People game AIs via game theory

They reject more of the AI’s offers, probably to get it to be more generous.

A judge's gavel near a pile of small change.

Enlarge / In the experiments, people had to judge what constituted a fair monetary offer. (credit: manusapon kasosod)

In many cases, AIs are trained on material that's either made or curated by humans. As a result, it can become a significant challenge to keep the AI from replicating the biases of those humans and the society they belong to. And the stakes are high, given we're using AIs to make medical and financial decisions.

But some researchers at Washington University in St. Louis have found an additional wrinkle in these challenges: The people doing the training may potentially change their behavior when they know it can influence the future choices made by an AI. And, in at least some cases, they carry the changed behaviors into situations that don't involve AI training.

Would you like to play a game?

The work involved getting volunteers to participate in a simple form of game theory. Testers gave two participants a pot of money—$10, in this case. One of the two was then asked to offer some fraction of that money to the other, who could choose to accept or reject the offer. If the offer was rejected, nobody got any money.

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Lilbits: Intel extends warranties for desktop chips (but your PC maker may not be following suit)

Last month Intel finally acknowledged issues with its 13th and 14th-gen desktop chips based on Raptor Lake architecture and promised to release microcode updates that would prevent these chips from becoming unstable. They’re starting to roll out…

Last month Intel finally acknowledged issues with its 13th and 14th-gen desktop chips based on Raptor Lake architecture and promised to release microcode updates that would prevent these chips from becoming unstable. They’re starting to roll out now. But if you have one of these chips and it’s already become glitchy and crash-prone, the only […]

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UFC Links Increase in Piracy Numbers to ESPN Price Hikes

The Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) has repeatedly taken a tough stance on piracy, condemning freeloaders and calling for tough enforcement measures. In a recent earnings call, UFC parent company TKO noted that ESPN price hikes haven’t made things easier. On the contrary, the company directly links price increases to the “jacked up” piracy numbers.

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

tko logoThe Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) has promoted mixed martial arts fights for three decades, turning the sport into a billion-dollar industry.

The company is known for its aggressive stance against piracy. UFC President Dana White has repeatedly called out pirates and even got into a keyboard fight with a trolling streaming pirate.

UFC has also called on lawmakers to help them address the piracy problem. In U.S. Congress recently, the company urged lawmakers to consider site-blocking legislation. UFC also wants service providers to take responsibility and process takedown requests instantaneously.

Carrot-and-Stick

Fighting piracy with tough language, takedowns, and technological hurdles can have an effect. However, in addition to making illegal options less desirable, it’s generally a good idea to offer a great experience to legal consumers. The carrot-and-stick approach, if you will.

A few weeks ago, sports streaming services in Greece decided to present fans with a massive carrot by significantly reducing bundle prices in an attempt to combat piracy. This decision resulted in many happy consumers, who now feel that they’re getting their money’s worth.

In America, the link between pricing and piracy is typically ignored by major rightsholders, at least publicly. However, UFC and others are not insensitive to its importance. In fact, UFC parent company TKO Group Holdings highlighted the link during a quarterly earnings call yesterday.

Higher prices, More Pirates

When an analyst asked about recent pay-per-view (PPV) pricing trends and developments, TKO President Mark Shapiro said that ESPN, which is owned by Disney, has been quite aggressive with its price setting. The broadcasting partner raised PPV prices four times after signing the UFC deal in 2019, which isn’t ideal.

“Look, ESPN and Disney were very aggressive, if you will, on pricing the pay-per-view,” Shapiro responded. “Over the period of our partnership, as you’ve asked, they probably went a little quicker and a little higher than we would have liked.”

Raising prices “quicker and higher” could be a good thing if people continue to pay. However, when confronted with repeated price hikes, some subscribers decided to go down the pirate route instead.

ESPN presumably raised prices to increase profits but if subscribers churn at a rapid pace, that could be counterproductive. TKO believes that may be the case here, linking the price hikes to an increasing piracy rate.

Pricing Matters

TKO doesn’t set ESPN’s prices and has no direct influence on them. However, after noticing elevated piracy rates, TKO shared its concerns with the broadcaster.

“We voiced that to them, especially in this kind of era of piracy where we’re seeing our piracy numbers really jacked up and we think that’s driven by them pricing it too high. They were very receptive to that feedback,” Shapiro notes.

Following a meeting in Las Vegas a few months ago, attended by both UFC CEO Dana White and ESPN chairman Jimmy Pitaro, ESPN made some price tweaks, offering a discount to loyal fans.

“[T]hey took their price down […] in terms of offering a new marketing promotion where, if you buy by a certain date well in advance of the numbered fights, you were going to get a discount, and then the price of course increases once you pass that date. And they’re seeing good success with that,” Shapiro said.

While ESPN’s ‘concession’ is certainly not as generous as that of the Greek streamers, it shows that streaming platforms realize that higher prices are not always better. The ultimate goal is to find an equilibrium, where legal services are affordable, while also being profitable.

MMA Fighting notes that the last increase in UFC PPV prices dates back to late 2022, so ESPN is clearly taking it easy on that front. At this stage, it might even make sense to take “a hit” of somewhat lower profits, driving people away from pirate sites and services to undo their piracy habits.

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

Intel details fixes for crashing 13th- and 14th-gen CPUs as BIOS updates roll out

This microcode fix can’t be rolled out in a regular software update.

Intel details fixes for crashing 13th- and 14th-gen CPUs as BIOS updates roll out

Enlarge (credit: Intel)

Intel has shared more about the voltage-related issues that affected some 13th- and 14th-generation Core processors, as the company tries to put the episode behind it. As reported by Tom's Hardware, Intel says that the problem originated with "elevated operating voltage" stemming from "incorrect voltage requests," specifically an increase to the minimum operating voltage of the chips. These "elevated voltage events can accumulate over time," eventually damaging the processor and causing system hangs or crashes.

Intel has developed a microcode update to fix those elevated voltage requests, but the bad news for some users is that they will require a BIOS update, and they can't be deployed via software updates as some microcode fixes can be.

Intel says that in most cases, CPU performance should be essentially unaffected by the patch, though the company did notice a handful of benchmark subscores and individual games that exhibited "moderate" slowdown (though we don't know how much that is, in concrete terms). Here's the relevant statement about performance:

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Daily Deals (8-09-2024)

The Epic Games Store is giving away two PC games this week. Best Buy has some decent deals on cheap Chromebooks and Windows laptops. And Samsung’s latest budget and mid-range tablets continue to be on sale for well below their list prices. Here …

The Epic Games Store is giving away two PC games this week. Best Buy has some decent deals on cheap Chromebooks and Windows laptops. And Samsung’s latest budget and mid-range tablets continue to be on sale for well below their list prices. Here are some of the day’s best deals. Laptops Lenovo IdeaPad Slim 3 […]

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Nova Launcher, savior of cruft-filled Android phones, is on life support

Nova Launcher feels the “massive” layoffs at the firm that acquired it in 2022.

Lineup of four Android devices showing Nova Launcher aspects, including the logo, icon customization, and app drawer

Enlarge (credit: Nova Launcher)

Back in July 2022, when mobile app metrics firm Branch acquired the popular and well-regarded Nova Launcher for Android, the app's site put up one of those self-directed FAQ posts about it. Under the question heading "What does Branch want with Nova?," Nova founder and creator Kevin Barry started his response with, "Not to mess it up, don't worry!"

Branch (formerly/sometimes Branch Metrics) is a firm concerned with helping businesses track the links that lead into their apps, whether from SMS, email, marketing, or inside other apps. Nova, with its Sesame Search tool that helped users find and access deeper links—like heading straight to calling a car, rather than just opening a rideshare app—seemed like a reasonable fit.

Barry wrote that he had received a number of acquisition offers over the years, but he didn't want to be swallowed by a giant corporation, an OEM, or a volatile startup. "Branch is different," he wrote then, because they wanted to add staff to Nova, keep it available to the public, and mostly leave it alone.

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Dozens injured, pets killed in fires causing Samsung to recall 1.1M stoves

Samsung is currently offering free knob locks and covers to prevent fires.

US Consumer Product Safety Commission announced a recall of 1.1 million Samsung Slide-in Electric Ranges due to hundreds of reported fires.

Enlarge / US Consumer Product Safety Commission announced a recall of 1.1 million Samsung Slide-in Electric Ranges due to hundreds of reported fires. (credit: Samsung)

After hundreds of reports of fires causing dozens of injuries and several pet deaths, Samsung is recalling more than a million electric stoves sold in the US between 2013 and 2024.

In a press release, the US Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) reported that the voluntary recall was due to "front-mounted knobs" on Samsung's slide-in electric ranges. The faulty knobs "can be activated by accidental contact by humans or pets, posing a fire hazard"—particularly when people leave objects on the stove.

The stoves impacted by the recall were widely sold in Costco, Home Depot, Best Buy, Lowe's, and other appliance stores nationwide. Their knobs can be easily triggered by accident, heating up the cooktop and increasing the risks of fires, the CPSC said. Since 2013, Samsung has received "over 300 reports of unintentional activation." According to the CPSC:

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Raspberry Pi Pico 2 is a $5 board powered by the new RP2350 microcontroller (with RISC-V and ARM Cortex-M33 cores)

Three and a half years after launching the Raspberry Pi Pico and RP2040 microcontroller, Raspberry Pi has introduced new versions of each that bring a number of upgrades. The new Raspberry Pi RP2350 microcontroller features faster CPU cores, twice as …

Three and a half years after launching the Raspberry Pi Pico and RP2040 microcontroller, Raspberry Pi has introduced new versions of each that bring a number of upgrades. The new Raspberry Pi RP2350 microcontroller features faster CPU cores, twice as much memory, and optional support for on-chip storage. It’s also the first Raspberry Pi device to feature […]

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“Archeology” on the ISS helps identify what astronauts really need

Regular photography shows a tool shed and more isolated toilet would be appreciated.

I woman holds a handheld device in front of a rack of equipment.

Enlarge / Jessica Watkins gets to work on the ISS (credit: NASA)

“Archeology really is a perspective on material culture we use as evidence to understand how humans adapt to their environment, to the situations they are in, and to each other. There is no place, no time that is out of bounds,” says Justin Walsh, an archeologist at Chapman University who led the first off-world archeological study on board the ISS.

Walsh’s and his team wanted to understand, document, and preserve the heritage of the astronaut culture at one of the first permanent space habitats. “There is this notion about astronauts that they are high achievers, highly intelligent, and highly trained, that they are not like you and me. What we learned is that they are just people, and they want the comforts of home,” Walsh says.

Disposable cameras and garbage

“In 2008, my student in an archeology class raised her hand and said, ‘What about stuff in space, is that heritage?’ I said, ‘Oh my God, I’ve never thought of this before, but yes,’” Walsh says. “Think of Tranquility base—it’s an archeological site. You could go back there, and you could reconstruct not only the specific activities of Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin, but you could understand the engineering culture, the political culture, etc. of the society that created that equipment, sent it to the Moon, and left it there.”

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Netflix und Crunchyroll: Neue Anime-Folgen vor Veröffentlichung verfügbar

Netflix will energisch gegen illegale Veröffentlichungen vorgehen. Das unfertige Material der Serien und Animes soll schnell offline genommen werden. Fans haben andere Wünsche. (Netflix, Politik)

Netflix will energisch gegen illegale Veröffentlichungen vorgehen. Das unfertige Material der Serien und Animes soll schnell offline genommen werden. Fans haben andere Wünsche. (Netflix, Politik)