I’m sure someone has already asked ChatGPT what it thinks of all this…
Italy's ChatGPT ban attracts EU privacy regulators
Italy's move to temporarily ban ChatGPT has inspired other European countries to study if harsher measures are needed to rein in the wildly popular chatbots and whether to coordinate such actions.
… "The points they raise are fundamental and show that GDPR does offer tools for the regulators to be involved and engaged into shaping the future of AI," said Dessislava Savova, partner at law firm Clifford Chance.
Privacy regulators in France and Ireland have reached out to counterparts in Italy to find out more about the basis of the ban. Germany could follow in Italy's footsteps by blocking ChatGPT over data security concerns, the German commissioner for data protection told the Handelsblatt newspaper.
Eventually this will show here as prep for war or translated into hacker tools.
Views of a hot cyberwar — the Ukrainian perspective on Russia’s online assault
In a recent report issued by the State Service of Special Communications and Information Protection of Ukraine (SSSCIP) titled “Russia’s Cyber Tactics: Lessons Learned in 2022 — SSSCIP analytical report on the year of Russia’s full-scale cyberwar against Ukraine” readers obtained a 10,000-foot overview of what a hot cyberwar entails from the Ukrainian perspective.
The SSSCIP report highlights the major targets, the coordination between government-advanced persistent threat groups and “hacktivists”, espionage operations and influence operations, and the Ukrainian analysis and discoveries.
I don’t think this is right. Perhaps they (the lawyers) are asking the wrong questions.
https://www.bespacific.com/what-are-the-top-5-areas-in-legal-work-that-cannot-be-replaced-by-ai/
What are the top 5 areas in legal work that cannot be replaced by AI?
Linkedin: “As a follow-up to our previous article, which asked ChatGPT the same question, here is Google Bard’s response: Here are the top 5 areas in legal work that cannot be replaced by AI [condensed answers]
Legal research.
Legal analysis.
Legal writing.
Legal negotiation.
Legal advocacy.
In conclusion, AI can be a valuable tool for lawyers, but it cannot replace the human judgment and skills that are necessary to provide sound legal advice and representation.”
Perspective.
https://www.sfchronicle.com/tech/article/ai-artificial-intelligence-report-stanford-17869558.php
AI has already changed the world. This report shows how
Artificial intelligence software may not control every aspect of life (yet), but the powerful technology can generate seemingly organic text and photos while also controlling fusion reactors and designing the chips to power its own silicon brain.
A report from the Stanford Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence Institute shows just how much the technology is in our lives, from its, at times, significant carbon footprint, to the vast amount of investment flooding into the industry, and even how different kinds of people feel about the powerful technology.
Called the AI Index, the report is assembled by an independent cross-discipline group of AI experts from academia and industry. Here are some of the key findings:
https://hai.stanford.edu/news/2023-state-ai-14-charts
Research tool. Mr Zillman collects everything you can imagine. (Not I can find out what happened to Aunt Edith after she got out of prison!)
https://www.bespacific.com/2023-finding-people-miniguide/
2023 Finding People MiniGuide
Via LLRX – 2023 Finding People MiniGuide – This guide by Marcus P. Zillman is a selected list of free and fee based (some require subscriptions), people finding resources, from a range of providers. A significant number of free sources on this subject matter are sourced from public records obtained by a group of companies who initially offer free information to establish your interest, from which point a more extensive report requires a fee to obtain. It is important to note there can be many errors in these data, including the inability to correctly de-duplicated individuals with the same common names. Also note that each service targets a different mix of identifying data such as: name, address, date of birth, phone numbers, email addresses, relatives, education, employment, criminal records. social media accounts, income. As we conduct research throughout the day it is useful to employ both impromptu and planned searches about individuals that are referenced.
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