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AI kill switches have been proposed by several academic institutions to prevent that whole Skynet thing from playing out
By Andy Edser published
news Everyone likes a big red "Emergency Stop" button, don't they?
Reddit's set to rake in $60M per year in a deal with an unnamed AI company to train future models on its 20 years' worth of user generated content
By Nick Evanson published
news In the eyes of AI, it would seem that nothing is ever truly yours once it's posted online.
Turns out speedrunning Windows installs is a thing, so why not spare 106 seconds to watch the world's most 'heart-pounding' record attempt?
By Nick Evanson published
news That's quicker than it takes me to make a cup of coffee. Or even drink it.
Five new Steam games you probably missed (February 19, 2024)
By Shaun Prescott published
New on Steam Sorting through every new game on Steam so you don't have to.
The Epic Games Store gave away nearly 586 million games in 2023, as 40 million new PC users joined the platform across the year
By Rick Lane published
News Epic aims to add a new download manager and support for third-party subscription services to the storefront in 2024.
An AI-generated image of a rat with unfeasibly large genitals made it into a peer-reviewed article, along with the caption 'dck'
By Andy Edser published
news Peer-reviewed it may have been, but I get a feeling those peers may have scanned a little too quickly over the images here.
We'll never be free from AI paranoia, so as long as the burden of detective work keeps falling to the masses
By Harvey Randall published
FAKE FATIGUE I want to put my pipe and deerstalker hat away for five minutes.
OpenAI unveils powerful, creepy new text-to-video generator that it calls 'a foundation for models that can understand and simulate the real world'
By Tyler Wilde published
news Sora is another step on the road to "artificial general intelligence," the ChatGPT company says.
Even the US Department of Defence is not immune to data breaches as 20,000 individuals are notified of a Microsoft cloud email leak
By Andy Edser published
news The US government still relies on cloud email servers like the rest of us, and a certain amount of beans appears to have been spilled.
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