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NDSS 2025 - Statically Discover Cross-Entry Use-After-Free Vulnerabilities In The Linux Kernel - Security Boulevard
NDSS 2025 - Statically Discover Cross-Entry Use-After-Free Vulnerabilities In The Linux Kernel Security Boulevard
Categories: Linux
NDSS 2025 - Statically Discover Cross-Entry Use-After-Free Vulnerabilities In The Linux Kernel - Security Boulevard
NDSS 2025 - Statically Discover Cross-Entry Use-After-Free Vulnerabilities In The Linux Kernel Security Boulevard
Categories: Linux
US government warns Linux flaw is now being exploited for ransomware attacks - TechRadar
Categories: Linux
arXiv Changes Rules After Getting Spammed With AI-Generated 'Research' Papers
An anonymous reader shares a report: arXiv, a preprint publication for academic research that has become particularly important for AI research, has announced it will no longer accept computer science articles and papers that haven't been vetted by an academic journal or a conference. Why? A tide of AI slop has flooded the computer science category with low-effort papers that are "little more than annotated bibliographies, with no substantial discussion of open research issues," according to a press release about the change.
arXiv has become a critical place for preprint and open access scientific research to be published. Many major scientific discoveries are published on arXiv before they finish the peer review process and are published in other, peer-reviewed journals. For that reason, it's become an important place for new breaking discoveries and has become particularly important for research in fast-moving fields such as AI and machine learning (though there are also sometimes preprint, non-peer-reviewed papers there that get hyped but ultimately don't pass peer review muster). The site is a repository of knowledge where academics upload PDFs of their latest research for public consumption. It publishes papers on physics, mathematics, biology, economics, statistics, and computer science and the research is vetted by moderators who are subject matter experts.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Chrome now helps you fill in passport, driver’s license, vehicle information and more.Chrome now helps you fill in passport, driver’s license, vehicle information and more.Senior Product Manager, Chrome
Chrome already saves you time every day by securely filling in your addresses, passwords and payment information. Today, we’re making it even more helpful. For desktop u…
Categories: Technology
Palantir Thinks College Might Be a Waste. So It's Hiring High-School Grads.
Palantir launched a fellowship that recruited high school graduates directly into full-time work, bypassing college entirely. The company received more than 500 applications and selected 22 for the inaugural class. The four-month program began with seminars on Western civilization, U.S. history, and leaders including Abraham Lincoln and Winston Churchill. Fellows then embedded in client teams working on live projects for hospitals, insurance companies, defense contractors, and government agencies.
CEO Alex Karp, who studied at Haverford and Stanford, said in August that hiring university students now means hiring people engaged in "platitudes." The program wraps up in November. Palantir executives said they had a clear sense by the third or fourth week of which fellows were succeeding in the company environment. Fellows who perform well will receive offers for permanent positions without college degrees.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Microsoft AI Chief Says Only Biological Beings Can Be Conscious
Microsoft AI chief Mustafa Suleyman says only biological beings are capable of consciousness, and that developers and researchers should stop pursuing projects that suggest otherwise. From a report: "I don't think that is work that people should be doing," Suleyman told CNBC in an interview this week at the AfroTech Conference in Houston, where he was among the keynote speakers. "If you ask the wrong question, you end up with the wrong answer. I think it's totally the wrong question."
Suleyman, Microsoft's top executive working on artificial intelligence, has been one of the leading voices in the rapidly emerging field to speak out against the prospect of seemingly conscious AI, or AI services that can convince humans they're capable of suffering.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
5 obscure Linux distros you've probably never heard of - but should definitely try - ZDNET
Categories: Linux
Nearly a third of Steam users are still using Windows 10, and Linux usage hits new milestone - PC Guide
Nearly a third of Steam users are still using Windows 10, and Linux usage hits new milestone PC Guide
Categories: Linux
Xi Quips About Backdoors During Xiaomi Phone Gift To Korea's Lee
An anonymous reader shares a report: Chinese President Xi Jinping joked about security backdoors while presenting a pair of Xiaomi smartphones to his South Korean counterpart, a rare moment of spontaneous levity captured during a week of tense trade negotiations with Donald Trump.
Xi, in South Korea to meet Trump on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit, presented the pair of devices to Korean President Lee Jae Myung. In a video circulated on social media, Lee asked: "Is the line secure?" Xi chuckled, pointed at the gadgets and replied through an interpreter: "You can check if there's a backdoor." The two leaders burst into laughter.
The exchange was striking because the issue of security and alleged espionage is a sensitive one and a major thorn in US-Chinese relations. American lawmakers have raised the possibility that tech companies such as Huawei build backdoors -- ways to gain access to sensitive data -- into their equipment or services, something the firms have repeatedly denied.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
OpenAI Signs $38 Billion Cloud Deal With Amazon
OpenAI will pay Amazon $38 billion for computing power in a seven-year deal that marks the companies' first partnership. Amazon expects all of the computing capacity negotiated as part of the agreement will be available to OpenAI by the end of next year. The ChatGPT maker will train new AI models using Amazon's data centers and use them to process user queries.
The deal is small compared with OpenAI's $300 billion agreement with Oracle and its $250 billion commitment to Microsoft. OpenAI ended its exclusive cloud-computing partnership with Microsoft last month and has since signed almost $600 billion in new cloud commitments. Amazon Web Services is the industry's largest cloud provider, but Microsoft and Google have reported faster cloud-revenue growth in recent years after capturing new demand from AI customers.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.