At last, someone is doing something about the weather…
https://news.bitcoin.com/a-hair-dryer-may-have-gamed-a-paris-weather-sensor-for-34000-on-polymarket/
A Hair Dryer May Have Gamed a Paris Weather Sensor for $34,000 on Polymarket
… The complaint follows two temperature anomalies at the CDG station. On April 6, the sensor recorded a jump of roughly 4 degrees Celsius within 12 minutes at approximately 6:30 p.m., briefly reaching 22.5 degrees Celsius before returning to normal. On April 15 at approximately 9:30 p.m., the reading climbed to 22 degrees Celsius under calm, cloudy skies before dropping back within minutes.
No neighboring stations recorded similar changes during either event. Wind direction and relative humidity showed no corresponding shifts.
… On April 6, long-shot bets on Paris reaching 21 degrees Celsius paid out approximately $14,000 to at least one bettor whose account had been created days earlier, according to reporting by Le Monde and BFMTV. A similar wager on 22 degrees Celsius resolved in a bettor’s favor on April 15 for roughly $20,000.
The look of an AI arms race.
https://www.politico.eu/article/u-k-intelligence-100-nations-have-spyware-that-can-hack-britain/
UK intelligence: 100 nations have spyware that can hack Britain
More than half of the world's nation states are believed to have purchased technology that could be capable of hacking into Britain's infrastructure, companies and private networks, U.K. intelligence has found.
The U.K. National Cyber Security Centre — which is part of the GCHQ intelligence agency — believes around 100 countries have procured cyber intrusion software, suggesting the barrier for states to get their hands on the technology is dropping, the agency told POLITICO ahead of a discussion about its findings at its CYBERUK conference in Glasgow Wednesday.
First look?
House Republicans roll out landmark data privacy push
Key House Republicans on Wednesday unveiled a landmark legislative effort to create a national data privacy standard, teeing up a push to enact sweeping changes to how tech and financial data are regulated.
The effort includes two bills — the SECURE Data Act, which deals with tech companies’ consumer data, and a second financial data privacy measure dubbed the GUARD Financial Data Act.
(Related)
FPF on the Securing and Establishing Consumer Uniform Rights and Enforcement Over Data (“SECURE Data”) Act
… In the absence of a federal law, twenty-one states have enacted comprehensive privacy laws that, while varying in detail, have generally converged around a common framework. The “SECURE Data Act” largely follows that consensus model, which could facilitate compliance for businesses already navigating state requirements. However, several states have taken different approaches or amended their laws in recent years, including expansions related to health data, minors’ data, and geolocation—raising questions about the extent to which a federal baseline should reflect these alternatives.
Autonomous is expensive.
Pentagon asks for $54bn in pivot towards AI-powered war
The Pentagon is aiming to increase funding more than a hundredfold for an autonomous drone warfare program, according to budget documents released this week, signalling a major pivot towards AI-powered war.
In its 2027 budget, the Pentagon has asked for over $54bn to fund the Defense Autonomous Warfare Group, a 24,000% increase on last year.
An overview of the budget describes this money as going towards “autonomous and remotely operated systems across air, land, and above and below the sea,” including the “Drone Dominance” program.
The amount is over half the entire defence budget of the UK. In an opinion piece published yesterday, former CIA director David Petraeus said it was “the largest single commitment to autonomous warfare in history”.