Saturday, July 10, 2021

Coming soon to an ATM near you? (Full instructions provided in this article?)

https://krebsonsecurity.com/2021/07/spike-in-chain-gang-destructive-attacks-on-atms/

Spike in “Chain Gang” Destructive Attacks on ATMs

Last summer, financial institutions throughout Texas started reporting a sudden increase in attacks involving well-orchestrated teams that would show up at night, use stolen trucks and heavy chains to rip Automated Teller Machines (ATMs) out of their foundations, and make off with the cash boxes inside. Now it appears the crime — known variously as “ATM smash-and-grab” or “chain gang” attacks — is rapidly increasing in other states.

From surveillance camera footage examined by fraud investigators, the perpetrators have followed the same playbook in each incident. The bad guys show up in the early morning hours with a truck or tractor that’s been stolen from a local construction site.

Then two or three masked men will pry the front covering from the ATM using crowbars, and attach heavy chains to the cash machine. The canisters of cash inside are exposed once the crooks pull the ATM’s safe door off using the stolen vehicle.

In nearly all cases, the perpetrators are done in less than five minutes.

Tracey Santor is the bond product manager for Travelers, which insures a large number of financial institutions against this type of crime. Santor said investigators questioning some of the suspects learned that the smash-and-grabs are used as a kind of initiation for would-be gang members.

One of the things they found out during the arrest was the people wanting to be in the gang were told they had to bring them $250,000 within a week,” Santor said. “And they were given instructions on how to do it. I’ve also heard of cases where the perpetrators put construction cones around the ATM so it looks to anyone passing by that they’re legitimately doing construction at the site.”





Not very serious, but clearly a way to show leadership that hackers can get to them.

https://gizmodo.com/hackers-derail-irans-train-system-post-supreme-leaders-1847260870

Hackers Derail Iran's Train System, Post Supreme Leader's Phone Number as Help Line

Cyberattacks reportedly disrupted Iran’s railway system on Friday, causing “unprecedented chaos” at stations throughout the country, according to state media.

The hackers, whoever they are, also reportedly trolled the nation’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, posting his phone number as “the number to call for information” on multiple train station message boards, Reuters reports. According to some Iranian outlets, the number, 64411, was displayed on screens in train stations and redirected to Ayatolla Khamenei’s office when dialed.

The railway’s website, local ticket offices, and cargo services have all apparently been affected, the news outlet reports.





Makes me wonder what Biden and Putin agreed on…

https://news.softpedia.com/news/cybercriminals-attacked-the-republican-national-committee-533488.shtml

Cybercriminals Attacked the RNC

According to a statement from Republican National Committee, cybercriminals gained access to the IT infrastructure of one of the committee's contractors, Synnex. Although the infrastructure was breached, no data was lost as a result of the cyberattack, says NPR.

If the alleged source of the attack (REvil) is confirmed, it will be the second major cyber attack launched by a Russian network against the United States in the last period. More than 200 U.S. organizations were affected by a massive ransomware cyberattack conducted by the REVil Russian cybercriminal gang over the weekend.





Is this the future?

https://www.wsj.com/articles/new-york-city-opens-cyberattack-defense-center-11625778530?mod=djemalertNEWS

New York City Opens Cyberattack Defense Center

New York City has become the first major American metropolitan area to open a real-time operational center to protect against cybersecurity threats, regional officials said.

Set in a lower Manhattan skyscraper, the center is staffed by a coalition of government agencies and private businesses, with 282 partners overall sharing intelligence on potential cyber threats. Its members range from the New York Police Department to Amazon.com Inc. and International Business Machines Corp. to the Federal Reserve Bank and several New York healthcare systems.

Until last week, the two-year effort known as New York City Cyber Critical Services and Infrastructure was completely virtual.





Another buzzword field of work for AI.

https://www.itproportal.com/features/content-management-and-artificial-intelligence-the-future-of-contentops/

Content management and Artificial Intelligence – the future of ContentOps

Artificial intelligence (AI) is eating the world, one boring, routine task at a time.

From navigation apps using AI to crunch a bunch of data at a super-fast speed to determine the best and fastest route from A to B, or automatic spam filters and categorizations that make email more manageable, AI is truly ubiquitous.

It was only a matter of time before AI applications in the content management space arose. And when it comes to content ops, the combination of content management and artificial intelligence is a great tool for giving workers back the time they need to perform more complex tasks that still require a human brain.





Free is good!

https://www.makeuseof.com/free-self-study-apps-for-life-long-learners-to-find-new-skills-courses/

5 Free Self Study Apps for Life-Long Learners to Find New Skills and Courses

Use these fantastic self-study resources to learn anything you want without spending a penny.



Friday, July 09, 2021

I feel so much more private!

https://www.huntonprivacyblog.com/2021/07/08/colorado-legislature-passes-colorado-privacy-act/

Colorado Privacy Act Signed Into Law

On July 8, 2021, Colorado Governor Jared Polis signed SB21-190, the Colorado Privacy Act (“the Act”), into law, making Colorado the third state to have a comprehensive data privacy law on the books, following California and Virginia.

The Act will go into effect on July 1, 2023, with some specific provisions going into effect at later dates.





Surely confusion shall reign. Retaining and storing is not collecting? Not covered if you are not a ‘customer.’

https://www.bespacific.com/new-york-citys-new-biometrics-privacy-law-takes-effect/

New York City’s new biometrics privacy law takes effect

Mondaq – “Following the municipal ban on the use of facial recognition technology in Portland, Oregon, New York City’s more expansive biometric identifier information” law, set to go into effect July 9, 2021, will ban the sale of biometric data but permit the use of biometric identifying technologies with posted notice to customers in “simple language” to be prescribed by forthcoming rules. Specifically, the law requires that a “commercial establishment” post “clear and conspicuous signs” at customer entrances notifying customers that technologies are in use that can identify (or assist in identifying) individuals by voice, eye (retina or iris), finger, hand, face, “or any other identifying characteristic.” Even if the commercial establishment does not actively collect biometric data, notice must still be posted if it “retains, converts, stores or shares biometric identifier information of customers.” A “customer” includes only a “purchaser or lessee, or a prospective purchaser or lessee, of goods or services;” a notice for collecting or using biometrics of employees is not required. Although the use of biometric identifying technologies is permitted with the required notice, it will be unlawful to sell, lease, trade, or share biometric identifier information in exchange for anything of value or to “otherwise profit from the transaction of biometric information.” Because the section of the law banning sale or exchange is not specifically in relation to “customers,” it may be argued that commercial establishments’ employees’ biometric identifier information is subject to the ban on sale or exchange..”



(Related)

https://www.cpomagazine.com/data-privacy/maine-becomes-first-state-to-pass-broad-government-ban-on-facial-recognition-technology/

Maine Becomes First State To Pass Broad Government Ban on Facial Recognition Technology

While it is not the first state-level regulation addressing facial recognition technology in the United States, Maine’s new law (LD 1585) is both the strongest and broadest in scope as of yet. The new bill bans the use of it across all levels of state government, with a lone exception carved out for law enforcement investigations of serious crimes.





No human in the loop?

https://www.dailysabah.com/business/defense/china-declassifies-underwater-drone-amid-taiwan-escalation

China declassifies underwater drone amid Taiwan escalation

China has declassified its new unmanned underwater drone designed specifically to target "enemy" submarines, a report said on Thursday.

The project to build such a drone dates back to the 90s and its specifics were revealed in an academic paper last week.

The drone was test-fired in the Taiwan Strait without human input a decade ago, reported daily South China Morning Post, adding the drone "could detect a mock craft, use artificial intelligence to identify its origin, and hit it with a torpedo."

"It is unclear why China has now declassified details of the test, but the tension over the Taiwan Strait has recently escalated to its highest point in decades," the report noted.

Tensions between China and Western capitals in the Taiwan Strait have raised exponentially, mostly under former U.S. President Donald Trump's administration.





Simple, but useful.

https://www.kmworld.com/Articles/News/News/The-Difference-Between-Traditional-Programming-and-Machine-Learning-147862.aspx

The Difference Between Traditional Programming and Machine Learning

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wYJsGHVxY3k

In traditional programming a developer looks at what the factors are that affect the outcome that the program is attempting to predict, he explained. In the case of a business, it's what you would put on a spreadsheet and then the programmer implements in code the logic, the relationships among all of these different things, which can be as simple as if expenses go up, then revenue profits will come down or way more complex scenarios between releationships.

Whereas machine learning drops the logic, drops the relationships, and what we know about the relationship, he said.





Tools & Techniques

https://www.makeuseof.com/vivaldi-vs-opera-vs-brave-best-chrome-alternative/

Vivaldi vs. Opera vs. Brave: Which Is the Best Chrome Alternative?



(Related)

https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/2-anonymous-web-browsers-completely-private-secure/

4 Free Anonymous Web Browsers That Are Completely Private



(Related)

https://www.makeuseof.com/beginners-guide-windows-narrator/

The Beginner's Guide to the Windows 10 Narrator

Windows Narrator is a built-in screen-reader and text-to-speak tool which helps people to complete common tasks. While it was designed for visually impaired people, anyone can use Narrator as it has a large number of configuration options.



(Related) How to truly appreciate "Weird Al" Yankovic.

https://www.makeuseof.com/best-android-lyrics-apps/

Find the Lyrics to Your Favorite Songs With These 7 Android Apps



Thursday, July 08, 2021

A privacy resource.

https://www.bespacific.com/privacy-design-strategies-and-the-gdpr-a-systematic-literature-review/

Privacy Design Strategies and the GDPR: A Systematic Literature Review

Saltarella M., Desolda G., Lanzilotti R. (2021) Privacy Design Strategies and the GDPR: A Systematic Literature Review. In: Moallem A. (eds) HCI for Cybersecurity, Privacy and Trust. HCII 2021. Lecture Notes in Computer Science, vol 12788. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-77392-2_16

Article 25 of the GDPR states that data collection, processing and management measures should be implemented following tṇhe privacy by design and privacy by default paradigms. This paper presents a systematic literature review to identify useful guidelines to support the development of GDPR-compliant software. Selected papers are categorized under 8 different data-oriented and process-oriented strategies and their contributions are reported. Future activities will highlight the HCI community’s attitude towards these new technical and organizational approaches in order to bridge the identified gaps and shortcomings…”





For anti-social me.

https://www.bespacific.com/event-highlights-and-action-items-25-solutions-from-the-social-media-summit-mit/

Event Highlights and Action Items: 25 Solutions From The Social Media Summit @ MIT

On April 22, 2021, the IDE hosted The Social Media Summit @ MIT (#SMSMIT), which attracted more than 20,000 virtual attendees to learn about the most-pressing topics of the day. The event brought together business, policy, and academic experts to discuss social media trends and to offer actionable solutions that—as moderator Sinan Aral pointed out—can help “steer us toward the promise of digital technologies and away from the perils.” This special report offers a six-point roadmap for platform reform –from rescuing truth, to restoring free speech; ensuring transparency to humanizing design. “We need all of these oars rowing in the same direction at once for substantive change to occur,” said Aral.”





For this anti-social guy

https://theweek.com/donald-trump/1002367/trump-social-media-lawsuits

Trump's social media lawsuits are strategic, performative, and doomed

One member of this class action is not like the others

Former President Donald Trump announced himself on Wednesday as the lead plaintiff in class action lawsuits against Facebook, Twitter, and Google, as well as their respective CEOs.

"We're demanding an end to the shadow-banning, a stop to the silencing and a stop to the blacklisting, banishing, and canceling that you know so well," he told reporters at his New Jersey golf course, arguing "there's no better evidence that big tech is out of control than [that] they banned the sitting president of the United States earlier this year." With these lawsuits, then, Trump will stand athwart big tech yelling, Stop! Please let me join you! I very much would like to be part of the extremely cool stuff you're doing here!

If that rallying cry seems nonsensical, well, so is the entire project, if taken at face value. Its real value for Trump is indirect. These don't seem to be lawsuits designed to succeed in court so much as tools of public relations and fundraising. They are strategic, performative, sometimes downright silly, and almost certainly legally doomed.



(Related)

https://thenextweb.com/news/making-facebook-follow-first-amendment-catastrophic?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+TheNextWeb+%28The+Next+Web+All+Stories%29

Why making Facebook follow the First Amendment would be catastrophic

Free Speech? I do not think that phrase means what you think it means





Is this like the government going underground?

https://www.cpomagazine.com/data-protection/german-data-protection-commissioner-tells-countrys-government-organizations-to-shut-down-their-facebook-pages-by-january-2022/

German Data Protection Commissioner Tells Country’s Government Organizations To Shut Down Their Facebook Pages by January 2022

Germany’s data protection commissioner (DPC) has been one of the toughest in the EU on Big Tech, and apparently no longer has faith in Facebook to properly secure government pages. German government organizations have been told that they should shut down their official Facebook Pages by January 2022 or face potential enforcement action under data privacy laws.





Eventually, we will all agree on the rules. Eventually.

https://www.cpomagazine.com/data-privacy/eu-tech-chief-shoots-down-one-of-apples-strongest-arguments-privacy-and-security-cannot-be-used-as-defenses-against-antitrust-charges/

EU Tech Chief Shoots Down One of Apple’s Strongest Arguments: “Privacy and Security” Cannot be Used as Defenses Against Antitrust Charges

As Apple fends off a variety of lawsuits and antitrust probes around the world, one of the chief arguments it has put forward for its “walled garden” practices is that they are essential for high levels of privacy and security. Margrethe Vestager, Executive Vice President of the European Commission, is having none of it.

Vestager warned Apple that its antitrust issues cannot be dispelled simply by invoking privacy and security concerns. She has previously proposed rules that would require Apple to allow sideloading and third-party app stores on its devices, and has pointedly said that she believes privacy and security would not be compromised if this were the case.





Ye Olde stuff…

https://www.bespacific.com/oldest-book-of-english-literature-in-the-world-available-to-browse-online-for-the-first-time/

Oldest book of English literature in the world available to browse online for the first time

University of Exeter: “One of the oldest books of English literature in the world – created more than 1,000 years ago – is now available for anyone to browse online for the first time. The Exeter Book is one of the four most significant verse manuscripts to survive from the Anglo-Saxon period and contains the vast majority of all surviving Old English poetry. Its origins are a mystery. The new website and digital technology gives a fascinating glimpse into the production of the book, allowing people to explore doodles made a century ago of people and even an angel. Experts from the University of Exeter’s Digital Humanities Lab and Exeter Cathedral have collaborated to create the new website. Their work, supported by a generous grant from the University’s Provost’s Fund, means high resolution images have been captured of each one of the Exeter Book’s 130-odd pages for the first time. The digital Exeter Book will be an exceptional resource and tool for researchers, teachers and students of English literature, and provides a chance for anyone to in close-up one of the rarest and most remarkable relics of the medieval past. For Ann Barwood, Canon Librarian of Exeter Cathedral and Honorary Associate Research Fellow at the University of Exeter, the new digital resource is a solution to a centuries-old dilemma: “Of our many historical treasures, the Exeter Book has been the jewel in the crown of Exeter Cathedral for nearly a thousand years. It’s a vitally important piece of heritage for the whole of the English-speaking world…”





Writing in the digital era. I find rule number one inadequate!

https://www.makeuseof.com/how-to-write-professional-emails-rules/

How to Write Professional Emails? 8 Simple Rules to Live By



Wednesday, July 07, 2021

Might make a fun exercise in Computer Security or Privacy.

https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/4-steps-find-information-someone-online/

How to Find Information on Someone Online: 7 Simple Steps





Interesting. I assume there is some simple legal explanation that I don’t understand. Unlikely the crooks will comply, right?

https://www.theregister.com/2021/07/06/ransomware_4_new_square_chambers/

Ransomware-hit law firm gets court order asking crooks not to publish the data they stole

A barristers' chambers hit by a ransomware attack has responded by getting a court order demanding the criminals do not share stolen data.

4 New Square chambers, which counts IT dispute experts among its ranks, obtained a privacy injunction from the High Court at the end of June against "person or persons unknown" who were "blackmailing" the firm.

Those persons were said to be "responsible for engaging in a cyber-attack on [the barristers] on or about 12 June 2021 and/or who is threatening to release the information thereby obtained."

Trade mag The Lawyer reported the ransomware attack but the obtaining of an injunction against people outside the jurisdiction of the English courts seems strange.

Handed down by Mrs Justice Steyn, the injunction orders the ransomware criminals not to "use, publish or communicate or disclose to any other person" any of the (unspecified) data they stole in June. No data from 4 New Square appears to have been published on the known ransomware gangs' Tor-hosted leak blogs, though the injunction return date is this Friday (9 July).





Worth reading?

https://themarkup.org/privacy/2021/07/06/this-manual-for-a-popular-facial-recognition-tool-shows-just-how-much-the-software-tracks-people

This Manual for a Popular Facial Recognition Tool Shows Just How Much the Software Tracks People

The public records The Markup reviewed included a 2019 user guide for AnyVision’s software called “Better Tomorrow.” The manual contains details on AnyVision’s tracking capabilities and provides insight on just how people can be identified and followed through its facial recognition.





Searching for AIristotle?

https://dailynous.com/2021/07/06/shaping-the-ai-revolution-in-philosophy-guest-post/

Shaping the AI Revolution In Philosophy (guest post)

Despite the great promise of AI, we maintain that unless philosophers theorize about and help develop philosophy-specific AI, it is likely that AI will not be as philosophically useful.”

In the following guest post, Caleb Ontiveros, a philosophy graduate student-turned-software engineer and writer, and Graham Clay, a recent philosophy PhD from the University of Notre Dame, discuss the possibility of AI providing a “suite of tools” that could revolutionize philosophy, and why it’s important that “philosophers help develop and theorize about” the role of AI in philosophy.





Cool! Now my AI can read this and become a virtual lawyer!

https://www.bespacific.com/law-professors-desk-reference-introduction-and-table-of-contents/

Law Professor’s Desk Reference – Introduction and Table of Contents

Garon, Jon M., Law Professor’s Desk Reference – Introduction and Table of Contents (June 11, 2021). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3865067 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3865067

Law school faculty members are expected to be legal scholars, effective teachers, and engaged institutional partners, but the information essential to develop these skills has not been published in one single source, until now. LAW PROFESSOR’S DESK REFERENCE provides faculty members a foundation for student learning, effective teaching, and student engagement. It offers strategies for teaching face-to-face, online, and blended education. It provides a roadmap to help faculty develop meaningful scholarship, and it addresses law school administration, shared governance, academic freedom, hiring, tenure, and accreditation. More than a reflection on legal education, the book provides a “user’s manual” for the legal academy.”





Why Johnny can’t get hired...

https://www.technologyreview.com/2021/07/07/1027916/we-tested-ai-interview-tools/

We tested AI interview tools. Here’s what we found.

One gave our candidate a high score for English proficiency when she spoke only in German.

AI-powered interview software claims to help employers sift through applications to find the best people for the job. Companies specializing in this technology reported a surge in business during the pandemic.

But as the demand for these technologies increases, so do questions about their accuracy and reliability. In the latest episode of MIT Technology Review’s podcast “In Machines We Trust,” we tested software from two firms specializing in AI job interviews, MyInterview and Curious Thing. And we found variations in the predictions and job-matching scores that raise concerns about what exactly these algorithms are evaluating.





Make money by reformatting what you already know?

https://www.makeuseof.com/social-media-platforms-that-pay-creators/

9 Social Media Platforms That Pay You to Create Content





Tools & Techniques.

https://www.makeuseof.com/tag/4-sites-create-wikipedialike-website/

How to Create a Wiki: The 7 Best Sites That Make It Easy



Tuesday, July 06, 2021

Speech does not have to be logical, software does.

https://www.makeuseof.com/gettr-got-hacked/

GETTR, the Pro-Trump Social Media Platform, Got Hacked

Donald Trump has had issues with staying online in the past, and it seems those problems aren't going away.

As reported on Business Insider, GETTR was launched during Independence Day. GETTR is a social media platform with a pro-Trump focus after the ex-president ran afoul of issues on other websites.

However, it appears this new website has its own fair share of problems. In the wee hours of the morning after the launch, several high-ranking profiles had been successfully hacked.





An evil (or at least paranoid) thought. Suppose the bad guys say they will only decrypt the data of the first X percent of victims to settle. (Or the top X bidders.) Everyone else will have to live without their help.

https://www.databreaches.net/some-kaseya-victims-privately-negotiating-with-revil/

Some Kaseya victims privately negotiating with REvil

While the headlines blare about REvil offering to decrypt all victims of the Kaseya attack if they are paid $70 million, some companies have apparently already taken to individual negotiations with the threat actors.

Over on SuspectFile, Marco A. De Felice is careful not to name the victim, but describes one such set of negotiatons going on. The chat logs he observed suggest that there is a lot of confusion with perhaps more than one set of negotiations going on for the same victim. There is also inconsistency in the ransom demands being made for an individual company, with it variously being listed as $550,000 but settling for $225,000, and in another place it appeared to be less than $50,000.

But Marco also raises the question: who is uploading and pointing people to these negotiations and chats on threat actors’ servers? Marco hypothesizes that it is the threat actors themselves. It’s an interesting hypothesis, but I’d still be more inclined to believe that it is an employee of a firm with knowledge of the attack(s). But do read his post and see what you think of it all.

Kaseya’s updates can be found here. Another update is due today between 8:00 am and noon EDT. Although early reports suggested that malware was pushed out after being injected into the codebase, the firm later stated that this was a direct attack on victims by use of a 0-day. The number of victims seems to vary wildly from source to source and report to report, but remember that each single victim/client of Kaseya may have downstream clients, so the total number of companies impacted may be quite large.



(Related)

https://www.theregister.com/2021/07/05/cyber_insurance_report/

The cost of cyber insurance increased 32 per cent last year and shows no signs of easing

The cost of insurance to protect businesses and organisations against the ever-increasing threat of cybercrimes has soared by a third in the last year, according to international insurance brokers Howden.

It found that global cyber insurance pricing has increased by an average of 32 per cent in the year to June.

Not only are premiums going through the roof, insurers are also attaching more strings to their policies, demanding ever more assurances that firms taking out cover have the necessary systems and processes in place to prevent a cyber mishap.

According to Howden's Cyber Insurance: A Hard Reset the upward squeeze on premiums shows no sign of easing, which, in turn, is putting more strain on the sector.

Last week, a report by the Royal United Services Institute (RUSI) – Cyber Insurance and the Cyber Security Challenge – warned that the spike in ransomware attacks had led to some insurers wondering if they should pull out of the market.





So where should we draw the line? And is the police department the best monitor of social media?

https://www.wired.com/story/ai-helps-police-monitor-social-media-go-too-far/

This AI Helps Police Monitor Social Media. Does It Go Too Far?

SINCE 2016, CIVIL liberties groups have raised alarms about online surveillance of social media chatter by city officials and police departments. Services like Media Sonar, Social Sentinel, and Geofeedia analyze online conversations, clueing in police and city leaders to what hundreds of thousands of users are saying online.

Zencity, an Israeli data-analysis firm that serves 200 agencies across the US, markets itself as a less invasive alternative, because it offers only aggregate data and forbids targeted surveillance of protests. Cities like Phoenix, New Orleans, and Pittsburgh say they use the service to combat misinformation and gauge public reaction to topics like social distancing enforcement or traffic laws.





What’s real in AI? Real enough to patent?

https://www.bespacific.com/artificial-intelligence-patent-dataset/

Artificial Intelligence Patent Dataset

To assist researchers and policymakers focusing on the determinants and impacts of artificial intelligence (AI) invention, OCE released two data files, collectively called the Artificial Intelligence Patent Dataset (AIPD). The first data file identifies United States (U.S.) patents issued between 1976 and 2020 and pre-grant publications (PGPubs) published through 2020 that contain one or more of several AI technology components (including machine learning, natural language processing, computer vision, speech, knowledge processing, AI hardware, evolutionary computation, and planning and control). OCE generated this data file using a machine learning (ML) approach that analyzed patent text and citations to identify AI in U.S. patent documents (Abood and Feltenberger 2018; Toole et al. 2020). OCE’s approach is based on the methodology of Abood and Feltenberger (2018), but also includes an analysis of patent claims to better identify AI contained in the technical and legal scope of the invention. The second data file contains the patent documents used to train the ML models.

  • A working paper describing the dataset is available and can be cited as Giczy, A., Pairolero, N., and Toole, A. 2021. Identifying artificial intelligence (AI) invention: A novel AI patent dataset. USPTO Economic Working Paper Series No. 2021-2. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3866793.

  • This effort was made possible through cross business unit collaboration among OCE, the Office of Policy and International Affairs, the Patents Business Unit, and the Office of the Chief Information Officer. The AIPD was used in the USPTO report “Inventing AI: Tracing the diffusion of artificial intelligence with U.S. patents.”



(Related) Mr. Zillman always seems to list everything related to his topic.

https://www.llrx.com/2021/06/artificial-intelligence-resources-on-the-internet-2021/

Artificial Intelligence Resources on the Internet 2021

Articles, studies, reports and investigations abound on how AI is impacting all aspects of our lives inclusive of privacy, social media, healthcare, the economy, the financial system, education, communications, law, the courts and technology. This is a timely, broad overview of resources, sites and applications that span subject matter and disciplines and the many permutations of the technologies that drive artificial intelligence.





Some examples…

https://venturebeat.com/2021/07/05/ai-legislation-needs-to-broaden-its-focus-from-rd-to-address-bias-in-algorithmic-decision-making-systems/

AI legislation must address bias in algorithmic decision-making systems

In early June, border officials “quietly deployed the mobile app CBP One at the U.S.-Mexico border to “streamline the processing of asylum seekers. While the app will reduce manual data entry and speed up the process, it also relies on controversial facial recognition technologies and stores sensitive information on asylum seekers prior to their entry to the U.S. The issue here is not the use of artificial intelligence per se, but what it means in relation to the Biden administration’s pre-election promise of civil rights in technology, including AI bias and data privacy.

The current state of AI legislation in the U.S. is disappointing, [with] a majority of AI-related legislation focused almost solely on investment, research, and maintaining competitiveness with other countries, primarily China,” Winters said.

But there is some promising legislation waiting in the wings. The Algorithmic Justice and Online Platform Transparency bill, introduced by Sen. Edward Markey and Rep. Doris Matsui in May, clamps down on harmful algorithms, encourages transparency of websites’ content amplification and moderation practices, and proposes a cross-government investigation into discriminatory algorithmic processes throughout the economy.





Some thoughts on the HR-bot.

https://www.lexology.com/library/detail.aspx?g=839a1a78-2192-4ca4-a88e-3bf02f40a6ba

Artificial intelligence and algorithms in the workplace

Is removing subjective human choice from HR decisions going to create more problems than it solves?

In May 2021, the TUC and the AI Consultancy published a report - Technology Managing People - the legal implications - highlighting exactly these sorts of issues and calling for legal reform.

For employers looking for ideas on good practice in this area, the policy paper published by ACAS - My boss the algorithm: an ethical look at algorithms in the workplace - is a good starting point, although it should be noted this is not ACAS guidance.





Bias is people making choices. Bias goes both ways? Some day, none of this will matter.

https://businessden.com/2021/07/06/du-trial-advocacy-program-director-accuses-law-school-of-gender-bias/

DU law professor accuses law school of gender bias

Schott indicates in the lawsuit that the problems began in the summer of 2016 when, during a meeting with Moffat, he claims she said she “did not want to see white men teaching anymore in the Center for Advocacy.”





A new (to me) resource.

https://www.bespacific.com/how-to-find-the-documents-behind-big-legal-cases/

How to find the documents behind big legal cases

The Verge / Adi Robertson: “Earlier this year, I spent a month covering the trial for a dispute between Apple and Epic. The case was one of the biggest antitrust suits in recent memory, and it brought to light revelations about both companies and the larger tech industry, often in the form of legal filings. I (and other reporters) try to pick out the most relevant details from these filings for readers. But sometimes, the documents are worth checking out in their own right. A site called CourtListener makes that easier than it might sound — if you know how to look….

Maintained by the nonprofit Free Law Project, CourtListener hosts a free and open archive of millions of filings. It contains court opinions, audio of oral arguments from trials, and something called the RECAP archive — which is where you’ll find a lot of the most interesting material. That includes the long back-and-forth between Apple and Epic, government allegations like the cryptocurrency fraud claims against late antivirus tycoon John McAfee, and important legal decisions like a judge tossing the aforementioned Facebook antitrust suit …”