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Omnipresent AI cameras will ensure good behavior, says Larry Ellison

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A colorized photo of CCTV cameras in London, 2024.

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On Thursday, Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison shared his vision for an AI-powered surveillance future during a company financial meeting, reports Business Insider. During an investor Q&A, Ellison described a world where artificial intelligence systems would constantly monitor citizens through an extensive network of cameras and drones, stating this would ensure both police and citizens don't break the law.

Ellison, who briefly became the world's second-wealthiest person last week when his net worth surpassed Jeff Bezos' for a short time, outlined a scenario where AI models would analyze footage from security cameras, police body cams, doorbell cameras, and vehicle dash cams.

"Citizens will be on their best behavior because we are constantly recording and reporting everything that's going on," Ellison said, describing what he sees as the benefits from automated oversight from AI and automated alerts for when crime takes place. "We're going to have supervision," he continued. "Every police officer is going to be supervised at all times, and if there's a problem, AI will report the problem and report it to the appropriate person."

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LinuxGeek
3 hours ago
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Every time that I see 'security' cameras pointed at a public space, I have an urge to buy black spray paint. So far, I've resisted - which explains why I'm not in jail right now.
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AMD Is Giving up on High-End PC Graphics Cards

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NVIDIA makes arguably the best graphics cards out there, but competition is always good and keeps the market healthy. Sadly, it appears that AMD, its closest competitor, might be backing out of the fight.



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LinuxGeek
6 days ago
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:sadface: I've been getting AMD graphics cards because they're better supported on linux.
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AT&T sues Broadcom for refusing to renew perpetual license support

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Signage is displayed outside the Broadcom offices on June 7, 2018 in San Jose, California.

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AT&T filed a lawsuit against Broadcom on August 29 accusing it of seeking to “retroactively change existing VMware contracts to match its new corporate strategy.” The lawsuit, spotted by Channel Futures, concerns claims that Broadcom is not letting AT&T renew support services for previously purchased perpetual VMware software licenses unless AT&T meets certain conditions.

Broadcom closed its $61 billion VMware acquisition in November and swiftly enacted sweeping changes. For example, in December, Broadcom announced the end of VMware perpetual license sales in favor of subscriptions of bundled products. Combined with higher core requirements per CPU subscription, complaints ensued that VMware was getting more expensive to work with.

AT&T uses VMware software to run 75,000 virtual machines (VMs) across about 8,600 servers, per the complaint filed at the Supreme Court of the State of New York [PDF]. It reportedly uses the VMs to support customer service operations and for operations management efficiency.

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LinuxGeek
10 days ago
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Broadcom's licensing change should be illegal -but is it?
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Microsoft Is Ditching the Control Panel For Good, and It Really Means It This Time

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We hope you like the Settings menu.
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LinuxGeek
25 days ago
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"we will miss its straightforward design and ease of use. In our opinion, the Settings menu is not as easy to use"
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Is the US Federal Government Increasing Cyber-Risk Through Monoculture?

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In a monoculture, cybercriminals need to look for a weakness in only one product, or discover an exploitable vulnerability, to affect a significant portion of services.

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LinuxGeek
45 days ago
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Yes. I certainly understand the philosophy of standardizing on a single product to do the same functions across your enterprise. Your technicians can leverage their familiarity with that product to increase security. On the other hand, all eggs in one basket. One vulnerability and they all go down.
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Cybercriminals Deploy 100K+ Malware Android Apps to Steal OTP Codes

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A new malicious campaign has been observed making use of malicious Android apps to steal users' SMS messages since at least February 2022 as part of a large-scale campaign. The malicious apps, spanning over 107,000 unique samples, are designed to intercept one-time passwords (OTPs) used for online account verification to commit identity fraud. "Of those 107,000 malware samples, over 99,000 of

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LinuxGeek
47 days ago
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Perhaps this story is the motivation for Authy leaving the GrapheneOS platform
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