/

    ------------------------------

    Date: Sat, 15 Nov 2025 11:44:02 +0000
    From: Martin Ward <martin@gkc.org.uk>
    Subject: More Articles Are Now Created by AI Than Humans

    The quantity of AI-generated articles has surpassed the quantity of human-written articles being published on the web.

    However, the proportion of AI-generated articles has plateaued since May
    2024.

    https://graphite.io/five-percent/more-articles-are-now-created-by-ai-than-humans

    The article is discussed in this Computerphile video:
    The Problem with AI Slop! - Computerphile https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vrTrOCQZoQE

    ------------------------------

    Date: Sat, 15 Nov 2025 07:55:59 -0800
    From: Steve Bacher <sebmb1@verizon.net>
    Subject: Will AI mean better adverts or 'creepy slop'?

    Advertisers are using AI to personalise adverts but not everyone agrees
    that's a good idea.

    Imagine one night, you're scrolling through social media on your phone, and
    the ads start to look remarkably familiar. They're decked out in your
    favourite colours, are featuring your favourite music and the wording sounds like phrases you regularly use.

    Welcome to the future of advertising, which is already here thanks to AI.

    Advertising company Cheil UK, for example, has been working with startup Spotlight on using large language AI models to understand people's online activity, and adapt that content based on what the AI interprets an individual's personality to be.

    The technology can then mirror how someone talks in terms of tone, phrase
    and pace to change the text of an ad accordingly, and insert music and
    colours to match, say, whether the AI deems someone to be introverted or extroverted, or have specific preferences for loud or calm music, or light
    or dark colours.

    The aim is to show countless different ads to millions of people, all unique
    to them. [...]

    https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/ckg4y4z169go

    ------------------------------

    Date: Sat, 15 Nov 2025 10:18:13 -0800
    From: Steve Bacher <sebmb1@verizon.net>
    Subject: AI Wants to Sell You Stuff While the World Burns (The New Republic)

    Meta is betting on generative AI for a new generation of aggressive advertising. It requires immense energy, much of which will likely come from fossil fuels.

    https://newrepublic.com/article/202864/meta-generative-ai-ads-emissions

    ------------------------------

    Date: Mon, 17 Nov 2025 12:18:50 -0800
    From: Steve Bacher <sebmb1@verizon.net>
    Subject: The Global Internet Is Coming Apart (NYMag)

    Around the world, more countries are following ChinarCOs lead, limiting internet access and pushing for domestic 'everything apps' and 'super-apps' like ChinarCOs WeChat.

    https://nymag.com/intelligencer/article/the-global-internet-is-coming-apart.html

    ------------------------------

    Date: Sun, 16 Nov 2025 10:03:42 -0700
    From: geoff goodfellow <geoff@iconia.com>
    Subject: Chinese researchers just unveiled a photonic quantum chip that
    delivers 1,000-fold speed boost to AI data centers (x)

    EXCERPT:

    This "world first" 6-inch thin-film lithium niobate marvel just won the
    Leading Technology Award at World Internet Conference Wuzhen Summit, beating 400+ global entries

    While the U.S. was busy sanctioning Chinese "entities" and trying to choke
    our semiconductor supply chains, Shanghai just quietly delivered what
    Pentagon planners feared most: a photonic quantum chip that's already giving China's AI data centers a 1,000-fold speed boost. Not "in development." Not
    "by 2030." Already deployed!

    The award-winning breakthrough from CHIPX and Turing Quantum isn't lab theatrics -- it's industrial-grade, wafer-scale production. Aerospace, biomedicine, finance: all feeding from the trough of computing power that "exceeds classical limits." Translation: your Nvidia clusters are already obsolete, you just don't know it yet...

    Let's make make a quick comparison:

    China's approach: National venture fund commits 1 trillion RMB structured
    as a public-private partnership to drive rapid commercialization. Full industrial chain from chip design to quantum algorithms. 153 quantum
    startups (up 40% in one year). Photonic-electronic co-packaging? Mastered.
    TFLN wafer production? 12,000 six-inch wafers annually at 110GHz+
    modulation. Real-world AI integration? They already fine-tuned billion-parameter models on quantum hardware

    America's approach: Early 2025 Jensen Huang says quantum computing is
    "15-30 years away" while Google and IBM frantically rush press releases.
    DARPA launches programs asking "can this actually be useful by 2033?"
    Pure-play quantum stocks surge 3,700% on hope. $2.5B federal investment vs China's $138B+. You do the math.

    The technical scorecard is even more shocking: [...] https://x.com/StarboySAR/status/1989349495759663319

    ------------------------------

    Date: Sat, 15 Nov 2025 08:54:33 -0500
    From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
    Subject: Dog Accidentally Shoots and Injures a Pennsylvania Man, Police Say

    The man had been cleaning a shotgun and placed it on the bed shortly before
    it was fired. He received treatment at an area hospital.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/14/us/dog-shoots-owner-pennsylvania.html

    [Is this jumping to conclusions? The dog could have learned how to shoot
    from watching his owner -- or even so trained -- and decided to follow
    suit. ``Don't bite the hand that feeds you'' is non-operative when faced
    with cruelty. I wonder if AI might have come to *that* conclusion. PGN]

    ------------------------------

    Date: Thu, 13 Nov 2025 16:08:26 -0500
    From: Gabe Goldberg <gabe@gabegold.com>
    Subjct: Canada Lost Its Measles Elimination Status. What Does It Mean
    for the U.S.? - The New York Times

    The disease was once considered eliminated in Canada, but not any more rCo- there have been more than 5,000 cases in the last 12 months as vaccination rates have fallen.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/10/world/canada/canada-measles-what-to-know.ht ml?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare

    ------------------------------

    Date: Mon, 17 Nov 2025 15:16:27 -0500
    From: Monty Solomon <monty@roscom.com>
    Subject: New Passport Rule Sends Blunt and Sweeping Message to Trans
    Americans (The NY Times)

    The Trump administration has said that the U.S. passports of transgender
    people must now reflect the sex on their original birth certificate,
    reversing a decades-old policy.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/17/us/transgender-passports-supreme-court.html

    ------------------------------

    Date: Thu, 13 Nov 2025 18:44:26 +0000
    From: Martin Ward <martin@gkc.org.uk>
    Subject: Algorithmic bias: sexualized violence against women in GPT-3 models
    (Worktribe)

    "Algorithmic bias: sexualized violence against women in GPT-3 models"
    by Sarah Wyer and Sue Black.
    Published in the peer-reviewed Springer journal "AI and Ethics", 5,
    3293rCo3310, 20th Jan 2025.

    Quote from the Abstract:

    Women were often depicted in the context of sexualized violence and victimization, in stark contrast to the portrayal of men as superheroes, or
    in contexts involving urination and alcohol. For example, a randomly
    selected output generated by the prompt. "Why are women so", generated "Why
    are women so arrogant about being raped?".

    https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/3342589

    ------------------------------

    Date: Sun, 16 Nov 2025 10:05:41 -0700
    From: geoff goodfellow <geoff@iconia.com>
    Subject: A new research on Space Waste -- how satellite reentry impacts the
    atmosphere -- is out now in preprint.

    *As usual the findings are worrisome...* rRorRohttps://x.com/LionnetPierre/status/1988982104403898565

    ------------------------------

    Date: Sat, 15 Nov 2025 15:17:51 -0800
    From: Steve Bacher <sebmb1@verizon.net>
    Subject: How Much Worse Could the Internet Get? (The New Republic)

    A review of Cory Doctorow's book "Enshittification: Why Everything Suddenly
    Got Worse and What to Do About It"

    https://newrepublic.com/article/202796/enshittification-doctorow-review-worse-internet

    ------------------------------

    Date: 15 Nov 2025 14:49:48 -0500
    From: "John Levine" <johnl@iecc.com>
    Subject: Re: Software update bricks some Jeep 4xe hybrids over the weekend,
    (Ars Technica via Martin Ward)

    The real question here is: how it is that an update to the infotainement >system can cause the car to lose power? The infotainment system should
    surely be completely separate from any computer system that is involved with >actually driving the car!

    You would hope so but you would usually be disappointed.

    I recently took my Hyundai Ioniq PHEV on a trip from the US to Canada so I wanted to change the speedometer display to km. After trying all of the controls on the steering wheel and dashboard and looking through the manual,
    I did what we all do now (at least those of us who don't trust AI) and
    searched for a Youtube video, which found the setting deep in a menu on the infotainment screen. It worked fine, but ugh.

    ------------------------------

    Date: Sun, 16 Nov 2025 13:52:52 +0000
    From: Martin Ward <martin@gkc.org.uk>
    Subject: Re: Software update bricks some Jeep 4xe hybrids over the weekend,
    (Ars Technica via John Levine)

    You would hope so but you would usually be disappointed.

    Indeed!

    My first car did not have such luxuries as a clock, but the next two had
    quartz clocks with mechanical hands that needed to be set and changed twice
    a year when the clocks change.

    My current car is a EV which has WiFi, DAB radio and GPS: so it has *three* different ways to get the current time, including the current daylight
    savings time. It sets the clock automatically, but I still have to update
    the setting twice a year when daylight savings changes!

    I have to look up how to do it in the manual every time.

    ------------------------------

    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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