Starnberger See

Peter Kernwein posted a photo:

Starnberger See

antenna V

conspectus_bs posted a photo:

antenna V

Fomapan 100 with Mamiya 645 Pro and Sekor 50 mm Shift

Rijnmond - Nieuws

Het laatste nieuws van vandaag over Rotterdam, Feyenoord, het verkeer en het weer in de regio Rijnmond

Buurt geschrokken na vondst van overleden broers: ‘We hadden ze al weken niet gezien’

De buurt is geschrokken na het overlijden van de twee broers zaterdagochtend in een woning aan de Lissabonweg in Vlaardingen. "Het is heel triest", reageert een buurtbewoner. "Ik hoop dat ze rust kunnen vinden."

Bestuurder naar ziekenhuis na eenzijdig ongeval in Bleiswijk

Bij een eenzijdig ongeval op de Kooilaan in Bleiswijk is zaterdagavond een auto op zijn zijkant tegen een boom terechtgekomen. Het ongeluk gebeurde rond 19.00 uur.

LIVE. Uw nieuwe held Gradus Kraus gaat 11-0

Allemaal leuk en aardig dat de acterende oliebol Rico Verhoeven tussen het doodknuffelen van Humberto door straks de ring door gemept mag worden door het Oekraïense superfenomeen Oleksandr Usyk, we hebben in de Nederlandse bokswereld natuurlijk maar één superster. Gradus Kraus, die z'n entree bij de profs maakte door in Carré een of andere gekke Pool te onthoofden en sindsdien niet meer heeft omgekeken. Staat al 10-0, stond laatst voor de lol zelfs southpaw te boksen en ook die tamme tegenstander van vanavond (ene 'Theo Brooks') gaat eraan. Die gozer is zogenaamd ook ongeslagen, maar kwam in actie tegen wat prizefighters en gaat dubbel en dwars geveegd worden door ONZE Gradus Kraus, die technisch niet eens perfect is, maar gewoon veel te veel power heeft en uiteindelijk gaat knokken voor de wereldtitel. Hopen voor Theo dat-ie het een paar rondjes vol weet te houden. Live kijken bij Videoland. Later meer.

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The Register

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

Google tweaks Chrome AI privacy wording, insists processing stays on-device

Google has changed Chrome's disclosure language about how its on-device AI works, but that doesn't mean the company intends to capture on-device AI interactions. The Chrome menu modification, which isn't universally rolled out yet even in Chrome 148, was noted this week on Reddit. The "On-device AI" message in Chrome's System settings previously read, "To power features like scam detection, Chrome can use AI models that run directly on your device without sending your data to Google servers. When this is off, these features might not work." But the message changed recently – it lost the phrase "without sending your data to Google servers." That prompted privacy advocate Alexander Hanff to question whether the edit signaled an architectural change that would see local AI interactions processed by Google servers instead of remaining on-device. "Why was the sentence 'without sending your data to Google servers' removed from the on-device AI description in Chrome's Settings UI?" Hanff asked. "Was the previous text inaccurate? Has the architecture changed? Was the wording withdrawn on legal advice because Google was unwilling to defend it as a representation?" Asked about this, a Google spokesperson said, "This doesn’t reflect a change to how we handle on-device AI for Chrome. The data that is passed to the model is processed solely on device." It appears this situation deserves a more genteel rendering of Hanlon's Razor – "Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity." In this case, it's "Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by bad timing." Word of the menu modification surfaced as Chrome was rolling out the Prompt API, which is designed to provide web pages with a programmatic way to interact with a browser-resident AI model. The API's arrival and public discussion of it drew attention to the fact that Chrome has been silently downloading Google's 4GB Nano model onto users' devices. The coincidence of these events made it seem that Google was preparing to capture on-device prompts and responses, which would be a significant privacy retreat. In fact, Chrome has been letting Nano sleep on the couch for early adopters dating back two years when local AI was implemented in Chrome 126 as a preview program. While Google hasn't yet made model downloading and storage opt-in, the biz did earlier this year implement a way to deactivate and remove the space-hogging model. "We’ve offered Gemini Nano for Chrome since 2024 as a lightweight, on-device model," a Google spokesperson explained, pointing to relevant help documentation. "It powers important security capabilities like scam detection and developer APIs without sending your data to the cloud. While this requires some local space on the desktop to run, the model will automatically uninstall if the device is low on resources. In February, we began rolling out the ability for users to easily turn off and remove the model directly in Chrome settings. Once disabled, the model will no longer download or update." The edit to the "On-device AI" message occurred in early April. According to Google, Gemini Nano in Chrome processes all data on-device. But when websites interact with Gemini Nano in Chrome – via the Prompt API, for example – they can see the inputs and outputs of the model. In such cases, the data handling would fall under the privacy policy of the website interacting with the user's Nano instance. Google decided to change its "On-device AI" message to avoid confusion – and perhaps to preclude legal claims alleging policy violations – when the user is interacting with a Google site that calls out to the Nano model on-device, in support of some service it provides. In that scenario, the Google site would have access to the prompts it sends and responses it gets from the user's on-device model. That interaction would happen "without sending your data to Google servers," at least in the context of a user querying a model running in Google Cloud. But since the user's on-device Chrome-resident Nano model would send data to the Google site in response to that site's API calls, that data transmission might be interpreted as a violation of the local AI commitment language. Hence the edit. Google's decision to have Gemini Nano become a Chrome squatter is a novel way of doing things, given that co-opting people's computing resources has largely been the province of covert crypto-mining scripts. But perhaps after years of offering Gmail and Search at no monetary cost, Google feels entitled to a few gigabytes of Chrome users' local storage and occasional bursts of their on-device compute. ®

The Guardian

Latest news, sport, business, comment, analysis and reviews from the Guardian, the world's leading liberal voice

UK passengers on hantavirus-hit ship will fly home after Tenerife screening

The MV Hondius is heading for the Canary Islands where Britons on board will be transferred to Merseyside hospital

Passengers from the UK who are on board the hantavirus-afflicted cruise ship heading for Tenerife will be flown to Merseyside on Sunday for hospital quarantine.

The 19 British passengers and three crew will be transferred to Arrowe Park hospital in Wirral, which hosted British people returning from China at the start of the Covid-19 pandemic.

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Cherry blossoms

rl_rail has added a photo to the pool:

Cherry blossoms

Kanazawa, Japan

Hirosaki castle

rl_rail has added a photo to the pool:

Hirosaki castle

Hirosaki, Japan

Slashdot

News for nerds, stuff that matters

Newspaper Chain's Reporters Withhold Their Bylines to Protest 'AI-Assisted' Articles

A chain of 30 U.S. newspapers including the Sacramento Bee, the Miami Herald and the Idaho Statesman "has started to use a new AI tool that can summarize traditional articles and spit out different versions for different audiences," reports the New York Times.

And the chain's reporters "are not happy about it."

Journalists in many of the company's newsrooms are now withholding their bylines from articles created by the new tool, meaning that those articles will run with a generic credit rather than a reporter's name, as is customary. They are also labeled AI-assisted. "We don't want to put our bylines on stories we did not actually write even if they're based on our work," said Ariane Lange, an investigative reporter at the Sacramento Bee and the vice chair of the Sacramento Bee News Guild. "That in itself feels like a lie."

The reporters' byline strike is one of the sharpest conflicts yet between journalists and their companies over the use of AI. Related debates are playing out in newsrooms across the country, as publishers experiment with new AI tools to streamline work that used to take hours, and some even use it to write full articles... [E]xecutives have promoted the tool internally as a way to increase the number of articles published and ultimately gain new subscribers... [Eric Nelson, the vice president of local news] said using reporters' bylines on the AI-generated articles was a way to show "authority" on Google so the search engine would rank the articles higher in the results. He also said the company was experimenting with feeding in reporters' notes to create articles. "Journalists who embrace and experiment with this tool are going to win," Nelson said in the meeting. "Journalists who are defiant will fall behind"....

McClatchy's public AI policy states that the company uses AI tools to summarize articles to "help readers quickly understand the main points of a single story or catch up on multiple stories about a larger topic," and that editors review the output before publication.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.