Ексватажок «ДНР» просив перевести його під домашній арешт, заявивши, що не може втекти за кордон через розшук Інтерполу
…
A “cybersecurity issue” led to the shutdown of some casino and hotel computer systems at MGM Resorts International properties across the U.S., a company official reported Monday.
The incident began Sunday and the extent of its effect on reservation systems and casino floors in Las Vegas and states including Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Mississippi, New Jersey, New York and Ohio was not immediately known, company spokesman Brian Ahern said.
“MGM Resorts recently identified a cybersecurity issue affecting some of the company’s systems,” the company said in a statement that pointed to an investigation involving external cybersecurity experts and notifications to law enforcement agencies.
The nature of the issue was not described, but the statement said efforts to protect data included “shutting down certain systems.” It said the investigation was continuing.
A post on the company website said the site was down. It listed telephone numbers to reach the reservation system and properties.
A post on the company’s BetMGM website in Nevada acknowledged that some customers were unable to log on.
The company has tens of thousands of hotel rooms in Las Vegas at properties including the MGM Grand, Bellagio, Cosmopolitan, Aria, New York-New York, Park MGM, Excalibur, Luxor, Mandalay Bay and Delano.
It also operates properties in China and Macau.
…
DuckDuckGo, which has long complained that Google’s tactics have made it too tough to get people to use their search engine on a mobile phone, will be one of many rivals to the online search giant eyeing a once-in-a-generation antitrust trial set to begin Tuesday.
The United States will argue Google didn’t play by the rules in its efforts to dominate online search in a trial seen as a battle for the soul of the Internet.
The U.S. Justice Department is expected to detail how Google paid billions of dollars annually to device makers like Apple Inc. AAPL.O, wireless companies like AT&T T.N and browser makers like Mozilla to keep Google’s search engine atop the leader board.
DuckDuckGo has also complained, for example, that removing Google as the default search engine on a device and replacing it with DuckDuckGo takes too many steps, helping keep them to a measly 2.3% market share.
DuckDuckGo, MicrosoftMSFT.O and Yahoo are among a long list of Google competitors who will be watching the trial closely.
“Google makes it unduly difficult to use DuckDuckGo by default. We’re glad this issue is finally going to have its day in court,” said DuckDuckGo spokesman Kamyl Bazbaz who said that Google had a “stranglehold on major distribution points for more than a decade.”
Google has denied wrongdoing and is prepared to vigorously defend itself.
The legal fight has huge implications for Big Tech, which has been accused of buying or strangling small competitors but has insulated itself against many accusations of breaking antitrust law because the services the companies provide to users are free, as in the case of Alphabet’s Google GOOGL.O and Facebook META.O, or low price, as in the case of Amazon.com AMZN.O.
“It would be difficult to overstate the importance of this case, particularly for monopolies and companies with significant market share,” antitrust lawyer Luke Hasskamp told Reuters.
“This will be a major case, particularly for the major tech companies of the world (Google, Apple, Twitter, and others), which have grown to have an outsized role in nearly all our lives,” he added.
Previous antitrust trials of similar importance include Microsoft, filed in 1998, and AT&T, filed in 1974. The AT&T breakup in 1982 is credited with paving the way for the modern cell phone industry while the fight with Microsoft is credited with opening space for Google and others on the internet.
Congress tried to rein in Big Tech last year but largely missed. It considered bills to check the market power of the companies, like legislation to prevent them from preferencing their own products, but failed to pass the most aggressive of them.
Big Tech’s rivals now pin their hope on Judge Amit Mehta, who was nominated by former President Barack Obama to the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia.
The lawsuit that goes to trial was brought by former President Donald Trump’s Justice Department. In a rare show of bipartisan agreement, President Joe Biden’s Justice Department has pressed on with the lawsuit and filed a second one against Google in January focused on advertising technology.
Judge Mehta will decide if Google has broken antitrust law in this first trial, and, if so, what should be done. The government has asked the judge to order Google to stop any illegal activity but also urged “structural relief as needed,” raising the possibility that the tech giant could be ordered broken up.
The government’s strongest arguments are those against Google’s revenue sharing agreements with Android makers, which requires Google to be the only search on the smartphone in exchange for a percentage of search advertising revenue, said Daniel McCuaig, a partner at Cohen Milstein who was formerly with the U.S. Justice Department’s Antitrust Division.
…
Спеціальний потяг, який, імовірно, перевозить лідера Північної Кореї Кім Чен Ина, схоже, вирушив до Росії, повідомили в понеділок представники уряду Південної Кореї.
«Органи розвідки вважають, що поїзд, який, ймовірно, перевозить Кім Чен Ина, рухається до Владивостока», – сказав посадовець розвідки Південної Кореї інформаційному агентству Yonhap.
Поки ні з Пхеньяна, ні з Москви офіційної інформації про можливу поїздку Ина до Росії немає. Якщо поїзд лідера КНДР дійсно їде до Владивостока, то ця поїздка може триватиме 20 годин або й більше.
Президент РФ Володимир Путін тим часом прибув до Владивостока для участі у Східному економічному форумі. Це найближче велике місто Росії біля кордону з КНДР.
Північна Корея – одна з дуже небагатьох країн світу, які відкрито підтримали Кремль від початку збройного вторгнення в Україну. Радник президента США з національної безпеки Джейк Салліван раніше констатував, що переговори про постачання зброї між Москвою та Пхеньяном «активно просуваються», і попередив лідера КНДР, що його країні доведеться дорого заплатити за постачання Росії зброї для застосування на фронті в Україні.
Наприкінці липня цього року до Північної Кореї приїжджав міністр оборони Росією Сергій Шойгу. Метою його поїздки називалося «зміцнення військових зв’язків» між двома державами.
…
As young children went back to school across Sweden last month, many of their teachers were putting a new emphasis on printed books, quiet reading time and handwriting practice and devoting less time to tablets, independent online research and keyboarding skills.
The return to more traditional ways of learning is a response to politicians and experts questioning whether the country’s hyper-digitalized approach to education, including the introduction of tablets in nursery schools, had led to a decline in basic skills.
Swedish Minister for Schools Lotta Edholm, who took office 11 months ago as part of a new center-right coalition government, was one of the biggest critics of the all-out embrace of technology.
“Sweden’s students need more textbooks,” Edholm said in March. “Physical books are important for student learning.”
The minister announced last month in a statement that the government wants to reverse the decision by the National Agency for Education to make digital devices mandatory in preschools. It plans to go further and to completely end digital learning for children under age 6, the ministry also told The Associated Press.
Although the country’s students score above the European average for reading ability, an international assessment of fourth-grade reading levels, the Progress in International Reading Literacy Study, highlighted a decline among Sweden’s children between 2016 and 2021.
In 2021, Swedish fourth-graders averaged 544 points, a drop from the 555 average in 2016. However, their performance still placed the country in a tie with Taiwan for the seventh-highest overall test score.
In comparison, Singapore — which topped the rankings — improved its PIRLS reading scores from 576 to 587 during the same period, and England’s average reading achievement score fell only slightly, from 559 in 2016 to 558 in 2021.
Some learning deficits may have resulted from the coronavirus pandemic or reflect a growing number of immigrant students who don’t speak Swedish as their first language, but an overuse of screens during school lessons may cause youngsters to fall behind in core subjects, education experts say.
“There’s clear scientific evidence that digital tools impair rather than enhance student learning,” Sweden’s Karolinska Institute said in a statement last month on the country’s national digitalization strategy in education.
“We believe the focus should return to acquiring knowledge through printed textbooks and teacher expertise, rather than acquiring knowledge primarily from freely available digital sources that have not been vetted for accuracy,” said the institute, a highly respected medical school focused on research.
The rapid adoption of digital learning tools also has drawn concern from the United Nations’ education and culture agency.
In a report published last month, UNESCO issued an “urgent call for appropriate use of technology in education.” The report urges countries to speed up internet connections at schools, but at the same time warns that technology in education should be implemented in a way so that it never replaces in-person, teacher-led instruction and supports the shared objective of quality education for all.
In the Swedish capital, Stockholm, 9-year-old Liveon Palmer, a third-grader at Djurgardsskolan elementary school, expressed his approval of spending more school hours offline.
“I like writing more in school, like on paper, because it just feels better, you know,” he told the AP during a recent visit.
His teacher, Catarina Branelius, said she was selective about asking students to use tablets during her lessons even before the national-level scrutiny.
“I use tablets in math and we are doing some apps, but I don’t use tablets for writing text,” Branelius said. Students under age 10 “need time and practice and exercise in handwriting … before you introduce them to write on a tablet.”
Online instruction is a hotly debated subject across Europe and other parts of the West. Poland, for instance, just launched a program to give a government-funded laptop to each student starting in fourth grade in hopes of making the country more technologically competitive.
In the United States, the coronavirus pandemic pushed public schools to provide millions of laptops purchased with federal pandemic relief money to primary and secondary students. But there is still a digital divide, which is part of the reason why American schools tend to use both print and digital textbooks, said Sean Ryan, president of the U.S. school division at textbook publisher McGraw Hill.
“In places where there is not connectivity at home, educators are loath to lean into digital because they’re thinking about their most vulnerable (students) and making sure they have the same access to education as everyone else,” Ryan said.
Germany, which is one of the wealthiest countries in Europe, has been famously slow in moving government programs and information of all kinds online, including education. The state of digitalization in schools also varies among the country’s 16 states, which are in charge of their own curricula.
Many students can complete their schooling without any kind of required digital instruction, such as coding. Some parents worry their children may not be able to compete in the job market with technologically better-trained young people from other countries.
Sascha Lobo, a German writer and consultant who focuses on the internet, thinks a national effort is needed to bring German students up to speed or the country will risk falling behind in the future.
“If we don’t manage to make education digital, to learn how digitalization works, then we will no longer be a prosperous country 20 years from now,” he said in an interview with public broadcaster ZDF late last year.
To counter Sweden’s decline in fourth-grade reading performance, the Swedish government announced an investment worth $64.7 million in book purchases for the country’s schools this year. Another 500 million kronor will be spent annually in 2024 and 2025 to speed up the return of textbooks to schools.
Not all experts are convinced Sweden’s back-to-basics push is exclusively about what’s best for students.
Criticizing the effects of technology is “a popular move with conservative politicians,” Neil Selwyn, a professor of education at Monash University in Melbourne, Australia, said. “It’s a neat way of saying or signaling a commitment to traditional values.”
“The Swedish government does have a valid point when saying that there is no evidence for technology improving learning, but I think that’s because there is no straightforward evidence of what works with technology,” Selwyn added. “Technology is just one part of a really complex network of factors in education.”
…
Міністерство закордонних справ Румунії викликало тимчасового повіреного у справах РФ через виявлення нових уламків безпілотника на території країни.
Як йдеться у пресрелізі МЗС, румунська сторона висловила протест через порушення свого повітряного простору після виявлення «фрагментів безпілотників, подібних до тих, які використовують російські війська» у війні проти України.
Також там засудили «систематичні, невиправдані та жорстокі» атаки РФ на українське населення та цивільну інфраструктуру.
Реакція МЗС з’явилася після того, як президент Румунії Клаус Йоганніс заявив у суботу, що ідентифікація нових фрагментів безпілотника на кордоні Румунії з Україною є абсолютно неприйнятним порушенням суверенного повітряного простору Румунії, союзника НАТО.
У своїй заяві Йоганніс сказав, що «він поінформував генерального секретаря НАТО Єнса Столтенберґа про уламки безпілотника – другого, що впав на території Румунії цього тижня – і що Столтенберг підтвердив повну солідарність Альянсу з Румунією».
Раніше перед тим, у Міністерстві оборони Румунії 9 вересня розповіли, що «нові фрагменти безпілотника, подібного до тих, що використовувалися російськими військовими для обстрілу українських портів на Дунаї, були знайдені на території країни».
ще 5 вересня президент Румунії – члена НАТО – Клаус Йоганніс повторював тези Міністерства оборони цієї країни про те, що жоден безпілотник, зокрема – російський, не впав на території Румунії.
4 вересня українська влада заявила, що російський безпілотник впав на територію Румунії після атак РФ на порт Ізмаїл. У МЗС України навіть заявили про готовність надати відповідні фотодокази. Але влада Румунії інформацію на той час заперечувала. Міністр оборони Ангел Тілвар тоді заявив, що «жодного разу засоби нападу, застосовані Російською Федерацією, не створювали прямих військових загроз території або територіальним водам Румунії».
Наприкінці квітня Міністерство оборони Польщі повідомило, що в місті Замость неподалік Бидгоща знайдено «залишки невпізнаного військового об’єкта». За даними польських ЗМІ, найімовірніше, це була російська ракета, запущена з території Білорусі в бік України ще в середині грудня минулого року.
Якраз тоді під час масованого обстрілу України на радарах був зафіксований об’єкт, що прилетів до Польщі з Білорусі. За повідомленнями, його втратили з поля зору біля міста Бидгоща, а подальші пошуки не дали результатів. Саме в цьому районі згодом знайшли уламки ракети, схожої на російську Х-55. Польська армія таких ракет на озброєнні не має.
Коментуючи той інцидент, міністр оборони Польщі Маріуш Блащак сказав, що військові йому про це не доповіли.
…
Атака безпілотниками російського аеродрому у глибокому тилу майже напевно була здійснена з території Росії, йдеться в повідомленні Міноборони Британії з посиланням на дані розвідки.
«Через обмежену дальність дії БПЛА атаки на базу (у Псковській області РФ) майже напевно було здійснено з території Російської Федерації… Історично склалося так, що знищити БПЛА за допомогою вогню зі стрілецької зброї виявляється важко, тому російським силам, як і раніше, будуть потрібні системи ППО з можливістю спостереження, а також кінетичні та електронні засоби перехоплення для знищення атакуючих БПЛА», – йдеться в повідомленні.
Британська розвідка звертає увагу, що влада Псковської області організувала добровільчі патрулі для запобігання подальшим атакам безпілотників. Повідомляється, що близько 800 громадян записалися до патрулів.
«Створення таких добровільчих патрулів безпеки, найімовірніше, стане стримуючим фактором і забезпечить певний рівень захисту від БПЛА безпосередньо в районі поблизу авіабази», – йдеться в огляді.
Британська сторона зауважує, що використання таких волонтерів, ймовірно, вказує на нестачу підготовлених співробітників служб безпеки у РФ.
Раніше і керівник Головного управління розвідки (ГУР) Міноборони України Кирило Буданов заявив, що безпілотники, які атакували авіабазу в російському Пскові, були запущені з території Росії.
У ніч на 30 серпня авіабаза у Пскові зазнала ударів БПЛА. В результаті атаки на Псков було пошкоджено кілька російських військово-транспортних літаків.
…
The cost of building an artificial intelligence product like ChatGPT can be hard to measure.
But one thing Microsoft-backed OpenAI needed for its technology was plenty of water, pulled from the watershed of the Raccoon and Des Moines rivers in central Iowa to cool a powerful supercomputer as it helped teach its AI systems how to mimic human writing.
As they race to capitalize on a craze for generative AI, leading tech developers, including Microsoft, OpenAI and Google, have acknowledged that growing demand for their AI tools carries hefty costs, from expensive semiconductors to an increase in water consumption.
But they’re often secretive about the specifics. Few people in Iowa knew about its status as a birthplace of OpenAI’s most advanced large language model, GPT-4, before a top Microsoft executive said in a speech it “was literally made next to cornfields west of Des Moines.”
Building a large language model requires analyzing patterns across a huge trove of human-written text. All that computing takes a lot of electricity and generates a lot of heat. To keep it cool on hot days, data centers need to pump in water — often to a cooling tower outside its warehouse-sized buildings.
In its latest environmental report, Microsoft disclosed that its global water consumption spiked 34% from 2021 to 2022 (to nearly 1.7 billion gallons, or more than 2,500 Olympic-sized swimming pools), a sharp increase compared to previous years that outside researchers tie to its AI research.
“It’s fair to say the majority of the growth is due to AI,” including “its heavy investment in generative AI and partnership with OpenAI,” said Shaolei Ren, a researcher at the University of California, Riverside, who has been trying to calculate the environmental impact of generative AI products such as ChatGPT.
In a paper due to be published later this year, Ren’s team estimates ChatGPT gulps up 500 milliliters of water (close to what’s in a 16-ounce water bottle) every time you ask it a series of between 5 to 50 prompts or questions. The range varies depending on where its servers are located and the season. The estimate includes indirect water usage that the companies don’t measure — such as to cool power plants that supply the data centers with electricity.
“Most people are not aware of the resource usage underlying ChatGPT,” Ren said. “If you’re not aware of the resource usage, then there’s no way that we can help conserve the resources.”
Google reported a 20% growth in water use in the same period, which Ren also largely attributes to its AI work. Google’s spike wasn’t uniform — it was steady in Oregon, where its water use has attracted public attention, while doubling outside Las Vegas. It was also thirsty in Iowa, drawing more potable water to its Council Bluffs data centers than anywhere else.
In response to questions from The Associated Press, Microsoft said in a statement this week that it is investing in research to measure AI’s energy and carbon footprint “while working on ways to make large systems more efficient, in both training and application.”
“We will continue to monitor our emissions, accelerate progress while increasing our use of clean energy to power data centers, purchasing renewable energy, and other efforts to meet our sustainability goals of being carbon negative, water positive and zero waste by 2030,” the company’s statement said.
OpenAI echoed those comments in its own statement Friday, saying it’s giving “considerable thought” to the best use of computing power.
“We recognize training large models can be energy and water-intensive” and work to improve efficiencies, it said.
Microsoft made its first $1 billion investment in San Francisco-based OpenAI in 2019, more than two years before the startup introduced ChatGPT and sparked worldwide fascination with AI advancements. As part of the deal, the software giant would supply computing power needed to train the AI models.
To do at least some of that work, the two companies looked to West Des Moines, Iowa, a city of 68,000 people where Microsoft has been amassing data centers to power its cloud computing services for more than a decade. Its fourth and fifth data centers are due to open there later this year.
“They’re building them as fast as they can,” said Steve Gaer, who was the city’s mayor when Microsoft came to town. Gaer said the company was attracted to the city’s commitment to building public infrastructure and contributed a “staggering” sum of money through tax payments that support that investment.
“But, you know, they were pretty secretive on what they’re doing out there,” he said.
Microsoft first said it was developing one of the world’s most powerful supercomputers for OpenAI in 2020, declining to reveal its location to the AP at the time but describing it as a “single system” with more than 285,000 cores of conventional semiconductors and 10,000 graphics processors — a kind of chip that’s become crucial to AI workloads.
Experts have said it can make sense to “pretrain” an AI model at a single location because of the large amounts of data that need to be transferred between computing cores.
It wasn’t until late May that Microsoft’s president, Brad Smith, disclosed that it had built its “advanced AI supercomputing data center” in Iowa, exclusively to enable OpenAI to train what has become its fourth-generation model, GPT-4. The model now powers premium versions of ChatGPT and some of Microsoft’s own products and has accelerated a debate about containing AI’s societal risks.
“It was made by these extraordinary engineers in California, but it was really made in Iowa,” Smith said.
In some ways, West Des Moines is a relatively efficient place to train a powerful AI system, especially compared to Microsoft’s data centers in Arizona, which consume far more water for the same computing demand.
“So if you are developing AI models within Microsoft, then you should schedule your training in Iowa instead of in Arizona,” Ren said. “In terms of training, there’s no difference. In terms of water consumption or energy consumption, there’s a big difference.”
For much of the year, Iowa’s weather is cool enough for Microsoft to use outside air to keep the supercomputer running properly and vent heat out of the building. Only when the temperature exceeds 29.3 degrees Celsius (about 85 degrees Fahrenheit) does it withdraw water, the company has said in a public disclosure.
…