Anzeige: Python in der Bildverarbeitung und Objekterkennung mit KI

Neuronale Netze sind die Grundlage moderner Bilderkennungs- und Klassifikationstechnologien. Ein umfassender Intensiv-Workshop der Golem Karrierewelt deckt das Training dieser Modelle mit Python ab. (Golem Karrierewelt, Python)

Neuronale Netze sind die Grundlage moderner Bilderkennungs- und Klassifikationstechnologien. Ein umfassender Intensiv-Workshop der Golem Karrierewelt deckt das Training dieser Modelle mit Python ab. (Golem Karrierewelt, Python)

People are overdosing on off-brand weight-loss drugs, FDA warns

Bad math and unclear directions are behind overdoses of up to 20 times the normal amount.

Wegovy is an injectable prescription weight-loss medicine that has helped people with obesity.

Enlarge / Wegovy is an injectable prescription weight-loss medicine that has helped people with obesity. (credit: Getty | Michael Siluk)

The US Food and Drug Administration has approved two injectable versions of the blockbuster weight-loss and diabetes drug, semaglutide (Wegovy and Ozempic). Both come in pre-filled pens with pre-set doses, clear instructions, and information about overdoses. But, given the drugs' daunting prices and supply shortages, many patients are turning to imitations—and those don't always come with the same safety guardrails.

In an alert Friday, the FDA warned that people are overdosing on off-brand injections of semaglutide, which are dispensed from compounding pharmacies in a variety of concentrations, labeled with various units of measurement, administered with improperly sized syringes, and prescribed with bad dosage math. The errors are leading some patients to take up to 20 times the amount of intended semaglutide, the FDA reports.

Though the agency doesn't offer a tally of overdose cases that have been reported, it suggests it has received multiple reports of people sickened by dosing errors, with some requiring hospitalizations. Semaglutide overdoses cause nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, fainting, headache, migraine, dehydration, acute pancreatitis, and gallstones, the agency reports.

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Windows 11 File Explorer is adding Android phone support

It’s possible to connect most Android phones to a PC with a USB cable and treat the phone as a USB mass storage device if you want to drag and drop files between devices or make other changes. Soon you may not need the USB cable. Microsoft has b…

It’s possible to connect most Android phones to a PC with a USB cable and treat the phone as a USB mass storage device if you want to drag and drop files between devices or make other changes. Soon you may not need the USB cable. Microsoft has begun rolling out an update that lets […]

The post Windows 11 File Explorer is adding Android phone support appeared first on Liliputing.

NASA nears decision on what to do with Boeing’s troubled Starliner spacecraft

Boeing won’t start flying operational crew missions with Starliner until a year from now.

Boeing's Strainer spacecraft is seen docked at the International Space Station in this picture taken July 3.

Enlarge / Boeing's Strainer spacecraft is seen docked at the International Space Station in this picture taken July 3. (credit: NASA)

The astronauts who rode Boeing's Starliner spacecraft to the International Space Station last month still don't know when they will return to Earth.

Astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams have been in space for 51 days, six weeks longer than originally planned, as engineers on the groundwork through problems with Starliner's propulsion system.

The problems are twofold. The spacecraft's reaction control thrusters overheated, and some of them shut off as Starliner approached the space station June 6. A separate, although perhaps related, problem involves helium leaks in the craft's propulsion system.

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Union game performers strike over AI voice and motion-capture training

Use of motion-capture actors’ performances for AI training is a sticking point.

Image of SAG-AFTRA logo next to a raised fist holding up a game controller, with

Enlarge / One day, using pixellated fonts and images to represent that something is a video game will not be a trope. Today is not that day.

SAG-AFTRA has called for a strike of all its members working in video games, with the union demanding that its next contract not allow "companies to abuse AI to the detriment of our members."

The strike mirrors similar actions taken by SAG-AFTRA and the Writers Guild of America (WGA) last year, which, while also broader in scope than just AI, were similarly focused on concerns about AI-generated work product and the use of member work to train AI.

"Frankly, it’s stunning that these video game studios haven’t learned anything from the lessons of last year—that our members can and will stand up and demand fair and equitable treatment with respect to A.I., and the public supports us in that,” Duncan Crabtree-Ireland, chief negotiator for SAG-AFTRA, said in a statement.

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AI and ML enter motorsports: How GM is using them to win more races

From modeling tire wear and fuel use to predicting cautions based on radio traffic.

SAO PAULO, BRAZIL - JULY 13: The #02 Cadillac Racing Cadillac V-Series.R of Earl Bamber, and Alex Lynn in action ahead of the Six Hours of Sao Paulo at the Autodromo de Interlagos on July 13, 2024 in Sao Paulo, Brazil.

Enlarge / The Cadillac V-Series.R is one of General Motors' factory-backed racing programs. (credit: James Moy Photography/Getty Images)

It is hard to escape the feeling that a few too many businesses are jumping on the AI hype train because it's hype-y, rather than because AI offers an underlying benefit to their operation. So I will admit to a little inherent skepticism, and perhaps a touch of morbid curiosity, when General Motors got in touch wanting to show off some of the new AI/ML tools it has been using to win more races in NASCAR, sportscar racing, and IndyCar. As it turns out, that skepticism was misplaced.

GM has fingers in a lot of motorsport pies, but there are four top-level programs it really, really cares about. Number one for an American automaker is NASCAR—still the king of motorsport here—where Chevrolet supplies engines to six Cup teams. IndyCar, which could once boast of being America's favorite racing, is home to another six Chevy-powered teams. And then there's sportscar racing; right now Cadillac is competing in IMSA's GTP class and the World Endurance Championship's Hypercar class, plus a factory Corvette Racing effort in IMSA.

"In all the series we race we either have key partners or specific teams that run our cars. And part of the technical support that they get from us are the capabilities of my team," said Jonathan Bolenbaugh, motorsports analytics leader at GM, based at GM's Charlotte Technical Center in North Carolina.

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ISPs seeking government handouts try to avoid offering low-cost broadband

Despite getting subsidies, ISPs oppose $30 plans for people with low incomes.

Illustration of fiber Internet cables

Enlarge (credit: Getty Images | Yuichiro Chino)

Internet service providers are eager to get money from a $42.45 billion government fund, but are trying to convince the Biden administration to drop demands that Internet service providers offer broadband service for as little as $30 a month to people with low incomes.

The Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment (BEAD) program was created by a US law that requires Internet providers receiving federal funds to offer at least one "low-cost broadband service option for eligible subscribers." The Biden administration says it is merely enforcing that legal requirement, but a July 23 letter sent by over 30 broadband industry trade groups claims that the administration is illegally regulating broadband prices.

The fund is administered by the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA). The NTIA is distributing money to states, which will then distribute it to ISPs. Before obtaining money from the NTIA, each state must get approval for a plan that includes a low-cost option. Nearly half of US states have already gotten approvals.

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Music Industry Puts Pressure on ‘Parasitic’ Streaming App Musi

Musi is one of the most popular music apps in Apple’s App Store. The free iOS music streaming tool has millions of happy users, but is branded a parasitic threat by the music industry. Behind the scenes, music industry group IFPI has been working hard to get it removed from the App Store. Apple hasn’t taken action thus far but further escalation involving the major labels, YouTube, and a potential lawsuit, were proposed earlier this year.

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

App stores are littered with apps that promise free access to music, but only few live up to expectations. Musi is one of them.

The music app made headlines in 2016 when its founders, who were teenagers at the time, presented their brainchild in an episode of the Canadian edition of Dragons’ Den.

In essence, the software itself is relatively simple. Musi can stream music, which it sources from YouTube, and allows users to create and share playlists. It essentially uses YouTube as a music library, without showing the video.

This functionality directly rivals other streaming apps such as Spotify. However, since content is sourced from YouTube, costs associated with payments to labels are absent from the Musi equation, and that means it’s much cheaper to run.

This business model is a win-win for Musi’s operators and the platform’s users. Music industry insiders, on the other hand, are less pleased. They describe the app as “parasitic”, a reference to the app’s reliance on YouTube content, which it allegedly obtains by circumventing the platform’s technical protection measures.

For Dragon’s Den judge Joe Mimran, potential challenges to the business proved too much. While he was initially interested in investing $125,000 in exchange for a 15 percent stake in the company, the entrepreneur eventually walked away from the deal due to legal concerns.

“I was advised that when companies such as Musi get to a critical size, they could be sued for past use by the publishers,” Mimran informed the Financial Post in 2016.

Musi’s Millions

Musi didn’t throw in the towel after this setback. The app, which was already operational, continued to grow its user base in Apple’s iOS store. In the years that followed, it was downloaded dozens of millions of times.

Currently, Musi is ranked 5th in the App Store’s music category with over 3.5 million mostly positive ratings. That’s truly remarkable for a bootstrapped company that relied on YouTube, without any direct licensing deals in place with the major labels.

musi app store

Earlier this year, a Wired piece highlighted Musi’s success, while also shedding some light on the legal concerns. The piece doesn’t offer any conclusions, but it suggests that the app is making many millions of dollars by operating in a ‘gray area’.

At the headquarters of global music industry body IFPI, legal matters are black or white, however. The group has had the Musi app in its crosshairs for a while. Information reviewed by TorrentFreak shows that legal pressure is building.

IFPI Reports Musi to Apple

TorrentFreak learned that IFPI reported the Musi app to the App Store last summer. Apple had already removed Musi years ago but later reinstated it. With this new request, the music group hoped for a better outcome.

Four days after IFPI submitted its complaint, U.S. legal counsel for Musi Inc. reached out to IFPI, refuting its claims. Musi’s lawyer argued that the app was merely providing access to publicly available music, stressing that it doesn’t store any content on its servers.

It’s not clear whether Apple took any position in this dispute. We do know that the company, which typically has rigorous copyright standards, didn’t remove Musi from the app store.

Apple’s inaction shows that the legalities surrounding the software are certainly not straightforward. IFPI continued to press on, however, and they eventually booked a small success, which was noticeable for Musi users too.

Secret Sauce

After the initial back and forth in July last year proved unsuccessful, IFPI reached out to Musi’s law firm again in September. Among other things, the music group specifically called out Musi’s “secret sauce” feature which, purportedly, provided access to pre-release music.

The exact contents of the letter are unknown but, in October 2023, Musi permanently removed the “secret sauce” feature.

Meanwhile, IFPI continued to hammer on the precarious legal situation it believes Musi to be in. The group has two main arguments, starting with the claim that the app circumvents YouTube’s technical protection measures.

In addition, it argues that Musi infringes its members’ rights by communicating their works through ‘new means’ to a ‘new audience’.

Musi Inc, however, continues to refute these claims though its legal team and maintains that it operates within the boundaries of copyright law.

Escalation to Apply Maximum Pressure

The communication between IFPI, Musi, and Apple continued into 2024 and the status quo remains. Apple has decided to leave the matter open for now and Musi continues to add over a million new downloads per month, frustrating IFPI.

Around February, the music group proposed to escalate the matter, encouraging its members to help out by putting pressure on Apple, while also involving YouTube in the matter. The plans are as follows, paraphrased:

– Music companies might want to complain to Apple about Musi, using their existing contacts at the company.

– In addition, they should motivate YouTube to take an active stance against the app’s developers, and complain to Apple as well.

– IFPI, for its part, should inquire among legal contacts to see whether there’s a basis for a lawsuit against Musi.

These plans would use existing business relationships to tackle the Musi problem. Whether any of these suggestions were followed up, and if so, to what extent, is unknown. The proposal is a few months old by now and from the outside there doesn’t appear to be much movement. That could easily change, of course.

After more than a year, users of the Musi app haven’t noticed anything new since much of the pressure is applied behind closed doors. In itself that’s an interesting observation, as it makes one wonder what else is going on.

It’s clear, however, that IFPI can garner the full power of its high-profile record label members. These are also the names that are likely to be listed on a lawsuit, if it ever comes to that.

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

X is training Grok AI on your data—here’s how to stop it

Some users were outraged to learn this was opt-out, not opt-in.

An AI-generated image released by xAI during the launch of Grok

Enlarge / An AI-generated image released by xAI during the open-weights launch of Grok-1. (credit: xAI)

Elon Musk-led social media platform X is training Grok, its AI chatbot, on users' data, and that's opt-out, not opt-in. If you're an X user, that means Grok is already being trained on your posts if you haven't explicitly told it not to.

Over the past day or so, users of the platform noticed the checkbox to opt out of this data usage in X's privacy settings. The discovery was accompanied by outrage that user data was being used this way to begin with.

The social media posts about this sometimes seem to suggest that Grok has only just begun training on X users' data, but users actually don't know for sure when it started happening.

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