Could
this be anything but surveillance and control?
From
2020, all devices sold in Russia will come with local apps
pre-installed
… The
rules state that there must be Russian alternatives to the stock
software - but it remains up to the individual as to which ones they
use.
However,
that has raised the eternal question of back doors and other rogue
payloads being included, effectively leaving the Western software as
sitting ducks for nation-state hacking attempts.
The
new rules won't just affect phones and laptops, but all smart devices
including Smart TVs and audio streaming devices.
For
my Computer Security students.
A
Brief Look at Exploits
(Ditto)
… In September 2019, the Federal Trade
Commission (FTC), which is responsible for enforcing COPPA, brought a
$170 million fine against YouTube for COPPA violations. This is by
far the largest fine ever paid for breaking this law.
The company’s primary offense was knowingly
using the viewing history of children under 13 to show them targeted
advertisements on videos. Because YouTube did not obtain parental
permission to track this data, it was breaking the rules of COPPA.
In addition to the monetary penalty, the FTC’s
settlement with Google requires the company to set up a new system on
its platform.
Will
this only apply as you enter the Republic of Massachusetts?
District
of Massachusetts Holds that Suspicionless Searches of Travelers’
Electronic Devices at U.S. Ports of Entry Violates the Fourth
Amendment
Last
week, in Alasaad
v. McAleenan.
the U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts ruled that
the Fourth Amendment requires reasonable suspicion that a traveler is
carrying contraband in order to search a traveler’s smartphone or
laptop at airports and other U.S. ports of entry. Judge Denise J.
Casper’s decision relied on Riley
v. California,
in which the Supreme Court held that the Fourth Amendment generally
requires the government to obtain a warrant to search cell phones
incident to arrest, to bar suspicionless or random searches of
electronic devices at the border. Judge Casper reasoned that while
“the government’s interest in preventing the entry of unwanted
persons and effects is at its zenith at the border,” this interest
must be balanced against the “substantial personal privacy
interests” implicated by the searches of electronic devices.
Inevitable.
Silicon
Valley Lawmakers Introduce New Federal Privacy Law
On
November 5, two Silicon Valley congresswomen – Democratic
representatives Anna G. Eshoo of Palo Alto and Zoe Lofgen of San Jose
– introduced a new bill called the Online Privacy Act. While the
Online Privacy Act still needs to pass a vote in both the House and
Senate before it can be officially signed into law, it is yet more
proof that a federal privacy law could be coming to the United States
as early as next year. According to the two backers of the Online
Privacy Act, it will be
more stringent than the California Consumer Privacy Act
(CCPA), which will go into effect on January 1, 2020.
Who
owns the patent?
Machine
Programming: What Lies Ahead?
Intel’s
Justin Gottschlich discusses how machine programming is at an
inflection point.
Imagine software that creates its own software.
That is what machine programming is all about. Like other fields of
artificial intelligence, machine programming has been around since
the 1950s, but it is now at an inflection point.
Use will explode when someone wins because of
analytics.
The Next
Legal Challenge: Getting Law Firms to Use Analytics
Wharton's Raghuram
Iyengar and Dave Walton from Cozen O'Connor talk about the challenges
and benefits of applying analytics to the legal field.
Some
interesting bits…
Top
Artificial Intelligence (AI) Predictions For 2020 From IDC and
Forrester
IDC
and
Forrester
issued
recently their predictions for artificial intelligence (AI) in 2020
and beyond. While external “market events” may make companies
cautious about AI, says Forrester, “courageous ones” will
continue to invest and expand the initial “timid” steps they took
in 2019.
… by
2024, AI will be integral to every part of the business, resulting in
25% of the overall spend on AI solutions as “Outcomes-as-a-service”
that drive innovation at scale and superior business value. AI will
become the new UI by redefining user experiences where over 50% of
user touches will be augmented by computer vision, speech, natural
language and AR/VR. Over the next several years, we will see AI and
the emerging user interfaces of computer vision, natural language
processing, and gesture, embedded in every type of product and
device.
… IDC
predicts that by 2022, possibly as a result of a few high-profile PR
disasters, over 70% of G2000 companies will have formal programs to
monitor their 'digital trustworthiness' as digital trust becomes a
critical corporate asset.
Will
I be allowed to bring my own AI to speak for me?
The
Artificial Intelligence Video Interview Act: Privacy Implications of
Illinois’s AI Statute
It’s
time for employers to start preparing for legislation recently signed
into law in Illinois, the Artificial
Intelligence Video Interview Act.
The new law, which takes effect on January 1, 2020, regulates
Illinois employers’ use of artificial intelligence (AI) in the
interview and hiring process.
Under
the AI Video Interview Act, employers that record video interviews
and use AI
technology to
analyze applicants’ suitability for employment must:
- inform applicants that AI technology may be used to evaluate their interviews;
- provide applicants with a written explanation of the technology’s mechanics, including the traits that will be reviewed and analyzed by AI and the characteristics the AI program uses to evaluate applicants; and
- acquire applicants’ prior consent to be assessed by AI technology.
To
philosophize or not to philosophize, that is the new question.
Why
tech companies need philosophers—and how I convinced Google to hire
them
… The
vast majority of cutting-edge AI research is carried out in
companies. The problem is that most of the people who lead these
companies don’t know that they are radically reinventing our
definition of what it means to be human. They think of themselves as
just people who work at tech companies.
One
of the major ambitions of my work is to change this. I want these
labs and companies to understand their enormous philosophical
responsibility: the self-aware design of new possibilities of being
human and of living together.
One
of these is probably really cool. Finding that one seems impossible.
The
Top 1% of App Publishers Generate 80% of All New Installs
… There were more than 3.4 million apps
available globally across the App Store and Google Play in 2018, an
increase of 65 percent from the 2.2 million apps available in 2014.
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