It’s no secret that the race is on to produce the first 1000TB SSD. At its Tech Day in 2022, Samsung revealed ambitious plans to “stack over 1,000 layers” in its most advanced NAND chip by 2030, meaning a petabyte SSD could arrive by then.
Last year the company dropped hits that it might be in a position to deliver it much sooner, but that looks to have been wishful thinking on the tech industry’s behalf.
That said, it’s clearly full steam ahead on the development of future NAND chips. The South Korean electronics giant recently announced it would commence mass production of its newest 290-layer ninth-generation vertical (V9) NAND chips shortly, and it’s widely expected it will reveal a staggering 430-layer tenth-generation (V10) NAND chip next year.
Hafnia Ferroelectrics
So while we don’t know much about what’s going on behind the scenes in the company’s quest to produce the first Petabyte SSD, some clues have appeared online.
At this year’s VLSI Technology Symposium in Honolulu, there’s going to be a Technical Session presented by Giwuk Kim, a Ph.D student at the department of Electrical Engineering at the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST). His research interests include hafnia-based FE-NAND memory, FeRAM, and In-memory computing application, and this will be the focus of the session, which is titled “In-depth Analysis of the Hafnia Ferroelectrics as a Key Enabler for Low Voltage & QLC 3D VNAND Beyond 1K Layer Experimental Demonstration and Modeling.”
The summary of the work which – spoiler alert – has been co-authored by Samsung Electronics, reads as follows: “We experimentally demonstrate a remarkable performance improvement, boosted by the interaction of charge trapping & ferroelectric (FE) switching effects in metal-band engineered gate interlayer (BE-G.IL)-FE-channel interlayer (Ch.IL)-Si (MIFIS) FeFET. The MIFIS with BE-G.IL (BE-MIFIS) facilitates the maximized ‘positive feedback’ (Posi. FB.) of dual effects, leading to low operation voltage (VPGM/VERS: +17/-15 V), a wide memory window (MW: 10.5 V) and negligible disturb at a biased voltage of 9 V. Furthermore, our proposed model verifies that the performance enhancement of the BE-MIFIS FeFET is attributed to the intensified posi. FB. This work proves that the hafnia FE can play as a key enabler in extending the technology development of 3D VNAND, which is currently approaching a state of stagnation.”
Quite what role Samsung will play in the demonstration (if anything) isn’t known at the moment, but the firm isn’t alone in exploring the potential of hafnia ferroelectrics. Giwuk Kim’s talk is part of a parent session at the symposium titled “Non-Volatile Memory Technology – Hafnia Based Ferroelectrics-1” which will be chaired by Deoksin Kil, Head of Material Development at Samsung’s archrival SK hynix.
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Almost a million people around the world have fallen victim to a highly organized fraud campaign, which scammed them out of some $50 million in the past couple of years.
According to a report from SRLabs, a group of cyber-criminals, supported by a wider network of affiliates, were organized into a crime ring dubbed BogusBazaar. This ring automated the creation and rotation of thousands of fake shopping websites – 22,500 domains, to be exact.
Through these shopping sites, the criminals did two things – steal credit card and other payment data, and steal money.
Well-organized group
Stealing credit card information is as straightforward as one can imagine with fake shopping sites – a person would try to purchase something off the site, they would submit their payment information, and never get the item they ordered. PayPal and Stripe data was stolen from the victims in the same manner.
Stealing money worked in a somewhat different way. Some of the victims actually received an item, albeit not the one they ordered, but rather a cheap copy, or a knock-off.
“The operation of fraudulent webshops is a seemingly small but well-organized crime,” Matthias Marx, a security consultant at SRLabs, told The Register. “As each fraud case has a relatively low volume, the fraudsters seem to have managed to evade the attention of the law enforcement authorities despite earning millions.”
The majority of the victims were located in Western Europe, Australia, and America.
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The worst part is that the campaign is still ongoing, and is decentralized and automated in a way that makes it difficult for law enforcement to fully eliminate. As soon as one website gets taken down, another one takes its place. The attackers often use expired domains with good standing, making spotting fraud even harder at start.
The majority of the fraudsters seem to be operating out of China.
The internet is filled with scammers and fraudsters, looking to steal people’s money and sensitive information. The best way to stay safe is to always make sure you’re buying from trusted sources and official websites. If you know the shop’s website, type the address in the bar instead of searching for it on Google or other search engines.
If you are being redirected to a website, double check the address and make sure it doesn’t have any weird typos or strange-looking characters.
And finally, always use common sense. If something is too good to be true, it most likely is.
Artificial intelligence is clearly going to feature heavily in iOS 18 and all the other software updates Apple is due to tell us about on June 10, and new leaks reveal more about what’s coming in terms of AI later in the year.
These leaks come courtesy of “people familiar with the software” speaking to AppleInsider, and focus on the generative AI capabilities of the Ajax Large Language Model (LLM) that we’ve been hearing about since last year.
AI-powered text summarization – covering everything from websites to messages – will apparently be one of the big new features. We’d previously heard this was coming to Safari, but AppleInsider says this functionality will be available through Siri too.
The idea is you’ll be able to get the key points out of a document, a webpage, or a conversation thread without having to read through it in its entirety – and presumably Apple is going to offer certain assurances about accuracy and reliability.
Fast and private
Expect to hear more about iOS 18 in June (Image credit: Apple / Future)
Ajax will be able to generate responses to some prompts entirely on Apple devices, without sending anything to the cloud, the report says – and that chimes with previous rumors about everything running locally.
That’s good for privacy, and for speed: according to AppleInsider, responses can come back in milliseconds. Tight integration with other Apple apps, including the Contacts app and the Calendar app, is also said to be present.
AppleInsider mentions that privacy warnings will be shown whenever Ajax needs information from another app. If a response from a cloud-based AI is required, it’s rumored that Apple may enlist the help of Google Gemini or OpenAI’s ChatGPT.
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Spotlight on macOS will be getting “more intelligent results and sorting” too, AppleInsider says, and it sounds like most of the apps on iOS and macOS will be getting an AI boost. Expect to hear everything Apple has been working on at WWDC 2024 in June.
The thing about Android TV is that it’s Android, the same operating system used by tablets and smartphones – and that’s good, because it’s very powerful. But it also means that it’s quite complex, and that complexity inevitably leads to the odd loophole. The latest such loophole on Android TVs could potentially let other people access your Gmail, but the good news is that Google is working on a fix for it.
The problem was reported this week by 404 Media, which makes it clear that the problem doesn’t mean your neighbor will suddenly be able to get into your inbox: the other person needs physical access to your TV. But a risk is still a risk, and Google says it’s now working on a fix for the issue.
So how on earth does your TV expose your email? It’s all about the logins.
Why Android TVs can potentially expose your email
The exploit takes advantage of Android’s Google account login, which is what enables you to log in automatically to your apps without having to enter your account details every time you want to use one of your TV’s apps. Those apps don’t include the Chrome browser, but there’s a way around that – and if you can get Chrome onto a TV where the user is logged in, then you can get that browser to open up their Gmail with the same login credentials.
Google told 404 Media that “most Google TV devices running the latest versions of software already do not allow this depicted behavior [but] we are in the process of rolling out a fix to the rest of devices”.
Although this particular exploit isn’t likely to affect many people and will be eliminated fairly soon anyway, it does act as an important reminder that we need to keep even the best TVs up to date with the latest OS and security updates too: it’s easy to forget sometimes that your TV is just a computer with a really big display panel glued to it, and that means it’s potentially vulnerable to the same kind of security issues that all our other devices are potentially vulnerable to.
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Apple’s upcoming iPhone 16 lineup will feature bigger battery capacities compared to previous-generation models with the exception of the iPhone 16 Plus, which will have a smaller battery than its predecessor.
That’s according to the Chinese Weibo-based leaker OvO Baby Sauce OvO, a relatively new source of supply chain leaks with an as-yet unproven track record for accuracy.
The iPhone 16 battery capacity details posted by the Weibo leaker match figures previously shared on X by “Majin Bu,” with the notable addition of a figure for the iPhone 16 Pro model, which Majin Bu omitted. That makes this leak the first time we have been provided with alleged iPhone 16 battery capacity changes across the board.
The figures show that the iPhone 16, iPhone 16 Pro, and iPhone 16 Pro Max will feature larger batteries than their predecessors, but the iPhone 16 Plus is allegedly facing a reduction in terms of battery capacity compared to the iPhone 15 Plus.
Why that would be the case isn’t clear, since apart from the size difference, both the iPhone 16 and the iPhone 16 Plus are expected to have an identical feature set. One possibility is that the capacity reduction turns out to be negligible in real terms thanks to efficiency improvements in other areas. On the other hand, by reducing capacity, Apple could be trying to maximize differentiation between the iPhone 16 Plus and the iPhone 16 Pro Max in an attempt to nudge customers toward the premium features (and prices) of its top tier model.
iPhone 15 Lineup (2023)
iPhone 16 Lineup (2024)
% Change
[Standard]
3,349 mAh
3,561 mAh
+6%
Plus
4,383 mAh
4,006 mAh
-9%
Pro
3,274 mAh
3,355 mAh
+2.5
Pro Max
4,422 mAh
4,676 mAh
+5%
When the iPhone 14 Plus was introduced into Apple’s smartphone lineup to replace the iPhone 13 mini, it gave customers the opportunity to own a device with the same 6.7-inch display as the iPhone 14 Pro Max without paying a premium. In addition, the iPhone 14 Plus also had the advantage of a larger capacity battery than the iPhone 14 Pro Max, allowing Apple to market the device as featuring “our longest battery life.“
However, with the advent of the iPhone 15 series, Apple increased the battery capacity of the iPhone 15 Pro Max to make it the largest battery ever used in an iPhone.
According to another rumor, this year’s iPhone 16 Pro Max will boast an even bigger 30-hour-plus battery life (compared to 29 hours for the iPhone 15 Pro Max). Not only that, both the iPhone 16 Pro and iPhone 16 Pro Max are expected to have slightly larger displays. If Apple does intend to reduce the battery in the iPhone 16 Plus, it would widen the gap further between the two tiers. The iPhone 16 lineup is expected to be announced in the fall.
A photographic archive has been discovered in Lyon, France, that adds precious detail to what we know about the founding of the world’s first police crime laboratory in 1910 and its creator, Edmond Locard, a pioneer of forensic science.
The huge collection, which comprises more than 20,000 glass photographic plates that document the laboratory’s pioneering scientific methods, crime scenes and Locard’s personal correspondence, is thrilling historians at a time when many consider that forensic science has lost its way. “There is a movement to look back to the past for guidance as to how to renew the science of policing,” says Amos Frappa, a historian affiliated with the Sociological Research Centre on Law and Criminal Institutions in Paris, who is overseeing the analysis of the images.
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In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, many people in Europe and beyond were thinking about how criminals might be accurately identified by using techniques such as fingerprint, blood and skeletal analysis. Locard was the first person to create the semblance of forensic science. He established the first scientific lab that came under the aegis of the police, and that was dedicated to studying ‘traces’ of criminal activity collected from crime scenes.
Garage find
The collection of photographic plates almost didn’t survive. It languished for decades in a garage belonging to the National Forensic Police Department in Ecully, a Lyon suburb. In 2005, the glass plates were rescued from the garage and stored in Lyon’s municipal archives. But at the time, the Lyon archives lacked the resources to treat the collection properly, says director Louis Faivre d’Arcier. It wasn’t until 2017 that an inspection revealed that the plates’ gelatine layer containing the image information was, in many cases, infected with mould. After a sorting and decontamination project in 2022, conservators saved around two-thirds of the plates.
Left: A tattooed woman named Marie-Clémentine in 1934; Edmond Locard’s team used tattoos as a way of identifying potential criminals. Right: Handwriting analysis as a means of identification was investigated but later spurned by Locard, who deemed it unreliable.Credit: Archives municipales de Lyon
The mammoth task of digitizing the contents of the fragile plates, which are mostly unindexed and disordered, became possible only when a local publisher and historian of funerary practices, Nicolas Delestre, offered to finance it. In collaboration with the municipal archives, his team developed a photographic protocol to capture as much information from the plates as possible. The digitization will be completed this spring, to coincide with the publication of Frappa’s French-language biography of Locard. The slow rebuilding of the indexes continues.
Locard, who worked in the early to mid-twentieth century, is famous for his maxim, which is usually formulated in English as “Every contact leaves a trace.” Trained as a forensic pathologist, he turned to the study of trace evidence after a French political scandal called the Dreyfus affair, in which a Jewish army officer called Alfred Dreyfus was falsely accused of espionage. During the affair, Locard’s mentor Alphonse Bertillon, who had invented a method of identifying people through bodily measurements, was called on as a handwriting specialist, despite having no expertise in the field. He wrongly identified Dreyfus as the author of an incriminating note.
Forensic science: The soil sleuth
Locard, seeing other countries adopt fingerprint identification, embraced that method instead. In 1910, he set up his laboratory in the attic of Lyon’s main courthouse, and gradually expanded his scientific analyses to include traces such as blood, hair, dust and pollen.
Sherlock Holmes connection
This much was known from published sources, but the photographic archive offers details about the social and intellectual milieu that produced Locard, onthe scientific networks in which he was embedded, and on how his thinking evolved as he experimented and made errors. His exchanges with contemporaries in countries including Germany, Switzerland, Italy and the United States shaped his approach, which might be why he did not consider himself a founder of a new field. But Locard’s ideas — his scientific methods and his insistence on meticulously studying crime scenes — fell on fertile ground in Lyon’s police chiefs and judges, who, unlike their Parisian counterparts, accepted the evidence that such approaches generated. “Lyon was a receptacle,” says Frappa.
Edmond Locard using a photographic bench in the 1920s.Credit: Archives municipales de Lyon
The new collection reveals Locard’s team at work. It captures their equipment and experiments, and the forensic traces they analysed. The close-knit group socialized together, received international visitors and investigated myriad means by which people could be identified. One way was to look at people’s tattoos, and the collection contains a large set of tattoo images. Locard took inspiration from many sources, including the Lyon-based Lumière brothers, who were pioneers of cinematography, and the creator of the fictional detective Sherlock Holmes, Arthur Conan Doyle, with whom he corresponded. In time, Locard discarded some techniques — notably, handwriting analysis — deeming them unreliable.
Since 2009, when a report from the US National Research Council found that many modern forensic techniques were inadequately grounded in science, the discipline has struggled to reorient itself. “By the late 20th century, it’s fair to say that forensic science had become an adjunct of law enforcement without allegiance to science,” says Simon Cole, who studies criminology, law and society at the University of California, Irvine, and directs the US National Registry of Exonerations. Cole has written about the problems with fingerprint identification, and last year reported on the fallibility of microscopic hair comparison. These techniques are routinely used to investigate crimes in the United States and elsewhere, and the evidence they generate is admissible in court.
Modern troubles
The 2009 report suggested that improving forensic science would require larger labs in which diverse specialists were insulated from each other and from the police to prevent bias. The trouble with that view, says Olivier Ribaux, director of the School of Criminal Sciences at the University of Lausanne in Switzerland, is that, when considering the potentially infinite number of traces that a crime scene can generate, some subjective selection by humans is inevitable. To ensure that this selection is as informative and as unbiased as possible, the forensic scientist must understand a trace in its context — as Locard’s maxim in French originally implied. “The problem with the big labs is that they have severed the connection with the crime scene,” Ribaux says.
He favours an alternative model in which smaller labs employ generalists, who can oversee specialists in certain fields, such as ballistics and DNA, but can also offer a more holistic view of a case. These generalists would work closely with the police — a return to Locard’s approach, in other words. But the two aren’t mutually exclusive, Ribaux says. They are just snapshots of the ongoing debate about how the field should reinvent itself.
That debate will surely be fuelled by the emerging portrait of Locard, sometimes dubbed the French Sherlock Holmes, whom Frappa describes as “a man so visionary he predicted, correctly, that he would be forgotten”.
Marvel has all but confirmed that Galactus will be the primary villain of its forthcoming Fantastic Four movie.
Today (April 4), the comic book giant ostensibly revealed that the planet-devouring deity would be the big bad of The Fantastic 4, which is set to launch in theaters in July 2025. The apparent announcement was surprisingly shadow-dropped on Marvel’s social media channels, where the Disney subsidiary revealed a brand-new poster depicting Johnny Storm/The Human Torch to celebrate 4-4 Day, aka April 4.
🔥🔥🔥🔥 #TheFantasticFour Celebrate 4-4 Day at: https://t.co/0L6vmfvKPN pic.twitter.com/byRvjcbsNfApril 4, 2024
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Okay, so how does this promotional art confirm that Galactus will feature in Marvel’s Fantastic Four reboot? It doesn’t, but the accompanying link to a page titled ‘Future Foundation’ does. Clicking on said link is supposed to take you to a Fantastic Four movie-based page but, at the time of writing at least, viewers have been greeted with a 404 page. However, if you click on the image of the supergroup’s helpful android Herbie, you’ll be redirected to the ‘Future Foundation’ page.
There, fans are welcomed as ‘delegates’ to the aforementioned webpage, which shows five key Fantastic Four-starring comic book issues that appear to be the biggest influences on the team’s Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) debut. Clicking on each comic book cover opens a new page where you can read said issues for free via Marvel Unlimited.
But I digress. The five issues in question – Fantastic Four #1 and #48 through #50 (all released in 1961) and Fantastic Four: Life Story #1 (published in May 2021) – suggest they’ll not only serve as the introductory inspiration to the group’s MCU arrival, but also that Galactus will by the film’s primary antagonist. Indeed, Fantastic Four issues #48 to #50 make up a three-part arc where Galactus arrives with the aim of consuming Earth to sustain his life force. Standing in his way are the Fantastic Four, who – spoilers – locate a supremely powerful weapon that scares off Galactus and keeps Earth safe from harm.
A Herald of darkness – and a 1960s setting
It’s increasingly likely that The Fantastic 4 will be set in the 1960s. (Image credit: Marvel Comics)
Galactus’ positioning as The Fantastic 4‘s villain-in-chief isn’t a complete surprise. Yesterday (April 3), Deadline reported that a gender-swapped version of The Silver Surfer – one of Galactus’ so-called Heralds (his servants, essentially) – will play a prominent role in the Marvel Phase 5 flick.
Julia Garner, who some readers might know as Ruth Langmore from Netflix‘s Ozark TV show, will portray the character. They’ll reportedly go by the name Shalla-Bal, an existing Marvel character with ties to the Silver Surfer in the comics. It seems, though, that Marvel will retool Shalla Bal as a multiversal iteration of Silver Surfer for the forthcoming movie. If this proves to be the case, it’ll be further proof that The Fantastic 4 is an MCU film that’s largely set in an alternate dimension – a storytelling device that fits into Marvel’s wider multiverse-centric plan for Phases 4 through 6.
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More evidence for this fan theory can be found in Marvel’s tease concerning the influence that Fantastic Four: Life Story will have on the movie’s plot. Indeed, #1 of this multi-comic story is set in the 1960s, which was already teased in The Fantastic 4‘s first MCU poster in mid-February. Considering the iconic quartet have been conspicuous by their absence in the MCU so far – there’s been no mention of them up to this point in any Marvel project – it would make sense that they exist in another universe. My guess? The group’s reality might be destroyed by Galactus and they’ll seek refuge in the MCU, aka on Earth-616, save this world from Galactus (who might follow them through whatever dimensional portal they use to escape), and decide to stay in this realm.
With production finally ramping up on The Fantastic 4 after years of intense rumors, it’s high time we learned more details – concrete or otherwise – about one of the most anticipated Marvel movies in years. Indeed, with Marvel finally confirming its Fantastic Four cast, release date, and new title (also in mid-February), as well as teasing what’ll inspire the superhero film, fans of the beloved superteam are certainly eating well.
It’ll be over a year before The Fantastic 4 is with us. In the meantime, you can watch the group’s other big-screen adventures on Disney Plus.
Apple researchers have developed a new method for training large language models (LLMs) that seamlessly integrates both text and visual information.
The company’s findings, detailed in a research paper titled “MM1: Methods, Analysis & Insights from Multimodal LLM Pre-training,” showcase a new approach to creating more intelligent and flexible AI systems. By utilizing a diverse dataset comprising image-caption pairs, interleaved image-text documents, and text-only data, Apple’s claims that the MM1 model sets a new standard in AI’s ability to perform tasks such as image captioning, visual question answering, and natural language inference with a high level of accuracy.
Apple’s research focuses on the combination of different types of training data and model architectures, which enables the AI to understand and generate language based on a mix of visual and linguistic cues. This capability is vital for tasks that require a nuanced comprehension of the world, such as interpreting complex images or answering questions that involve visual elements.
The paper also highlights the MM1 model’s exceptional in-context learning abilities, particularly in the largest 30 billion parameter configuration of the model. This version apparently exhibits remarkable capabilities for multi-step reasoning over multiple images using few-shot “chain-of-thought” prompting, a technique that allows the AI to perform complex, open-ended problem solving based on minimal examples.
This research emerges as part of Apple’s broader initiative to enhance its AI capabilities amid growing competition. Earlier today, Bloomberg‘s Mark Gurmanreported that Apple is in discussions with Google to license Google’s Gemini generative large-language models to power new features coming to the iPhone as part of iOS 18.
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The 2024 iPad Pro is generating quite the buzz, and for good reason. If you’re keen to know what Apple has up its sleeve for its next flagship tablet, you’re in the right place. The latest insights from ZONEofTECH sheds light on what we can expect, from design tweaks to performance boosts. Let’s delve into the details.
The first thing you’ll notice about the 2024 iPad Pro models is their sleeker profile. Apple is pushing the boundaries of thinness, with the 11-inch model slimming down by 13.5% to a mere 5.1mm, and the 12.9-inch variant getting a 21.8% reduction to 5mm. This makes them the slimmest flagship tablets you can get your hands on. Alongside a weight reduction—especially notable in the larger model—the iPads will see a minor increase in height and width adjustments. The display on the 12.9-inch model will grow to 13 inches, optimizing your viewing experience without compromising portability.
A significant ergonomic improvement is the orientation of Face ID, which will now favor landscape mode. This tweak reflects how most users interact with their iPads, particularly when typing or viewing media. Additionally, MagSafe wireless charging is making its debut, hinting at a possible design overhaul on the iPad’s back to accommodate this feature.
The leap to OLED technology for both models marks a pivotal upgrade. This move promises enhanced brightness and contrast, a boon for users who crave vivid visuals. The 11-inch and 13-inch displays are expected to feature Apple’s cutting-edge stacked OLED technology. This tech could rival the MacBook Pro’s brightness levels, peaking at an impressive 1600 nits. Behind the scenes, tech giants Samsung and LG are reported to be the driving forces manufacturing these advanced screens.
New gadgets are on the horizon to complement your iPad Pro experience. Anticipate a revamped Apple Pencil, rumored to boast magnetic tips and a novel real-world color picker feature. The Magic Keyboard is also getting a facelift with an aluminum top, an enlarged trackpad, and potentially added function keys alongside a lighter build.
While details are sparse, upgrades to match the iPhone 15’s camera capabilities, including 48-megapixel photos and spatial video recording, are anticipated. Storage may also see a boost, with rumors hinting at capacities up to 4TB.
Quality comes at a price, and the 2024 iPad Pro is no exception. A predicted $160 price hike places the starting figures at $949 for the 11-inch model and $1,249 for the 13-inch variant. Despite this, the enhancements in display, Face ID, sound quality, and pencil support present a compelling value proposition against counterparts like the MacBook Air.
The 2024 iPad Pro is poised to redefine what we expect from premium tablets, blending refined aesthetics with cutting-edge technology. From its ultra-thin design to the powerful M3 chip and OLED display advancements, Apple is setting a new standard. Whether you’re an artist, professional, or tech enthusiast, these upgrades promise to enhance your digital experience.
Source & Image Credit: ZONEofTECH
Filed Under: Apple, Apple iPad, Top News
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Elon Musk is concerned that OpenAI they’ve strayed from their original path, prioritizing profits over the open-source and non-profit ideals Musk envisioned at the beginning. This is a lawsuit about principles, about the direction of artificial intelligence, and about what happens when a vision for the future of technology is at risk of being compromised.
Back in 2015, Elon Musk, along with other tech visionaries, set up OpenAI with a clear mission: to advance digital intelligence in a way that could benefit humanity as a whole. Elon Musk even put in $50 million to kickstart this venture. The goal was to develop artificial intelligence that was open to all—not locked away behind corporate doors. But now, it seems things have taken a different turn.
On February 29, 2024, Elon Musk filed a lawsuit against OpenAI. His claim? That they’ve veered off course, becoming more focused on making money than on the greater good. One of Elon Musk’s main gripes is their exclusive partnership with Microsoft regarding the GPT-3 technology. Elon Musk sees this as a betrayal, a move away from the open sharing of AI advancements that Musk had intended.
Elon Musk lawsuit against OpenAI
Elon Musk’s worries don’t stop there. He is also uneasy about the makeup of OpenAI’s board. It appears to Elon Musk that they’ve been reshaped to prioritize commercial success over the public’s interest. Musk is questioning the motives of co-founder Sam Altman, wondering if his investment decisions are truly aligned with the organization’s philanthropic roots.
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The stakes of this lawsuit are incredibly high. If OpenAI has indeed developed Artificial General Intelligence, or AGI, the ramifications could be enormous. AGI has the potential to transform industries, economies, and societies. But who governs this technology? Who ensures it’s used responsibly? These are the questions at the heart of his legal challenge.
The world of AI has been buzzing with excitement over recent breakthroughs, particularly in deep learning and Transformer algorithms. These advancements have opened up new possibilities, but they’ve also sparked a debate about whether AI technology should be open-source or proprietary. Elon Musk’s lawsuit brings this debate into the spotlight, forcing the tech community to confront the ethical implications of AI development.
Elon Musk not just fighting for the soul of OpenAI; he is also fighting for the future of AI itself. Elon Musk believes that developers have a responsibility to balance innovation with the public’s welfare. The direction that OpenAI takes could set a precedent for how AI is managed and deployed globally.
This legal battle isn’t just about one company or one technology. It’s about setting the course for how AI will evolve and how it will affect humanity. It’s a reminder that with great power comes great responsibility, and that those who lead the charge in technological advancement must always consider the broader impact of their actions.
As this case unfolds, it will undoubtedly shape the conversation around ethical AI. It will force us to ask tough questions about the role of AI in society and how we can harness its potential for the common good. The outcome of this lawsuit will have far-reaching implications, influencing not just OpenAI’s trajectory but the future of AI development worldwide.
So, as you watch this legal drama play out, remember that it’s not just about corporate disputes or technological secrets. It’s about the vision we have for our future and the kind of world we want to live in. It’s about ensuring that as we step boldly into the age of artificial intelligence, we do so with our eyes wide open, guided by principles that put humanity first.
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