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Die Entwicklung von Confluence Server wurde eingestellt, bald endet auch der Support. Was betroffene Kunden jetzt tun können und welche Alternativen zur Verfügung stehen, erfahren Sie hier. (Atlassian, Wirtschaft)

Die Entwicklung von Confluence Server wurde eingestellt, bald endet auch der Support. Was betroffene Kunden jetzt tun können und welche Alternativen zur Verfügung stehen, erfahren Sie hier. (Atlassian, Wirtschaft)

US says Sam Bankman-Fried lied to jury, isn’t as “clueless” as he claims

With trial nearly over, defense says SBF is not a “villain” or “monster.”

Wearing a suit, former FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried pictured from the side as he arrives at court.

Enlarge / Former FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried arrives for a bail revocation hearing at US District Court on August 11, 2023, in New York City. (credit: Getty Images | Michael Santiago)

FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried's monthlong criminal trial neared its end today as the prosecution and defense presented closing arguments.

Bankman-Fried is accused of defrauding customers and investors of cryptocurrency exchange FTX and its affiliate Alameda Research. "This was a pyramid of deceit built by the defendant on a foundation of lies and false promises, all to get money," US prosecutor Nicolas Roos told the jury today, according to Reuters. "Eventually it collapsed, leaving thousands of victims in its wake."

Roos described how FTX customers lost their investments when the exchange collapsed, the Associated Press wrote. "Who was responsible?" Roos said, pointing at the defendant. "This man, Samuel Bankman-Fried. What happened? He spent his customers' money and he lied to them about it."

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“Catastrophic” AI harms among warnings in declaration signed by 28 nations

“Bletchley Declaration” sums up first day of UK’s international AI Safety Summit.

Technology Secretary Michelle Donelan (front row center) is joined by international counterparts for a group photo at the AI Safety Summit at Bletchley Park in Milton Keynes, Buckinghamshire on Wednesday November 1, 2023.

Enlarge / UK Technology Secretary Michelle Donelan (front row center) is joined by international counterparts for a group photo at the AI Safety Summit at Bletchley Park in Milton Keynes, Buckinghamshire, on November 1, 2023. (credit: Getty Images)

On Wednesday, the UK hosted an AI Safety Summit attended by 28 countries, including the US and China, which gathered to address potential risks posed by advanced AI systems, reports The New York Times. The event included the signing of "The Bletchley Declaration," which warns of potential harm from advanced AI and calls for international cooperation to ensure responsible AI deployment.

"There is potential for serious, even catastrophic, harm, either deliberate or unintentional, stemming from the most significant capabilities of these AI models," reads the declaration, named after Bletchley Park, the site of the summit and a historic World War II location linked to Alan Turing. Turing wrote influential early speculation about thinking machines.

Rapid advancements in machine learning, including the appearance of chatbots like ChatGPT, have prompted governments worldwide to consider regulating AI. Their concerns led to the meeting, which has drawn criticism for its invitation list. In the tech world, representatives from major companies included those from Anthropic, Google DeepMind, IBM, Meta, Microsoft, Nvidia, OpenAI, and Tencent. Civil society groups, like Britain's Ada Lovelace Institute and the Algorithmic Justice League in Massachusetts, also sent representatives.

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14 big landlords used software to collude on rent prices, DC lawsuit says

Suit claims employees were told pricing outside the algorithm was “unacceptable.”

House keys on top of a Mac-like laptop trackpad

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images)

DC's attorney general has sued 14 of the city's largest landlord firms, claiming they entered into agreements with a property management software firm to keep rent prices high in a city with a housing affordability crisis.

The complaint, filed earlier today by Attorney General Brian Schwalb, focuses on the multifamily landlords' use of software from Texas-based firm RealPage, which suggests rental prices based on a pricing algorithm. Key to those models, according to the suit, is the data fed in from the landlords and the pressure RealPage puts on them to stick to the code-derived rental rates.

"RealPage and the defendant landlords illegally colluded to artificially raise rents by participating in a centralized, anticompetitive scheme, causing District residents to pay millions of dollars above fair market prices,” Schwalb said in a release tied to the complaint.

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Apple’s cheaper Pencil is available to buy now, but it has some limitations

$79 Pencil lowers the barrier to entry for drawing on an iPad.

The new USB-C Apple Pencil is now available for sale through Apple's website, with the first shipments arriving on November 3. It looks like it will be available in physical stores starting around November 8, too.

The $79 peripheral is the third Apple Pencil model, but don't let that fool you into thinking it's the best choice; it's the new cheaper, entry-level option. The second-generation Pencil is the highest-end one, at $129.

What makes this Pencil different? Well, you can look at the gigantic table above from Apple's website to see the features as they compare to other models—or you can read what we wrote a couple of weeks ago when it was first announced:

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