A college kid’s fake, AI-generated blog fooled tens of thousands. This is how he made it.

https://www.technologyreview.com/2020/08/14/1006780/ai-gpt-3-fake-blog-reached-top-of-hacker-news/

At the start of the week, Liam Porr had only heard of GPT-3. By the end, the college student had used the AI model to produce an entirely fake blog under a fake name.

It was meant as a fun experiment. But then one of his posts found its way to the number-one spot on Hacker News. Few people noticed that his blog was completely AI-generated. Some even hit “Subscribe.”

While many have speculated about how GPT-3, the most powerful language-generating AI tool to date, could affect content production, this is one of the only known cases to illustrate the potential. What stood out most about the experience, says Porr, who studies computer science at the University of California, Berkeley: “It was super easy, actually, which was the scary part.”

GPT-3 is OpenAI’s latest and largest language AI model, which the San Francisco–based research lab  began drip-feeding out in mid-July. In February of last year, OpenAI made headlines with GPT-2, an earlier version of the algorithm, which it announced it would withhold for fear it would be abused. The decision immediately sparked a backlash, as researchers accused the lab of pulling a stunt. By November, the lab had reversed position and released the model, saying it had detected “no strong evidence of misuse so far.”

The lab took a different approach with GPT-3; it neither withheld it nor granted public access. Instead, it gave the algorithm to select researchers who applied for a private beta, with the goal of gathering their feedback and commercializing the technology by the end of the year.

Porr submitted an application. He filled out a form with a simple questionnaire about his intended use. But he also didn’t wait around. After reaching out to several members of the Berkeley AI community, he quickly found a PhD student who already had access. Once the graduate student agreed to collaborate, Porr wrote a small script for him to run. It gave GPT-3 the headline and introduction for a blog post and had it spit out several completed versions. Porr’s first post (the one that charted on Hacker News), and every post after, was a direct copy-and-paste from one of outputs.

“From the time that I thought of the idea and got in contact with the PhD student to me actually creating the blog and the first blog going viral—it took maybe a couple of hours,” he says.

A screenshot of one of Liam Porr's fake blog posts at #1 on Hacker News.
Porr’s fake blog post, written under the fake name “adolos,” reaches #1 on Hacker News.
SCREENSHOT / LIAM PORR

The trick to generating content without the need for editing was understanding GPT-3’s strengths and weaknesses. “It’s quite good at making pretty language, and it’s not very good at being logical and rational,” says Porr. So he picked a popular blog category that doesn’t require rigorous logic: productivity and self-help.

From there, he wrote his headlines following a simple formula: he’d scroll around on Medium and Hacker News to see what was performing in those categories and put together something relatively similar. “Feeling unproductive? Maybe you should stop overthinking,” he wrote for one. “Boldness and creativity trumps intelligence,” he wrote for another. On a few occasions, the headlines didn’t work out. But as long as he stayed on the right topics, the process was easy.

After two weeks of nearly daily posts, he retired the project with one final, cryptic, self-written message. Titled “What I would do with GPT-3 if I had no ethics,” it described his process as a hypothetical. The same day, he also posted a more straightforward confession on his real blog.

A screenshot of someone on Hacker News accusing the Porr's blog post of being written by GPT-3. Another user responds that the comment "isn't acceptable."
The few people who grew suspicious of Porr’s fake blog were downvoted by other members in the community.
SCREENSHOT / LIAM PORR

Porr says he wanted to prove that GPT-3 could be passed off as a human writer. Indeed, despite the algorithm’s somewhat weird writing pattern and occasional errors, only three or four of the dozens of people who commented on his top post on Hacker News raised suspicions that it might have been generated by an algorithm. All those comments were immediately downvoted by other community members.

For experts, this has long been the worry raised by such language-generating algorithms. Ever since OpenAI first announced GPT-2, people have speculated that it was vulnerable to abuse. In its own blog post, the lab focused on the AI tool’s potential to be weaponized as a mass producer of misinformation. Others have wondered whether it could be used to churn out spam posts full of relevant keywords to game Google.

Porr says his experiment also shows a more mundane but still troubling alternative: people could use the tool to generate a lot of clickbait content. “It’s possible that there’s gonna just be a flood of mediocre blog content because now the barrier to entry is so easy,” he says. “I think the value of online content is going to be reduced a lot.”

Porr plans to do more experiments with GPT-3. But he’s still waiting to get access from OpenAI. “It’s possible that they’re upset that I did this,” he says. “I mean, it’s a little silly.”

via Technology Review Feed – Tech Review Top Stories https://ift.tt/1XdUwhl

August 14, 2020 at 04:32AM

Intel Xe HPG Discrete Gaming GPU Coming 2021

https://www.legitreviews.com/intel-xe-hpg-discrete-gaming-gpu-coming-2021_221214


The Intel Xe GPU was announced by Intel back in 2018 and we have all be waiting patiently to see just how powerful Xe graphics is going to be. Intel will be using Xe in a wide range of applications from integrated solutions all the way up to dedicated cards that will be deployed in HPC/AI environments. Intel has long said that a dedicated card would be launched in the middle of 2020, but they never really said what that product was going to actually be. Then at CES 2020, Legit Reviews was able to actually see the first discrete development board codenamed DG1 in action. Intel was touting it as a software development vehicle that would help developers try out the brand new instruction set that Intel Xe runs.

Intel Xe HPG GPU For Gamers

During the Intel Architeture Day 2020 briefings, Raja Koduri addressed enthusiast gamers with regards to where they fit into the mix with Intel Xe graphics. The gaming side of the Xe GPU powerhouse will be delivered under the Xe HPG series. Intel Xe HPG solutions will have dedicated hardware ray-tracing support and be produced by a non-Intel fab for the time being. This means that Intel could possibly be using TSMC to produce the wafers for Xe HPG GPUs, which is ironically the same fab that creates AMD Radeon and NVIDIA GeForce GPUs.

Intel Xe HPG Has Raytracing

AMD and NVIDIA have some time to get ready though as Raja Koduri said that Intel Xe HPG dedicated cards will ship sometime in 2021. Intel also failed to clarify if discrete solutions would be available for both desktop and mobile form factors at launch.

Intel Xe Execution Units

Intel’s Xe graphics will have up to 48 texels (similar to an image pixel), 96 EUs (execution units), 1536 flops (floating-point calculations), and up to 16MB of L3 cache, as well as twice the amount of memory bandwidth. The GPU engine is about 1.5x larger than Intel’s Gen 11 graphics, and offers up to 1,536 FLOPS, up to 48 texels, and up to 24 pixels per clock, through three pipelines. The vector lanes are up from 8 to 16, and it features a more efficient thread controller, along with improved color and depth compression algorithms with end-to-end compression, to optimize bandwidth usage.

Intel Gen 11 Execution Units

The current Intel UHD Graphics 630 solution is based on the Gen 11 architecture and has 64 EUs offering 1,024 FLOPS, so you have 50% more execution units and those have drastically changed.

Intel has designed the Xe microarchitecture from scratch to ensure you’ll be able to play more game titles on an Intel GPU than ever before.

Intel Xe Running BF1

Intel showed off a 15W implementation of Xe LP (Low P0wer) technology running several major games during the briefing. Game titles included Doom Eternal, Grid and Battlefield 1. Video clips of actual gameplay footage was run showing how much better the Intel Xe graphics was versus current 25W Gen11 graphics solution. The Intel Xe LP integrated graphics solution was able to run the games at a higher frame rate to deliver a smoother gaming experience.

Intel Xe GPU Trasnscoding Performance

Intel also did a bunch of work on the media and display engines on Intel Xe. The Intel Xe LP media engine retains a similar architecture to that in Gen11, but both the encode and decode performance is up by nearly two times in some cases, and across multiple formats; 444, 422, 420.

Intel Xe Media Engine

Intel is now offering AV1 decoder and HEVC screen content coding support. There is also 4K and 8K 60Hz support along with HDR 10,  Dolby Vision, and 12-bit BT2020 color support. Intel even added support for 360Hz refresh rates and Adaptive Sync!

Intel DG1 Discrete Graphics Card System

We can’t wait to see how Intel Xe HPG discrete graphics perform in 2021, but thankfully we’ll soon have a chance to try out Intel Xe LP graphics in Intel’s upcoming 10nm ‘Tiger Lake’ processors. Intel Tiger Lake mobile processors will be coming to market later this year and will be the first to contain Xe LP graphics.

via Legit Reviews Hardware Articles https://ift.tt/2Y6Fy3O

August 13, 2020 at 11:11AM

A smartphone case that can crawl to a wireless charger

https://geekologie.com/2020/08/a-smartphone-case-that-can-crawl-to-a-wi.php

crawling-smartphone-case.jpg
Researchers from the Seoul National University Biorobotics Laboratory have developed a lightweight and low-profile crawling phone case robot. The legs retract flat when not in use, keeping the form factor as small as possible. According to IEEE Spectrum:

To move the robot forward, a linkage (attached to a motor through a gearbox) pushes the leg back against the ground, as the knee joint keeps the leg straight. On the return stroke, the joint allows the leg to fold, making it compliant so that it doesn’t exert force on the ground. The transmission that sends power from the gearbox to the legs is just 1.5-millimeter thick, but this incredibly thin and lightweight mechanical structure is quite powerful. A non-phone case version of the robot, weighing about 23 g, is able to crawl at 21 centimeters per second while carrying a payload of just over 300 g. That’s more than 13 times its body weight.

Okay, so it can’t technically choose where to crawl, it can sort of just vibrate itself in a relative forward motion. However, it’s not hard to imagine this thing with enough sensors to actually make it functional enough to crawl to a charging pad or, better yet, into your hand. Sure, right now it looks like a disgusting vibrating phone monster, but imagine if that disgusting vibrating phone monster could also think. No matter where you go, you look over your shoulder and there’s your phone. Sitting. Waiting. Plotting. Keep going for video of the case in action.

via Geekologie – Gadgets, Gizmos, and Awesome https://geekologie.com/

August 13, 2020 at 08:17AM

Snapchat’s latest custom Lenses are designed for dancing videos

https://www.engadget.com/snapchat-full-body-tracking-lens-studio-update-115018395.html

Snap has updated its Lens Studio platform so artists and developers can create custom Lenses — the company’s term for AR experiences — that leverage full body tracking. Snapchat’s maker has created two templates, Full Body Triggers and Full Body Attachments, that can conjure up various effects based on what the user is doing inside the frame. As a tutorial video explains, these include toggling virtual objects, playing short pieces of animation and particle bursts. Before, developers could use a Skeletal template to track eight points on the upper body. The new templates, meanwhile, can monitor 18 points including the user’s knees and ankles.

There’s an obvious application for these new developer tools: dance videos. The genre has always been popular across various social platforms including YouTube and Instagram. TikTok’s monumental rise, however, and the ongoing coronavirus pandemic — which has forced many to stay indoors and find new ways to entertain themselves — has encouraged people to create even more body-grooving clips. It’s no surprise, therefore, that Snapchat wants to support the trend with new artist and developer tools. If you don’t want to download and learn Lens Studio, fear not: Snapchat has already released four creator-made Lenses — Star Burst, Be You, Alone and Be Happy — that you can try right now in the app.

The Lens Studio update follows a long period of slow but steady growth for the company. Snapchat had 238 million daily active users last quarter, up 35 million year-over-year and nine million higher than the previous quarter. The company has quietly improved Spectacles, launched an app platform called Snap Minis and responded to rivals like TikTok by brokering deals with music labels and allowing users to share their Stories on other platforms. It hasn’t all been smooth sailing, though. The company released yet another insensitive filter — this time telling people to "smile and break the chains" — for Juneteenth a couple of months back. Following user backlash, the overlay was pulled and Snapchat issued an apology.

via Engadget http://www.engadget.com

August 14, 2020 at 07:00AM

Citizens of Mauritius are cleaning up a major oil spill themselves

https://www.popsci.com/story/environment/mauritius-oil-spill/

Mauritius' clear waters are currently muddied by oil

Mauritius’ clear waters are currently muddied by oil (bg62/Pixabay/)

When a huge freighter aground on the coast of Mauritius cracked open last Thursday, August 6, David Sauvage took immediate action. He called up his friends and team members from Rezistans ek Alternativ, a local group of environmental and political activists, and got to work.

The born and bred Mauritian, who is a software engineer by day, knew that they could not wait for a government-run clean up. After all, the Japanese carrier ship MV Wakashio had been stuck sitting on their reefs since July 25. Sauvage and his team worked through Thursday night, using plastic bottles, sugarcane leaves, and recycled construction materials to construct DIY oil booms, floating barriers that can help collect and contain spilt fuel. They deployed their homemade booms on Friday morning, and put out an open call to the community to join them in their efforts.

“Very quickly we had thousands of people helping us along the southeast coast,” says Sauvage. “Hope is found in the people of Mauritius. All kinds of different people came to join our open factory of volunteers. We spend nights and days together now working on cleaning the oil.”

More than 1,000 tonnes of black, slick oil have spilled into the island nation’s waters off the coast of Pointe d’Esny, near a marine park. Even after about 500 tonnes were pumped out via helicopter, the freighter still holds about 2,000 more tonnes of oil that needs to be pumped out immediately, before the ship breaks and leaks any further. But the oil is already creeping up the coast.

“There’s no doubt that the ecological impacts and environmental impacts are massive,” says Yuvan Beejadhur, a Mauritian and the leader of EnForce Maurice!, a local citizen-led movement for sustainability. This huge swath of coastline will be polluted for years, if not decades, Beejadhur says—the coral, crabs, birds, fishes, and people will all suffer for it. “We’re talking about 20 kilometers of dark beaches. It’s shocking and disturbing.”

The Mauritian government declared a state of emergency on August 7, 13 days after the ship first ran aground. Prime Minister Pravind Jugnaut appealed to the French and Japanese governments to assist with the spill, and told the BBC that the small island nation did not have "the skills and expertise to refloat stranded ships."

Even with the government waiting to defer to outside expertise, Beejadhur says that all of this action has been much too slow. “12 days is a lifetime in these kinds of incidents.” Even before the ship broke open, he says, there should have been plans in place to remove the oil and preemptively protect Mauritius’ valuable coastal environment. Now, because of this spill, everyone will be affected, he says—the fishermen will be impacted economically, the community will have to breathe in those fumes, and all of this piles on top of the COVID-19 pandemic.

France has since sent military aircrafts with pollution control equipment, and Japan sent a six-person team of experts to help France. Meanwhile, the Mauritius police obtained a warrant to investigate the ship’s log book and determine the root of the collision.

Satellite tracking shows that the MV Wakashio entered Mauritius national waters on July 23, almost 48 hours prior to hitting the reef. Not only that, but the ship had actually been on a collision course with Mauritius for several days prior to grounding. A huge freighter colliding into a country like this is entirely preventable, so this incident raises several questions: The government should have been on alert as soon as this ship entered Mauritian waters, says Beejadhur, but why was no one paying attention? Why didn’t anyone see the ship coming, he asks, and how could those on board have failed to see that it was going to hit us?

This is especially frustrating since this has happened before, says Sauvage, referring to a similar ship grounding from 2016. Their volunteer efforts mobilized quickly and are making an impact, but he says they are no replacement for proper official action.

“We fight to protect our commons: the sand dunes, lagoons, reefs, and wetlands,” Sauvage says. “It is amazing to see all people banding together, but it’s so bad…I can’t describe it. We are sad and we are angry.”

via Popular Science – New Technology, Science News, The Future Now https://www.popsci.com

August 12, 2020 at 07:09AM

Google Lens’ new ‘Homework’ filter will solve math problems from a photo

https://www.engadget.com/google-lens-socratic-math-problems-102931355.html

Google has been giving students — and their parents — a few helpful tools to make studying from home a bit easier. Back in May, it launched an augmented reality feature within Search that lets you view 3D anatomy models and cellular structures. And soon the tech giant will help you solve math problems simply by taking a photo of them using Google Lens.

The company is using technology from mobile learning app Socratic, which it acquired last year, to power the upcoming Lens feature. When it arrives, all you’ll need to do is snap a pic of your study material and then highlight an equation or a particular problem you can’t seem to solve to get quick access to step-by-step guides and detailed explainers. The idea is to make it easy to look up mathematical concepts giving you trouble, since you need to be able to understand them to be able to apply them. Google didn’t say when the Lens feature will roll out, but Socratic itself is available as standalone apps for iOS and Android.

In addition, Google has also announced that Search now has nearly 100 STEM-related 3D objects you can explore. If you search for “Quantum mechanical model,” for instance, you’ll be able to observe a 3D atom model superimposed against your environment. Jennifer Holland, Google’s Director of Program Management for Education, has also highlighted other tools that can help students who need to stay home due to the pandemic. She touched upon Read Along, which could foster kids’ love for reading, Google Meet’s live caption and a smart speaker feature called Family Bell that can keep you on track by announcing when it’s time to start an online class and when it’s time to take a break.

via Engadget http://www.engadget.com

August 12, 2020 at 05:36AM

People Are Cutting Off Their Hair to Soak Up the Mauritius Oil Spill

https://earther.gizmodo.com/people-are-cutting-off-their-hair-to-soak-up-the-maurit-1844678880


People scoop leaked oil near Blue bay Marine Park in southeast Mauritius on August 9, 2020
Photo: L’Express Maurice (Getty Images)

In an attempt to stave off ecological disaster, Mauritius residents are cutting off their own hair to soak up an oil spill that began off the coast of the island nation in late July.

The crisis that forced the government to declare a “state of environmental emergency” began when a Japanese ship started leaking tons of fuel oil into the Indian Ocean. The flow of oil has stopped, but officials are now rushing to drain an estimated 2,500 tons of oil from the bulk carrier before it breaks in half and further pollutes the water.

The commodities vessel has leaked some 1,000 metric tons of oil into the sea. Residents of the small nation are doing whatever they can to contain the oil, making booms from sugar cane leaves, plastic bottles, old stockings, and even, somewhat alarmingly, human hair that people are voluntarily cutting off.

Because human hair absorbs oil but not water, scientists have for years suggested it as a material to contain oil spills into water bodies. Now, Mauritians have launched a campaign to collect massive quantities of human hair across the island for this purpose.

G/O Media may get a commission

All over the nation, hairdressers are reportedly offering free haircuts to residents. Some abroad are also choosing to cut off their locks and ship it over to be used to soak up the fuel. All this hair can then be sewn into tubes and nets which float on the water, corralling the oil.

On the one hand, this is all very inspiring—communities are coming together in a bizarre show of mutual aid. But on the other, they shouldn’t need to do so. After all, this isn’t the first oil spill the world has seen. Oil tankers, it turns out, sometimes leak. When they do, the effects can be devastating for people, animals, and entire ecosystems—just look at what happened during oil company BP’s 2010 Deepwater Horizon disaster.

This emergency is especially scary for a small country like Mauritius. Its economy is heavily dependent on its beautiful beaches that tourists flock to. Many residents are also dependent on fishing for food and income, but marine life is now in peril. Since the oil spilled near the country’s Blue Bay Marine Park, it is also threatening local coral, fish, and other marine life species. The fuel is also spreading near delicate, biodiverse wetlands, which protect the country from sea level rise.

The country has declared a state of emergency, and its former colonizer ruler France has sent aid. The ship’s operator, the Mitsui OSK Line, has also apologized for the accident. But it’s clear that an apology isn’t enough. Neither are the noble efforts to collect donations of human hair. We need to stop using oil. As if we needed any more evidence of that.

via Gizmodo https://gizmodo.com

August 10, 2020 at 05:51PM