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‘Mass theft’: Thousands of artists call for AI art auction to be cancelled
Thousands of artists are urging the auction house Christie’s to cancel a sale of art created with artificial intelligence, claiming the technology behind the works is committing “mass theft”.The Augmented Intelligence auction has been described by Christie’s as the first AI-dedicated sale by a major auctioneer and features 20 lots with prices ranging from $10,000 to $250,000 for works by artists including Refik Anadol and the late AI art pioneer Harold Cohen.A letter calling for the auction to be scrapped has received 3,000 signatures, including from Karla Ortiz and Kelly McKernan, who are suing AI companies over claims that the firms’ image generation tools have used their work without permission.The letter says: “Many of the artworks you plan to auction were created using AI models that are known to be trained on copyrighted work without a licence. These models, and the companies behind them, exploit human artists, using their work without permission or payment to build commercial AI products that compete with them
Major outage hits TPG, Vodafone, iiNet, Internode and Kogan customers amid wild NSW weather
One of Australia’s largest internet providers has been hit with a major outage, leaving thousands businesses and individuals without broadband access.In a statement on Monday evening, TPG Telecom said it was working to resolve a “technical issue”, which was causing disruption to its fixed broadband services for consumer and business customers.“This issue is affecting broadband services for TPG, Vodafone, iiNet, Internode and Kogan fixed internet customers,” they said.Sign up for Guardian Australia’s breaking news email“Our technical teams have identified the issue and are working to restore services as quickly as possible for all customers.“We apologise for any inconvenience this has caused
AI race must be led by ‘western, liberal, democratic’ countries, says UK minister
The artificial intelligence race must be led by “western, liberal, democratic” countries, said the UK technology secretary in a veiled warning over China’s role in the contest, before a global AI summit in Paris.Peter Kyle spoke as political leaders and tech company bosses gather in France, and after the emergence of a new Chinese force in AI, DeepSeek, rattled US investors and upended assumptions about Silicon Valley’s leadership in the technology.The tech minister told the Guardian he would use the summit to explain why Britain should be at the forefront of developing AI.As well as allowing global leaders and companies to “come together and learn from each other”, the summit would give the UK a chance to show why it had the “skills and the scientific pedigree” that were “going to be essential if western, liberal, democratic countries are to remain at the forefront of this critical technology”, he said.Kyle added that AI would have an impact on every part of the economy and society, including national security and defence
From Dogecoin to $Trump: everything you need know about the wild world of meme coins
Are they the same as crypto, why has the US president launched one, and who’s really coining it in? Here’s a complete guide to the latest digital money maniaThree days before his inauguration as US president, Donald Trump made an unusual move. He launched $Trump, a so-called meme coin that fans and speculators could buy in the hopes it would gain value. Initially, $Trump soared from a value of $7 to $75 per coin in a day, according to crypto price-tracking website CoinMarketCap. Two days later, it dropped to about $40 – just as incoming first lady Melania Trump launched her own meme coin, $Melania. Even the pastor at Trump’s inauguration ceremony, Lorenzo Sewell, got swept up in the meme coin frenzy, promoting a $Lorenzo version the same afternoon
We didn’t click ‘consent’ on any gambling website. So how did Facebook know where we’d been?
A Facebook user logs into their account and is bombarded with dozens of gambling ads. The promotions for online casinos and betting sites offer free spins, “bet boosts”, discounts and bonuses.But the person has never placed a bet or played a game on a gambling site before – let alone consented to being targeted. How can that happen?The Observer conducted an experiment to find out how potential gambling customers are being tracked, profiled and targeted online.To do this, we visited 150 gambling websites run by companies with licences to operate in the UK
AI is developing fast, but regulators must be faster | Letters
The recent open letter regarding AI consciousness on which you report (AI systems could be ‘caused to suffer’ if consciousness achieved, says research, 3 February) highlights a genuine moral problem: if we create conscious AI (whether deliberately or inadvertently) then we would have a duty not to cause it to suffer. What the letter fails to do, however, is to capture what a big “if” this is.Some promising theories of consciousness do indeed open the door to AI consciousness. But other equally promising theories suggest that being conscious requires being an organism. Although we can look for indicators of consciousness in AI, it is very difficult – perhaps impossible – to know whether an AI is actually conscious or merely presenting the outward signs of consciousness
Asil Nadir, Polly Peck tycoon turned fugitive, dies aged 83
Asil Nadir obituary
‘Engine of inequality’: delegates discuss AI’s global impact at Paris summit
Man who lost bitcoin fortune in Welsh tip explores purchase of entire landfill
White cornerback, Black QB: did Eagles grab ultimate DEI Super Bowl win?
World Athletics plans cheek-swab tests for elite athletes in female category