The 10 drugs up for Medicare price negotiation have seen steep price hikes

Much of the drugs’ costs are due to repeated price hikes over the years.

High angle close-up view still life of an opened prescription bottles with pills and medication spilling onto ae background of money, U.S. currency with Lincoln Portrait.

Enlarge (credit: Getty | YinYang)

The first 10 prescription drugs up for Medicare price negotiations have had years of price hikes that have ratcheted up costs for US taxpayers—which totaled $50.5 billion in gross Medicare Part D coverage costs in the past year and $3.4 billion in out-of-pocket costs in 2022.

Today, the Department of Health and Human Services announced the 10 drugs selected for the first round of Medicare price negotiations, established under the Inflation Reduction Act. All but one of the announced drugs were among the top 25 costliest Medicare Part D prescriptions in 2021. An analysis by the AARP released earlier this month found that those top 25 drugs had price increases that, on average, tripled their list prices in their time on the market and far exceeded the rate of inflation.

The 10 selected today were no exception. The drugs are used by about 9 million Medicare Part D enrollees and treat various conditions, from diabetes, psoriasis, blood clots, heart failure, chronic kidney disease, to blood cancers. Based on 2021 prices, the nine drugs included in the AARP analysis were found to have list price increases averaging 262 percent in their time on the market. The average corresponding rate of inflation for the nine drugs was 64 percent.

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After Musk’s mass layoffs, X says it’s expanding safety and election teams

X, née Twitter, greenlights wider range of political advertising.

Twitter's old bird logo next to the X logo that replaced it.

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images | NurPhoto )

X, the social network that most people still call Twitter, says it is adding staff to its safety and elections teams as it starts allowing more political advertising.

"We're currently expanding our safety and elections teams to focus on combating manipulation, surfacing inauthentic accounts and closely monitoring the platform for emerging threats," the company said in a blog post today.

X probably wouldn't need to hire more staff if not for owner Elon Musk's extreme cost-cutting. Since buying Twitter in October 2022, he has reduced the employee count from about 7,500 people to around 1,500.

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These Raspberry Pi CM4 clones are powered by Rockchip processors

Two of the Chinese companies that crank out Raspberry Pi-like products (right down to the Fruit + Pi names) are at it again, this time with Raspberry Pi Compute Module clones. The Orange Pi Compute Module 4 is a system-on-a-module that should be compa…

Two of the Chinese companies that crank out Raspberry Pi-like products (right down to the Fruit + Pi names) are at it again, this time with Raspberry Pi Compute Module clones. The Orange Pi Compute Module 4 is a system-on-a-module that should be compatible with most carrier boards designed for the Raspberry Pi CM4. But […]

The post These Raspberry Pi CM4 clones are powered by Rockchip processors appeared first on Liliputing.

Google’s $30-per-month “Duet” AI will craft awkward emails, images for you

Google’s new kitchen-sink AI branding is everything to everyone in every Workspace app.

A robot with many hands using digital devices at workplace

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images / Benj Edwards)

On Tuesday, Google announced the launch of its Duet AI assistant across its Workspace apps, including Docs, Gmail, Drive, Slides, and more. First announced in May at Google I/O, Duet has been in testing for some time, but it is now available to paid Google Workspace business users (what Google calls its suite of cloud productivity apps) for $30 a month in addition to regular Workspace fees.

Duet is not just one thing—instead, it's a blanket brand name for a multitude of different AI capabilities and probably should have been called "Google Kitchen Sink." It likely represents several distinct AI systems behind the scenes. For example, in Gmail, Duet can summarize a conversation thread across emails, use the content of an email to write a brief or draft an email based on a topic. In Docs, it can write content such as a customer proposal or a story. In Slides, it can generate custom visuals using an image synthesis model. In Sheets, it can help format existing spreadsheets or create a custom spreadsheet structure suited to a particular task, such as a project tracker.

An example of Google Duet in action (one of many), provided by Google.

An example of Google Duet in action (one of many), provided by Google. (credit: Google)

Some of Duet's applications feel like confusion in branding. In Google Meet, Google says that Duet AI can "ensure you look and sound your best with studio look, studio lighting, and studio sound," including "dynamic tiles" and "face detection"—functions that feel far removed from typical generative AI capabilities—as well as automatically translated captions. It can also reportedly capture notes and video, sending a summary to attendees in the meeting. In fact, using Duet's "attend for me" feature, Google says that "Duet AI will be able to join the meeting on your behalf" and send you a recap later.

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iFixit tears down a McDonald’s ice cream machine, demands DMCA exemption for it

Public Knowledge and iFixit want the right to repair commercial kitchen gear.

iFixit staff taking apart Taylor ice cream machine

Enlarge / The McDonald's ice cream machine is a relatively simple machine. It has a compressor, a motor, churning and agitating elements, and a series of circuit boards that keep service contracts flowing. (credit: iFixit / YouTube)

McDonald’s soft-serve ice cream machines are regularly broken, and it’s not just your perception. When repair vendor and advocate iFixit was filming a video about the topic, it checked tracking map McBroken and found that 34 percent of the machines in the state of New York were reported inoperable. As I write this, the nationwide number of broken machines is just above 14 percent.

To improve the nation’s semi-frozen milk fat infrastructure, iFixit has done two things. One, as first reported by 404 Media, is to join with interest group Public Knowledge to petition the Copyright Office for an exemption allowing people to fix commercial equipment, such as McDonald’s ice cream machines and other industrial kitchen equipment, without fear of reprisal under Section 1201 of the DMCA.

The other is to obtain one of the Taylor ice cream machines used by McDonald’s franchises, tear it down, and marvel at how it could be so unreliable.

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iFixit tears down a McDonald’s ice cream machine, demands DMCA exemption for it

Public Knowledge and iFixit want the right to repair commercial kitchen gear.

iFixit staff taking apart Taylor ice cream machine

Enlarge / The McDonald's ice cream machine is a relatively simple machine. It has a compressor, a motor, churning and agitating elements, and a series of circuit boards that keep service contracts flowing. (credit: iFixit / YouTube)

McDonald’s soft-serve ice cream machines are regularly broken, and it’s not just your perception. When repair vendor and advocate iFixit was filming a video about the topic, it checked tracking map McBroken and found that 34 percent of the machines in the state of New York were reported inoperable. As I write this, the nationwide number of broken machines is just above 14 percent.

To improve the nation’s semi-frozen milk fat infrastructure, iFixit has done two things. One, as first reported by 404 Media, is to join with interest group Public Knowledge to petition the Copyright Office for an exemption allowing people to fix commercial equipment, such as McDonald’s ice cream machines and other industrial kitchen equipment, without fear of reprisal under Section 1201 of the DMCA.

The other is to obtain one of the Taylor ice cream machines used by McDonald’s franchises, tear it down, and marvel at how it could be so unreliable.

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TCL brings its paper-like display tech to phones with TCL 40 NXTPAPER series

TCL has been selling tablets with its NXTPAPER display technology for a few years, and now the company is bringing NXTPAPER to smartphones with the launch of the TCL NXTPAPER 40 and TCL NXTPAPER 40 5G. Both models are budget phones set to launch in Eu…

TCL has been selling tablets with its NXTPAPER display technology for a few years, and now the company is bringing NXTPAPER to smartphones with the launch of the TCL NXTPAPER 40 and TCL NXTPAPER 40 5G. Both models are budget phones set to launch in Europe soon before rolling out to the rest of the […]

The post TCL brings its paper-like display tech to phones with TCL 40 NXTPAPER series appeared first on Liliputing.

Google escapes Play Store class action after finding more persuasive expert

Court’s order is not yet finalized but could significantly reduce damages.

Google escapes Play Store class action after finding more persuasive expert

Enlarge (credit: SOPA Images / Contributor | LightRocket)

A US district judge has reversed course, revoking a 2022 class action status order for 21 million Google Play Store customers who alleged that Google “artificially inflated” prices for Android apps that could have been downloaded cheaper outside the Play Store.

Yesterday, Judge James Donato ordered the class action cancelled after he said that new evidence showed that key expert testimony that plaintiffs relied on to claim that prices were inflated was "based on assumptions about the Play Store apps that are not supported by the evidence.”

Because the expert testimony—which came from antitrust expert Hal J. Singer—failed a reliability test, it must be excluded, Donato said. Now it seems likely that plaintiffs may have to "dramatically reduce potential damages" in the case, which Singer had previously estimated could amount to billions, Bloomberg reported.

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Age of Empires and live ants used to test theoretical ideas on combat

Theories dating back to World War I put to the test with Australian meat ants.

Two small ants face each other and touch antennas.

Enlarge (credit: Jesús Alberto Ramírez Viera)

Anyone who has played a real-time strategy game probably ponders this question when preparing for a fight: Is it better to have a huge number of relatively weak units or a smaller number of extremely powerful ones? But the question predates computer games and virtual war machines. Theoreticians started tackling the problem in response to the real-world carnage of World War I, where it was posed as a question of army size vs. fighting strength.

In the years since, the ideas developed for human warfare have been adapted to apply to non-human combatants, most notably social insects, which can mobilize large forces when engaging in combat. In the early 1990s, researchers who studied ants argued that finding the right balance between force size and capability depended in part on the environment. Complex environments, they theorized, favored smaller numbers of capable units that could occupy key terrain. Simpler environments, by contrast, would allow massive waves of weak units to Zerg rush an outnumbered opponent.

That idea has been difficult to test empirically. But three researchers from the University of Western Australia (Samuel Lymbery, Bruce Webber, and Raphael Didham) have now put it to the test, using a combination of Age of Empires and live ants.

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OpenAI Asks Court to Dismiss Authors’ Copyright Infringement Claims

Several authors including comedian Sarah Silverman are suing OpenAI for using pirated copies of their books to train language models. This unauthorized use gives rise to several copyright infringement claims and also violates the DMCA, they argue. OpenAI disagrees and this week asked the California federal court to dismiss all claims but one.

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

openaiArtificial intelligence has the potential to make our lives more efficient, entertaining, and productive. There are potential downsides as well.

From a copyright perspective, AI brings up some interesting questions. For example, can content created by an AI be copyrighted? And can an AI be trained on copyrighted works without limitation?

Authors Sue OpenAI

According to several authors, large language model training sets shouldn’t be permitted to use every piece of text they come across online. In their lawsuit filed in June, book authors Paul Tremblay and Mona Awad accused OpenAI of direct and vicarious copyright infringement, among other things.

Soon after, writer/comedian Sarah Silverman was joined by authors Christopher Golden and Richard Kadrey in an identical suit which also accused OpenAI of using books as training data. This happened without permission, using datasets that were sourced from pirate sites, the complaint alleged.

The complaints mention the controversial Books2 and Books3 datasets that are believed to be sourced from shadow libraries such as LibGen, Z-Library, Sci-Hub, and Bibliotik.

“The books aggregated by these websites have also been available in bulk via torrent systems. These flagrantly illegal shadow libraries have long been of interest to the AI-training community..,” the authors wrote.

OpenAI Asks Court to Dismiss Claims

This week, OpenAI responded to these accusations with a request for the bulk of the claims to be dismissed. They include vicarious copyright infringement, DMCA violation, unfair competition, “negligence,” and unjust enrichment allegations.

“None of these causes of action states a viable claim for relief because none of the legal theories challenged here actually condemns the conduct alleged with respect to ChatGPT, the language models that power it, or the process used to create them,” OpenAI informed the court.

“It is important for these claims to be trimmed from the suit at the outset, so that these cases do not proceed to discovery and beyond with legally infirm theories of liability.”

bulk dismissed

The only claim that should be able to survive, for now, is direct copyright infringement, but OpenAI expects to defeat the claim at a later stage.

Fair Use

The authors’ copyright infringement claims are grounded in copyright law. OpenAI doesn’t dispute that copyright plays a role but notes that the complaints take a hard line, glossing over exemptions such as fair use.

“Those claims, however, misconceive the scope of copyright, failing to take into account the limitations and exceptions (including fair use) that properly leave room for innovations like the large language models now at the forefront of artificial intelligence.”

OpenAI notes that when the U.S. Constitution was drafted, its creators saw copyright law as a tool to promote the progress of science and the useful arts. In this case, AI is seen as useful progress, and its use of large amounts of copyrighted texts could be seen as ‘fair’.

“Numerous courts have applied the fair use doctrine to strike that balance, recognizing that the use of copyrighted materials by innovators in transformative ways does not violate copyright,” OpenAI writes.

Derivative?

The authors clearly have a different take. They argued that every output of OpenAI’s language models is a copyright infringing derivative work. These derivatives are generated without obtaining permission from rightsholders.

OpenAI argues that this conclusion goes too far. The organization points out, based on the authors’ theory, that all output from large language models is essentially copyright infringing. While that may be what the authors want, it would severely hamper AI innovations.

Courts have previously rejected interpretations of the term derivative that are too broad, and should do so here as well, the AI company notes.

“According to the Complaints, every single ChatGPT output —from a simple response to a question, to the name of the President of the United States, to a paragraph describing the plot, themes, and significance of Homer’s The Iliad— is necessarily an infringing ‘derivative work’ of Plaintiffs’ books.

“Worse still, each of those outputs would simultaneously be an infringing derivative of each of the millions of other individual works contained in the training corpus— regardless of whether there are any similarities between the output and the training works. That is not how copyright law works,” OpenAI adds.

Based on these and a variety of arguments, OpenAI asks the court to dismiss all claims, except direct copyright infringement.

The authors have yet to respond, but they will likely counter OpenAI’s motion. These cases will help to define the boundaries of copyright when it comes to AI developments, and will likely be fought tooth and nail.

The motions to dismiss in the Tremblay and Awad case can be found here (pdf), and the identical version that’s filed in the Silverman, Golden, Kadrey lawsuit is available here (pdf).

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