Noah Lyles: ‘America has a winner’s mentality. That’s the good and the bad’
How the far right is weaponising AI-generated content in Europe
From fake images designed to cause fears of an immigrant “invasion” to other demonisation campaigns targeted at leaders such as Emmanuel Macron, far-right parties and activists across western Europe are at the forefront of the political weaponisation of generative artificial intelligence technology.This year’s European parliamentary elections were the launchpad for a rollout of AI-generated campaigning by the European far right, experts say, which has continued to proliferate since.This month, the issue reached the independent oversight board of Mark Zuckerberg’s Meta when the body opened an investigation into anti-immigration content on Facebook. The inquiry by the oversight board will look at a post from a German account featuring an AI-generated image emblazoned with anti-immigrant rhetoric.It is part of a wave of AI-made rightwing content on social media networks
Oxford scientist resigns from Royal Society over Elon Musk’s continuing fellowship
A leading scientist at the University of Oxford has resigned from the UK’s national academy of sciences over concerns about Elon Musk’s continuing fellowship.Prof Dorothy Bishop, emeritus professor of developmental neuropsychology and a leading expert on children’s communication disorders, said she handed back her fellowship of the Royal Society last week.Bishop told the Guardian her move was a gut reaction, adding she had met the president and the chief executive after indicating her decision to resign, who stressed the need to follow due process over Musk.“I just started to think, you know, the Royal Society seemed to be set up to make it very, very difficult to ever get somebody to resign or to actually get thrown out, and given all I know about Musk, it felt grubby, to be honest,” she said.“It just felt having him in the Royal Society seemed such a contradiction of all the values of the Royal Society
Meta Quest 3S review: the best bang for your buck in VR
Meta’s latest virtual reality headset offers almost everything that makes its top model the best on the market but at a price that is far more palatable as an entry into VR.The Quest 3S costs £290 (€330/$300/A$500) – about 40% less than the £470 Quest 3 and cheaper than 2020’s Quest 2 that it directly replaces.The new device is a halfway house between the Quest 2 and Quest 3. It takes the same top Qualcomm VR chip from the Quest 3 that dramatically improves performance and slots it into a body similar in design and operation to the Quest 2 to keep the cost down.An easy-to-adjust strap fits across the back and top of your head while pivotable arms and a foam faceplate help make the Quest 3S one of the more comfortable headsets to wear for prolonged periods
Don’t know what to buy your loved ones for Christmas? Just ask ChatGPT
Some people love buying Christmas presents. Polly Arrowsmith starts making a note of what her friends and family like, then hunts for bargains, slowly and carefully. Vie Portland begins her shopping in January and has a theme each year, from heart mirrors to inspirational books. And Betsy Benn spent so much time thinking about presents, she ended up opening her own online gift business.How would these gift-giving experts react to a trend that is either a timesaving brainwave or an appalling corruption of the Christmas spirit: asking ChatGPT to do it for them?The answer, like Christmas Day, will have to wait
AI increasingly used for sextortion, scams and child abuse, says senior UK police chief
Paedophiles, scammers, hackers and criminals of all kinds are increasingly exploiting artificial intelligence (AI) to target victims in new and harmful ways, a senior police chief has warned.Alex Murray, the national police lead for AI, said that the use of the technology was growing rapidly because of its increasing accessibility and that police had to “move fast” to keep on top of the threat.“We know through the history of policing that criminals are inventive and will use anything they can to commit crime. They’re certainly using AI to commit crime now,” he said.“It can happen on an international and serious organised crime scale, and it can happen in someone’s bedroom … You can think of any crime type and put it through an AI lens and say: ‘What is the opportunity here?’”Speaking at the National Police Chiefs’ Council conference in London last week, Murray revealed concerns over emerging AI “heists” in which fraudsters use deepfake technology to impersonate company executives and trick their colleagues into transferring large sums of money
I’ve joined Bluesky and it feels like a breath of fresh air – in some ways… | John Naughton
As I write, there’s a window on my laptop screen that is providing a live view of a stampede. It’s logging the numbers of people joining the social network Bluesky. At the moment, the number of registered users is 20.5 million. By the time you read this there will be more than 30 million of them, judging by the rate that people are currently joining
The gospel according to Boris Johnson: it’s the church’s fault our kids are overweight | John Crace
Labour urges inquiry into claims Lee Anderson was offered money to join Reform
John Prescott packed a punch for the environment | Letters
From Egypt to India, five jailed men who feel abandoned by Britain
Is it time for another general election? I mean it’s been four months | John Crace
‘We had no alternative’: Reeves defends her budget to the CBI