OpenAI invites everyone to test new AI-powered chatbot—with amusing results

ChatGPT aims to produce accurate and harmless talk—but it’s a work in progress.

An AI-generated image of a chatbot.

Enlarge / An AI-generated image of a chatbot exploding forth from squiggly radial lines, as was foretold by the prompt. (credit: Benj Edwards / Ars Technica)

On Wednesday, OpenAI announced ChatGPT, a dialogue-based AI chat interface for its GPT-3 family of large language models. It's currently free to use with an OpenAI account during a testing phase. Unlike the GPT-3 model found in OpenAI's Playground and API, ChatGPT provides a user-friendly conversational interface and is designed to strongly limit potentially harmful output.

"The dialogue format makes it possible for ChatGPT to answer followup questions, admit its mistakes, challenge incorrect premises, and reject inappropriate requests," writes OpenAI on its announcement blog page.

So far, people have been putting ChatGPT through its paces, finding a wide variety of potential uses while also exploring its vulnerabilities. It can write poetry, correct coding mistakes with detailed examples, generate AI art prompts, write brand-new code, expound on the philosophical classification of a hot dog as a sandwich, and explain the worst-case time complexity of the bubble sort algorithm... in the style of a "fast-talkin' wise guy from a 1940's gangster movie."

Read 6 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Eufy’s “local storage” cameras can be streamed from anywhere, unencrypted

You can stream footage from cameras’ “local storage” from anywhere using VLC.

Eufy security camera

Enlarge / Eufy's camera footage is stored locally, but with the right URL, you can also watch it from anywhere, unencrypted. It's complicated.

When security researchers found that Eufy's supposedly cloud-free cameras were uploading thumbnails with facial data to cloud servers, Eufy's response was that it was a misunderstanding, a failure to disclose an aspect of its mobile notification system to customers.

It seems there's more understanding now, and it's not good.

Eufy didn't respond to other claims from security researcher Paul Moore and others, including that one could stream the feed from a Eufy camera in VLC Media Player, if you had the right URL. Last night, The Verge, working with the security researcher "Wasabi" who first tweeted the problem, confirmed it could access Eufy camera streams, encryption-free, through a Eufy server URL.

Read 7 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Hive Social turns off servers after researchers warn hackers can access all data

Site officials say site will be down for a couple of days.

Hive Social turns off servers after researchers warn hackers can access all data

Enlarge (credit: Hive Social)

Hive Social, a social media platform that has seen meteoric growth since Elon Musk took over Twitter, abruptly shut down its service on Wednesday after a security advisory warned the site was riddled with vulnerabilities that exposed all data stored in user accounts.

“The issues we reported allow any attacker to access all data, including private posts, private messages, shared media and even deleted direct messages,” the advisory, published on Wednesday by Berlin-based security collective Zerforschung, claimed. “This also includes private email addresses and phone numbers entered during login.”

The post went on to say that after the researchers privately reported the vulnerabilities last Saturday, many of the flaws they reported remained unpatched. They headlined their post “Warning: do not use Hive Social.”

Read 8 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Bungie’s Relentless Pursuit of Destiny 2 Cheaters Now Spans Three Continents

Game developer Bungie is showing patience and determination in its pursuit of cheat creators and distributors. A lawsuit targeting people behind the ‘Wallhax’ operation has already produced a $13.5m settlement and in an amended complaint filed this week, Bungie identifies several people who previously enjoyed relative anonymity. It’s a chase that now spans three continents.

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

Destiny 2A lawsuit filed in 2021 targeting businesses, owners and individuals behind the Wallhax, SecureAC, SecureCheats and CODHax platforms, is just a small part of a larger Bungie campaign.

Faced with growing numbers of cheaters in its online games, Bungie filed several lawsuits in the U.S. They sent the clearest possible message that similar behavior can have serious consequences.

For regular gamers honing innovative strategies to triumph within the parameters of clearly defined rulesets, elimination of cheaters can’t come soon enough.

Filed in 2021, the lawsuit against Wallax identified some defendants by name and others by their online handles. All faced allegations of copyright infringement, violations of the DMCA’s anti-cicumvention provisions, RICO violations, conspiracy, plus sundry other charges

In June 200, Robert Nelson and two companies under his control admitted copyright infringement after violating Bungie’s copyrights and injecting code into Destiny 2, thereby creating unlicensed derivative works. Bungie’s damages award was $13.5m.

Information provided by Nelson enabled Bungie to pursue developer Daniel Larsen in Denmark, and when he failed to appear, Bungie obtained an entry of default. Information also led Bungie to Germany where ‘Badger’ was identified as Patrick Schaufuss. He also agreed to settle by cooperating with Bungie.

Amended Complaint Unmasks More Defendants, More Details

Filed this week in a Washington District Court, Bungie’s first amended complaint identifies former Doe defendants ‘Luzypher’, ‘Yimosecai’, ‘Rulezzgame’, ‘Sentinent’, ‘CHENZHIJIE402’, and ‘Mindbender’ (aka ‘Bluegirl’), by their real names.

It also provides additional detail on some of the other defendants, including the entity ‘Dsoft CVR36454303’.

Daniel Larsen / Dsoft CVR36454303

Previously alleged to be just the administrator of Wallhax, Larsen is now described as the owner. Working under the pseudonym ‘Gokke’, it’s alleged he developed the code framework for the Wallhax cheat and was involved in designing, coding, updating and maintaining cheats for Destiny 2.

“Larsen and the other partners in the Wallhax business share in its profits and losses and engage in joint decision-making, with Larsen having particular say in matters in his area of expertise (software engineering),” Bungie writes.

“Defendant DSoft, registered with the Danish Business Authority under CVR 37454303, (‘DSoft’) is Larsen’s registered sole proprietorship, with a principal place of business located at [redacted address] in Denmark.”

Bungie says the Dsoft corporate entity was used to conduct business and accept funds relating to the Wallhax cheating operation.

Other Targets Identified

According to Bungie, ‘Luzypher’ is a Wallhax senior support specialist and moderator of the Wallhax forums. The company already knew that ‘Luzypher’ lives in the Netherlands but now identify him as Sebastiaan Juan Theodoor Cruden along with a specific address in a central region of the country.

Previously just a ‘Doe’ defendant, Bungie has added ‘Goodman’ to its complaint. The developer still doesn’t know his name but believes he’s in Sichuan, China, from where he sells Wallhax cheats and shares revenue with other Wallhax defendants. Chenzhijie Chen (aka chenzhiji402) of Shangai, China, faces identical allegations.

The defendant previously known as ‘Yimosecai’ is now identified as Yunxuan Deng of Shangai, China. Together with Eddie Tran (aka Sentient) of California, Anthony Robinson (aka Rulezzgame) of Germany, and Marta Magalhaes (Mindbender/Blue Girl) of Portugal, all stand accused of reselling Wallhax cheats.

Bungie frames their actions rather more elaborately, describing the defendants and others yet to be identified as complicit in a racketeering exercise. Other previously named defendants, including ‘Riddell’ and ‘piskubi93’, are absent from the amended complaint but for reasons not cited in the complaint.

Escalation Strategy

At least from the information available in court documents, it seems that Bungie is using compliant defendants (i.e those who have agreed to settle) as a means to identify others. That’s nothing out of the ordinary and can prove extremely effective.

As an abstract example unrelated to this case, if we take Defendant 1 as the main target in a civil action, he may know a lot about partner defendant 2, so if Defendant 1 starts to cooperate under threat of financial ruin, Defendant 2 is rendered vulnerable.

Lower players, let’s call them Defendants 6 and 7, may be happy to share personal information with each other, feeling they’re largely unimportant. But if Defendant 4 knows either and happens to be friendly with Defendant 3, none of the group are secure if Defendant 2 throws in the towel.

Defendant 5, meanwhile, may feel that settling is the only option because apparently everyone else has. Pressure to settle may not always work though, especially in far-off lands with different legal standards and potentially uncooperative governments.

The amended complaint can be found here (pdf)

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

Sam Bankman-Fried speaks on FTX collapse: “I didn’t ever try to commit fraud”

Bankman-Fried does public interview despite his lawyers urging him to stay quiet.

Journalist Andrew Ross Sorkin sitting on stage at a conference while interviewing Sam Bankman-Fried, who appeared remotely and was seen on a giant video screen.

Enlarge / Andrew Ross Sorkin interviews Sam Bankman-Fried at The New York Times DealBook conference on November 30, 2022, in New York City. (credit: Getty Images | Thos Robinson )

FTX co-founder and former CEO Sam Bankman-Fried was interviewed at a New York Times conference yesterday, speaking publicly despite the advice of lawyers urging him to remain silent about the collapsed cryptocurrency exchange. As the FTX bankruptcy unfolds and lawmakers urge US authorities to file criminal charges, Bankman-Fried said he did not intentionally commit fraud.

"Clearly I made a lot of mistakes," Bankman-Fried said. "There are things I would give anything to be able to do over again. I didn't ever try to commit fraud on anyone. I was excited about the prospects of FTX a month ago. I saw it as a thriving, growing business. I was shocked by what happened this month." Bankman-Fried also said he "didn't knowingly commingle funds" with Alameda Research, a related firm that he co-founded and owned a portion of.

Bankman-Fried was interviewed by NYT columnist Andrew Ross Sorkin for the news organization's DealBook Summit (see transcript). Bankman-Fried was in the Bahamas and appeared on a video feed.

Read 24 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Pixel 7a rumors show similar design, big tech upgrades

A 90 Hz display, wireless charging, and modern cameras make this a phone to watch.

Yep, that's what I thought it would look like.

Enlarge / Yep, that's what I thought it would look like. (credit: OnLeaks and Smartprix)

The design of the Pixel 7a does not seem like it will contain many surprises. OnLeaks has a fresh render for Google's next mid-range phone, and it looks like a mini Pixel 7. Usually, these renders are based on CAD information passed out to accessory manufacturers, so the sizes and shapes are usually accurate, but things like the colors and materials are up for interpretation.

If rumors are true, this will be Google's fourth phone to keep the camera-bar design going. The Pixel 6 and 6a camera bar had a clear glass or plastic covering around the camera lenses, while the Pixel 7 switched to an opaque, solid aluminum camera bar. Google likes these phones to look the same, so it's a safe bet the Pixel 7a will also get a solid camera bar. Whether that's aluminum or some other material is still up for interpretation. The front is also predictable and looks just like the Pixel 6a, with a flat screen and what the report calls "thick bezels."

Elsewhere in the Pixel rumor mill, big upgrades are expected for the Pixel 7a. Android researcher Kuba Wojciechowski has been tracking the Pixel 7a (codenamed "Lynx" and "Pixel 22 Mid-range") via the Android codebase, which reveals additions like (slow) 5 W wireless charging and the same Samsung GN1 main camera as what's in the Pixel 7 and 7 Pro, along with a Sony IMX787 for the wide-angle sensor. The new sensors would be a big camera upgrade. Currently, the Pixel 6a's main camera is the venerable Sony IMX363, a sensor that Google has been using (with one minor revision) since the Pixel 2. A fresh set of sensors would make sense, given that the IMX363 is around six years old now.

Read 2 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Nintendo apologizes for Pokémon performance problems, promises “improvements”

Games have been Nintendo’s fastest-selling titles despite early bugs.

Portrait of the author learning that some of the <em>Pokémon Scarlet</em> and <em>Violet</em> performance problems might be fixed.

Enlarge / Portrait of the author learning that some of the Pokémon Scarlet and Violet performance problems might be fixed. (credit: Andrew Cunningham)

Our review of Pokémon Scarlet and Violet mentioned some of the game's pervasive performance issues, and we weren't the only ones. Even more mainstream outlets like The Guardian and CNN noted the games' performance problems. Eurogamer's Digital Foundry team, known for its in-depth analyses of game performance, called the games "comprehensive technical failures," also calling attention to their blurry and poorly tiled textures and "low-geometry" environments.

Players have noticed plenty of other problems, too; these include a bug that allowed players to run twice as fast by connecting two controllers to the Switch, bizarre animations and clipping problems, Pokémon that blast off into the sky like Team Rocket, and some evidence that online battles were using the same probability seed for every match, making it easier for attentive players to make low-accuracy moves hit 100 percent of the time. I captured a screenshot of a Hoppip that was casting three shadows simultaneously (though it's possible the Paldea region has three suns that I just don't know about).

Nintendo released a 1.1.0 update for both Pokémon games today that includes "select bug fixes" (though the company didn't specify which). But alongside that mostly routine post-launch update came a less-routine acknowledgment of the performance problems and a suggestion that the company would provide fixes.

Read 2 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Daily Deals (12-01-2022)

Today’s the last day to score the Roku Channel’s Black Friday deals that let you sign up for any of dozens of premium channels for just $1 to $2 per month for up to 2 months. I just signed up for Paramount+ and Showtime subscriptions to ca…

Today’s the last day to score the Roku Channel’s Black Friday deals that let you sign up for any of dozens of premium channels for just $1 to $2 per month for up to 2 months. I just signed up for Paramount+ and Showtime subscriptions to catch up on Star Trek and finally get around […]

The post Daily Deals (12-01-2022) appeared first on Liliputing.

Call of Duty players flock to buy “all-black” DLC skin, hide in dark corners

LA Thieves skin pack becomes a bestseller by offering in-game camouflage effect.

You'll never see me coming...

Enlarge / You'll never see me coming...

Industry watchers who pay attention to Steam's Top Sellers charts may have noticed a surprising entry climbing near the top in recent days: a cosmetic Call of Duty skin pack themed after the Los Angeles Thieves Call of Duty League (CDL) team. Those surprisingly strong sales probably have little to do with team fandom, though, and more to do with how the nearly all-black kit can make players harder to spot in Modern Warfare II or Warzone 2.0 matches.

The LA Thieves pack, which went on sale earlier this week, is one of 12 different themed skin packs designed around the 12 teams in the competitive CDL. But while every other available CDL skin pack features bright colors and/or a striped shoulder harness for easy visibility, the LA Thieves' offering is almost completely black, save for a small red "LA" logo on the chest, left arm, and back.

Players have quickly noticed how this outfit could make them harder to see in the darker parts of some Call of Duty maps. "Make sure you guys head to the store and pick up the only skin that gives you a competitive advantage," Thieves player Sam Larew cheekily tweeted on Tuesday.

Read 7 remaining paragraphs | Comments

Google’s Reading mode app makes Android more accessible for blind, low-vision and dyslexic users

Google is introducing a handful of new features that are available or coming soon to Android. Among other things, there’s a new YouTube Search widget that lets you find videos from your home screen, the ability for some folks who use their phone…

Google is introducing a handful of new features that are available or coming soon to Android. Among other things, there’s a new YouTube Search widget that lets you find videos from your home screen, the ability for some folks who use their phones to unlock a car to share their digital car keys with friends […]

The post Google’s Reading mode app makes Android more accessible for blind, low-vision and dyslexic users appeared first on Liliputing.