Las Vegas Fashion Show

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Las Vegas Fashion Show

Let's Not Try to Figure Out Everything at Once

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Let's Not Try to Figure Out Everything at Once

ajpscs posted a photo:

the SQUARE
TOKYO LOST SOULS
© ajpscs

Hotei-sama în Mura Granit, Takamatsu

DanÃ…ke Carlsson posted a photo:

Hotei-sama în Mura Granit, Takamatsu

Night on Fire

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Night on Fire

Richard MacDonald

Thomas Hawk posted a photo:

Richard MacDonald

Wie profiteert van het meest commerciële WK ooit?

Het zit erop. Deze zondag is de WK-finale tussen Argentinië en Spanje: het einde van het grootste WK ooit.

15113 This is not a pitcher cropped unsigned

iain.davidson100 has added a photo to the pool:

15113 This is not a pitcher cropped unsigned

The Register

Biting the hand that feeds IT — Enterprise Technology News and Analysis

South Korea making its own security-centric AI model

South Korea is developing its own security-focused AI model and hopes to bring it online by the end of the year, to ensure the nation has sovereign bug-finding capabilities. Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Science and ICT Bae Kyung-hoon revealed the effort to create the model yesterday, and said it’s needed so South Korea possesses a bug-finding model to rival Anthropic’s Mythos. The US government has twice blocked access to Mythos, once by requiring Anthropic to offer it only to American citizens – a demand the AI company could not meet and therefore blocked all access – and a second time by ordering the company to take down its services so Washington could investigate allegations of possible dangerous performance problems. Those incidents led many other nations conclude that the US could in future deny access to powerful models – meaning US-based organizations and national security agencies would have an edge. Washington has since allowed limited access to Mythos to some of its allies. Interest in developing sovereign AI capacity has nonetheless soared, and Bae said South Korea now aspires to develop its own Mythos-class model. The Register is aware of another effort to create Mythos-like tools, involving private firms and infrastructure operators across several countries. In South Korea, the government’s approach is to add security-related information to the corpus it is using to train a locally developed frontier model. The minister said he expects that security-capable model will debut by the end of 2026. South Korea has also sought bids to create a chatbot that will be made freely available to all residents, plus an agentic application that will help locals interact with government services. Minister Bae made his remarks at a policy briefing session conducted by President Lee Jae Myung, during which discussions about AI also touched on using the technology to detect fake news in real time, and put it to work handling complaints about government services more quickly than is currently possible. ®

Slashdot

News for nerds, stuff that matters

HP Fined $14 Million For 'Cartelization' of Ink Cartridges, Toner, PCs

India's Competition Commission has fined HP India and its partners about 1.4 billion rupees ($14.4 million), alleging the company colluded with resellers to rig government PC bids and fix prices for ink cartridges, toner, and other printing supplies. "It said that HP was aiming to outcompete other OEMs and discourage resellers from selling 'counterfeit' ink and toner," adds Ars Technica. From the report: In an order, the CCI said that HP India worked with five resellers to coordinate their bid prices for government contracts to increase the chances of an HP partner winning the contracts. The company was fined 1.3 billion rupees (about $13.1 million). [...] HP was also fined 119.8 million rupees (about $1.2 million) for "indulging in cartelization in sale and supply of supplies products comprising of toner, cartridges, and other consumable used with print hardware products," CCI said in its announcement. The agency also fined 21 HP resellers 35.2 million rupees (about $365,335).

In a separate order, the CCI said that WhatsApp records showed that HP and 16 of its Tier-2 reseller partners operated "in a collusive arrangement" and that the messages show the companies engaging in "bid rigging, including cover bidding, price fixation, and customer allocation during 2017-2020." HP India played a central role, the regulator said.

Per the order, HP India said that high printing supply prices led some resellers to threaten to "shift to low-cost counterfeit products to compete on price." "HP India was commercially forced into a position where it had to support the collusive arrangement adopted by the Tier-2 resellers," the order reads. For its part, the order said that HP India "humbly objects to HP India's role being characterized as a 'kingpin' of the entire collusive arrangement." [...] The CCI also ordered HP India and its channel partners to "cease and desist from anti-competitive conduct" and to hold competition compliance training programs within 60 days.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.