Tuesday, June 23, 2026

AI slop by government edict?

https://www.bespacific.com/federal-workers-cant-get-the-white-houses-app-off-their-phones/

Federal Workers Can’t Get the White House’s App Off Their Phones

Wired no paywall: “In May, the White House announced that its new app would be automatically downloaded onto the work phones of millions of government employees. The problem: Federal workers hate it and can’t get rid of it. Employees of the US Department of Agriculture (USDA), the State Department, and the Department of Labor (DOL), who spoke to WIRED on the condition of anonymity due to fear of retaliation, say that they were disturbed when the app appeared on their phones. Some attempted to delete it, but to no avail. “I deleted it as a test and it came immediately back,” says an employee from the USDA. The app, which debuted in March, promises a mixture of “real-time updates, live events, and direct access to the Presidency,” according to the White House website. It is, apparently, the same version that is available to the public on the Apple and Google app stores. A button within the app allows users to text President Trump,” which autofills a text bubble reading Greatest President Ever.”





Perhaps proof of citizenship will be next? (Refuse and ICE comes knocking at your door?)

https://pogowasright.org/anthropic-says-claude-may-want-to-see-your-id/

Anthropic says Claude may want to see your ID

Zack Whittaker reports:

Anthropic may ask Claude users to verify their age and identity by uploading their government-issued documents, according to a new version of the company’s privacy policy.
The AI giant says the move was to allow users to appeal having their account flagged for potentially fraudulent activity rather than outright banning them, but comes at a time when Anthropic seeks to placate the Trump administration amid an ongoing standoff over who gets access to the company’s AI tools.
According to a new section in its latest privacy policy published earlier in June and set to take effect on July 8, Anthropic says it will ask for a user to prove their age or identity “in certain circumstances,” without providing specific examples.

Read more at TechCrunch.





Again I need someone to explain this. If these companies keep prices artificially high, are their competitors (with lower prices) benefiting? Is it illegal to consider competitor pricing?

https://thenextweb.com/news/ai-gas-prices-lawsuit-california

BP, Walmart and 7-Eleven sued over AI-set petrol prices in California

According to the complaint, the chains all fed data into the same algorithmic pricing software, supplied by a firm called Kalibrate, which the plaintiffs say draws on competitors’ prices to recommend what each station should charge.

The drivers allege that the practice amounted to a coordination scheme that lifted prices in step rather than through ordinary competition.



Monday, June 22, 2026

Employees age and get hung over too. Perhaps your boss should insist you wear a health monitor (for your own good of course)

https://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2026/06/professional-athletes-and-wearables.html

Professional Athletes and Wearables

I haven’t thought about the privacy issues surrounding professional athletes and wearables.

Wearables present serious privacy issues for “Average Joe” consumers, who are entrusting tech companies to safely store and protect their biometric data. Imagine the stakes for a professional athlete, whose entire livelihood could be affected by a single biometric data point. To give one of many realistic hypotheticals: a basketball player has a terrible game, and the coach wonders if they showed up to the gym hungover. The coach has access to the player’s wearable data, and checks to see when they went to sleep, as well as what their heart rate looked like during the night. Should the player have been out partying before a game? No. Should the coach be able to surveil them? Definitely not.
It will not surprise you to learn that there’s an emergent gambling angle here: sports leagues would love to commercialize players’ biometric data, and sharp bettors would love access to data about, say, a hungover player. “We’re going to get to a spot where people are betting not just on the velocity of the puck that was shot by a player in the NHL playoffs, but on what the heart rate of a certain player is going to be running down the field,” said Helen “Nellie” Drew, the director of the University of Buffalo’s Center for the Advancement of Sport, and a professor of practice in sports law.
There are other practical considerations, too. What if wearable data reveals that a player isn’t as speedy as they were before, and a team uses that data against the player during contract negotiations? What if a wearable reveals a player is favoring their leg, or is at greater risk of injury? This information is potentially beneficial to a training staff and an athlete, so long as it’s disclosed and used in a responsible manner—­a critical, mostly unresolved caveat. “Aging and injured players are the most at-risk” of wearable data being used against them, said Michael LeRoy, who researches sports labor laws and AI, and is a professor at the University of Illinois’s School of Labor and Employment Relations.

The bit about gamblers is particularly scary.

I have often said that surveillance tech is generally deployed first against people with diminished rights: children, prisoners, military personnel, the mentally impaired. This is another early use case with different dynamics. The surveilled are wealthy and powerful, and—in many cases—unionized.





About time they noticed this risk…

https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2026/jun/22/anthropic-claude-fable-ai-model-artificial-intelligence-national-security

AI models that can take down governments and business months away, rare Five Eyes statement warns

Powerful AI models capable of taking down governments and businesses are mere months away, cyber intelligence agencies for the Five Eyes have warned in a rare joint statement, urging leaders to “act now”.

The surprising public intervention by signals agencies for Australia, the US, the UK, New Zealand and Canada comes after the Trump administration earlier this month decided to block “foreign nationals” from using a much-hyped AI model built by tech company Anthropic, called Fable.

The statement, issued late Monday night Sydney time, said while AI “would help us improve cyber defence over time, it also accelerates the speed, scale, and sophistication of cyber threats”.





Lawyers are doomed!

https://www.ft.com/content/b4f8f589-6771-4df5-ac4d-cb15d94991fb?syn-25a6b1a6=1

AI law firm wins UK court case for first time

An AI law firm that uses technology instead of lawyers to prepare legal claims has won a case in the English courts for the first time, in a sign of artificial intelligence’s potential to disrupt the industry.

Garfield AI, which became the first AI law firm in the UK to receive regulatory approval last year, won the claim over unpaid fees for a freelancer following a three-hour trial at Wandsworth County Court last month.

The case is believed to be the first time a trial has been won using an AI lawyer not only in the UK but globally, according to founder Philip Young, a former London litigator.

The AI firm provided all of the documents for the trial, including drafting witness statements, demonstrating the potential for the technology to help clients in run-of-the-mill legal disputes.





Protecting you by hacking your devices…

https://thehackernews.com/2026/06/canadas-spy-agency-used-first-of-its.html

Canada’s Spy Agency Used First-of-Its-Kind Warrant to Clean Botnet-Infected Devices

Canada's spy service got a judge's permission to reach into infected servers, home routers, and IoT gear sitting on Canadian soil and neutralize two foreign-run botnets.

The Federal Court released a public version of the ruling on June 15. It is the first time the Canadian Security Intelligence Service has used its threat reduction warrant powers this way.

The warrant let CSIS alter, degrade, and destroy botnet data on the infected machines and cut the devices loose from the networks.

The targets were Canada-based servers, small office and home office (SOHO) routers, and Internet of Things devices: Ring doorbells, security cameras, TVs, and other Wi-Fi-enabled appliances.

CSIS needed the order because the cleanup would likely have been a crime without it. Reaching into someone else's device and wiping data is computer mischief under the Criminal Code, so the Service needed a judge's sign-off before touching the machines.





Might be worth reading.

https://www.theguardian.com/books/2026/jun/22/the-reverse-centaurs-guide-to-life-after-ai-by-cory-doctorow-review-the-real-price-of-artificial-intelligence

The Reverse Centaur’s Guide to Life After AI by Cory Doctorow review – the real price of artificial intelligence

Doctorow speeds through this entertaining primer with his usual vivid analogies, righteous ire and snarky asides – OpenAI, currently valued at $852bn, is parenthetically dismissed as “a grossly overhyped and terrible firm”. But as the central metaphor illustrates, this is not an anti-AI polemic and Doctorow is no purist. A centaur, in automation theory, is someone assisted by a machine, whether using a hearing aid or driving a car. A reverse centaur is someone whose freedom is diminished by the demands of a machine, like an Amazon warehouse worker. The technology of AI theoretically allows every worker to be a centaur, but the business model demands the reverse. Take radiology. In the centaur scenario, a human radiologist works with an AI radiologist to produce more accurate analysis, but that costs the hospital money. In the reverse centaur version, the AI radiologist demotes the surviving humans to the level of results-checking drones who are more likely to make mistakes. Much cheaper, but you see the problem.

Doctorow, who has written several science fiction novels, cites one of the genre’s defining messages: “The most important thing about the gadget isn’t what it does, it’s who it does it for and who it does it to.”



Sunday, June 21, 2026

To succeed, invent a better way to cheat?

https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/18/us/ai-apps-students-cheat.html?unlocked_article_code=1.rFA.SfOz.Q-duIR96SdO7&smid=bs-share

Student Cheating Is Becoming Impossible to Detect in an A.I. Era

The videos are all over social media, making students an irresistible offer: Go ahead and let A.I. do your homework — with the latest technology, you won’t get caught.

If you hate writing, you can avoid it.

Even established ed-tech companies are marketing with a wink and a nod.

These kinds of tutorials are now pervasive on TikTok and YouTube. They show students how to use tools known as humanizers and autotypers, which make it easier than ever to cheat. The videos — sometimes labeled ads, sometimes not — target college and high school students.

Humanizers rewrite A.I.-produced text to make it sound less robotic, formulaic and trite.

Autotypers slowly drip words and sentences into documents, making it appear as if papers were typed at a human pace when in fact, they were produced by A.I. They even fabricate typos, deletions and revisions.

Both tools can help students evade software designed to detect A.I.





Humans are fallible? What a concept!

https://thenextweb.com/news/amazon-human-in-the-loop-ai-governance-normalization-deviance

Amazon says human-in-the-loop AI oversight is failing because humans stop paying attention

Amazon’s security leadership is arguing against one of the most widely accepted principles in AI governance. Eric Brandwine, VP and distinguished engineer at Amazon Security, told The Register that human-in-the-loop oversight is not the gold standard companies think it is.

Humans are not terribly consistent,” Brandwine said. “Human-in-the-loop isn’t necessarily the gold standard.

His reasoning draws on a concept he has been talking about since at least 2017, when he gave a talk on normalization of deviance at AWS re:Invent. The term describes what happens when people in an organization take shortcuts over time, and nothing catastrophic results, so the deviant behavior becomes the new normal.



Saturday, June 20, 2026

What does it cost to think?

https://thenextweb.com/news/wharton-cognitive-surrender-ai-chatbots-decisions-moot-app

Wharton researchers coined ‘cognitive surrender’ to describe what happens when people let AI think for them

A pair of Wharton researchers have put a name to something that many AI users have quietly started doing: letting chatbots make their decisions for them.  Steven Shaw and Gideon Nave published a study in January titled “Thinking, Fast, Slow, and Artificial,” in which they introduced the term “cognitive surrender” to describe the tendency of people to defer to AI outputs even when those outputs are wrong.

The study, conducted through the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania, asked participants to answer questions with and without AI assistance. Those who received AI help accepted correct answers 93% of the time, which is unsurprising. What caught the researchers’ attention was the error rate: participants accepted incorrect AI answers 80% of the time, and reported confidence levels 11.7% higher than those who worked without AI.





The art of the kowtow...

https://www.axios.com/2026/06/19/trump-anthropic-national-security-the-axios-show

Exclusive: Trump tells "The Axios Show" that Anthropic was a national security threat

Axios' Marc Caputo asked Trump in a wide-ranging White House interview if he viewed Anthropic, or CEO Dario Amodei, as a threat to national security.

"Well, not now, but a week ago, maybe," the president said.
But he said he walked away from the G7 summit with the impression that Amodei was "nice" and "smart."
"He responded to us very quickly because you know it's a tremendous liability," Trump said. "People get put in prison immediately for that. You can't play games with that. And he responded very responsibly, I thought."



(Related)

https://thenextweb.com/news/trump-mocked-zuckerberg-bezos-groveling-book-regime-change

Trump mocked Zuckerberg and Bezos for ‘first-class groveling’, new book claims





Please tell me Trump isn’t considering another golf course…

https://www.reuters.com/world/americas/cuban-lawmakers-vote-castro-backed-economic-reforms-amid-us-stranglehold-2026-06-18/

Cuban lawmakers approve sweeping reforms to socialist model amid US pressure

The reforms open the door to private real estate development on the Caribbean island, propose to transform state-owned businesses into private commercial ventures with shares and equity stakes and would allow private banks to enter Cuba's once state-dominated finance sector.



Friday, June 19, 2026

Logistically difficult?

https://www.reuters.com/world/us/us-court-rules-ohio-can-restrict-childrens-use-social-media-2026-06-18/

US court rules Ohio can restrict children's use of social media

, opens new tab

Ohio can implement a ‌law requiring social media companies, including Meta Platforms' Instagram, to obtain parental consent before allowing children under 16 to use their platforms, a U.S. appeals court ruled on Thursday.

, opens new tab

A 2-1 panel of the Cincinnati-based 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals overturned a lower-court ruling that had put the law on hold at the request of the tech industry trade group NetChoice. The panel found the law did not violate free speech protections under the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution.



Thursday, June 18, 2026

Another state bites the bullet.

https://fpf.org/blog/perseverance-pays-off-for-vermont-privacy-efforts/

Perseverance Pays Off for Vermont Privacy Efforts

Vermont has become the 23rd U.S. state to enact a comprehensive consumer privacy law after Governor Scott signed S.71, the Vermont Data Privacy and Online Surveillance Act (VDPOSA), on June 16. This new law is amongst the broadest in the country, closely resembling the 2025 version of the Connecticut Data Privacy Act (CTDPA). For example, the VDPOSA includes low applicability thresholds, a broad definition of sensitive data, heightened protections for consumer health data, consumer rights to know third parties to whom your personal data is sold and to contest certain profiling decisions, and impact assessments for certain uses of profiling. The law will take effect on January 1, 2028 and be enforced exclusively by the attorney general.





Very clever, them hacker guys…

https://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2026/06/embedding-forbidden-text-in-spyware-to-discourage-ai-analysis.html

Embedding Forbidden Text in Spyware to Discourage AI Analysis

At least one malware developer is adding text about nuclear and biological weapons to their spyware, in an effort to stop automatic AI analysis.





We tax them based on sales, not profits?

Then we pay taxpayers from the profits they don’t have?

https://apnews.com/article/bernie-sanders-ai-public-ownership-57b9f20d96490083e2749adba0f13977

AP Exclusive: Bernie Sanders unveils plan to give the public direct ownership of AI companies





No invention, no creativity.

https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2026/jun/17/elias-thorne-ai-generated-stories

The curious case of Elias Thorne – and what he tells us about AI inbreeding

Ever heard of a shadowy figure called Elias Thorne? If you haven’t, try asking an AI chatbot to tell you a story.

In recent months, tech types and researchers have noticed a weird phenomenon: when prompted to tell a story, numerous popular LLMs, including ChatGPT and Claude, will spit out a tale featuring this mysterious Elias figure.

Sometimes he’s a lighthouse keeper, sometimes he makes clocks, sometimes he’s a detective. But whatever form he takes, he features in a curious number of AI-generated stories. In May, two Cornell University researchers sampled 20,000 stories from four LLMs generated with variations of the prompt “Tell me a story” and found that the name Elias appeared in 26.5% of them. They also discovered more than 88.3% of generated stories shared the same 11 names, locations and professions, including Elias, lighthouse, keeper and clockmaker.





A step toward personhood?

https://www.theregister.com/ai-and-ml/2026/06/18/estonia-intends-to-recognize-ai-agents-with-digital-ids/5258087

Estonia intends to recognize AI agents with digital IDs

Estonia plans to allow AI agents to have their own digital identities so they can act on behalf of people in a way that can be verified and audited.

The initiative, backed by the country's Eesti.ai advisory board, calls for the development of ID codes that AI agents can use to take actions, subject to some unspecified authorization and task delegation process.

Academics and corporate technical folk have already made related proposals in recognition of the absence of agentic technical infrastructure. Last month, researchers under the flag of OWASP proposed the Agent Name Service for agent discovery and interoperability.  DNS for AI Discovery is another such project.





AImerica the strong?

https://www.economist.com/leaders/2026/06/18/ai-has-granted-america-vast-new-power

AI has granted America vast new power

THE NEWS is full of how an ignominious peace deal with Iran exemplifies a decline in American power. That conclusion could hardly be more wrong. On June 12th the Trump administration ordered Anthropic to block foreigners from Fable and Mythos, its latest and most capable frontier AI models. In an instant, everyone learned that the American government can decide who may use the world’s most important technology. You don’t get much more powerful than that.



(Related)

https://theconversation.com/sovereign-ai-anthropic-shutdown-reveals-canadas-weakness-285473

Sovereign AI? Anthropic shutdown reveals Canada’s weakness

The United States government recently ordered AI company Anthropic to suspend foreign nationals’ access to Fable 5 and Mythos 5, two of its most advanced AI models, citing national security concerns. Anthropic responded by disabling the models for all customers.

Organizations in CanadaEurope and around the world that had embedded those tools in their workflows found them simply gone. No appeal process. No migration window. No warning. No jurisdiction over this decision.

As the G7 summit wraps up in Evian, France, the Anthropic shutdown has put AI sovereignty and concerns about U.S. dominance high on the agenda.



(Related)

https://thenextweb.com/news/britain-lobbied-trump-for-an-exemption-from-the-anthropic-ai-ban-the-answer-was-no

Britain lobbied Trump for an exemption from the Anthropic AI ban. The answer was no.



Wednesday, June 17, 2026

Trust not yet earned… Loyalty uber alles...

https://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2026/06/ai-use-by-the-us-government.html

AI Use by the US Government

On 14 April, the Trump administration quietly acknowledged the widespread use of AI to automate government processes. The office of management and budget (OMB) disclosed a staggering 3,611 active or planned use cases for AI across the federal government. The list has ballooned by 70% from the one published in the final year of the Biden administration, and includes many disturbing-seeming plans to hand over sensitive governmental functions to AI.

Scanning this list, many readers may find many causes for alarm. It represents a transfer of decision processes from human to machine on a massive scale over matters of individual freedom, public health and well-being, nuclear reactor safety and more.

Consider these examples. The Health and Human Services’ (HHS) office of administration for children and families hired the world’s “scariest AI company, ” Palantir—notorious for its work on behalf of the military, the CIA and ICE—to scan  all grant applications to flag those not ideologically aligned with the administration’s dictates. The Federal Bureau of Prisons is developing an AI system to assess  the “potential for misconduct for newly admitted inmates,” routing people into high-security confinement before they have actually done anything wrong in their custody. These read like programs fit for a Philip K Dick or George Orwell novel.





Cheap consulting?

https://thenextweb.com/news/detachment-201-big-tech-army-reserve

More Big Tech executives just became Army officers. The conflict-of-interest question is getting louder.

Detachment 201, officially branded the Executive Innovation Corps, is designed to “bridge the gap between private-sector innovation and military modernisation,” according to the Army. Members serve as part-time reservists, completing a minimum of 112 hours of service annually, and can work remotely.





Interesting…

https://www.cnn.com/2026/06/17/middleeast/us-iran-war-mou-text-intl

Read the 14-point draft agreement between the US and Iran

Below is the text in full:





Did we spend that much in Iran? (Or are we planning another ‘adventure?’)

https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/white-house/trump-forcing-us-companies-manufacture-weaponry-rcna350419

Trump is forcing U.S. companies to manufacture more weaponry

The president invoked the Defense Production Act to accelerate munitions production as Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth pitched lawmakers on $350 billion in defense to help replenish U.S. stockpiles.