Experimental AI Lie Detector Will Help Screen EU Travelers Slashdotby BeauHD on ai at January 1, 1970, 1:00 am (cached at October 31, 2018, 11:35 pm)

SeriousSamy shares a report from Engadget: In the future, you might talk to an AI to cross borders in the European Union. The EU and Hungary's National Police will run a six-month pilot project, iBorderCtrl, that will help screen travelers in Hungary, Greece and Latvia. The system will have you upload photos of your passport, visa and proof of funds, and then use a webcam to answer basic questions from a personalized AI border agent. The virtual officer will use AI to detect the facial microexpressions that can reveal when someone is lying. At the border, human agents will use that info to determine what to do next -- if there are signs of lying or a photo mismatch, they'll perform a more stringent check.

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Flex Logix Says It's Solved Deep Learning's DRAM Problem Slashdotby BeauHD on ai at January 1, 1970, 1:00 am (cached at October 31, 2018, 11:05 pm)

An anonymous reader quotes a report from IEEE Spectrum: Deep learning has a DRAM problem. Systems designed to do difficult things in real time, such as telling a cat from a kid in a car's backup camera video stream, are continuously shuttling the data that makes up the neural network's guts from memory to the processor. The problem, according to startup Flex Logix, isn't a lack of storage for that data; it's a lack of bandwidth between the processor and memory. Some systems need four or even eight DRAM chips to sling the 100s of gigabits to the processor, which adds a lot of space and consumes considerable power. Flex Logix says that the interconnect technology and tile-based architecture it developed for reconfigurable chips will lead to AI systems that need the bandwidth of only a single DRAM chip and consume one-tenth the power. Mountain View-based Flex Logix had started to commercialize a new architecture for embedded field programmable gate arrays (eFPGAs). But after some exploration, one of the founders, Cheng C. Wang, realized the technology could speed neural networks. A neural network is made up of connections and "weights" that denote how strong those connections are. A good AI chip needs two things, explains the other founder Geoff Tate. One is a lot of circuits that do the critical "inferencing" computation, called multiply and accumulate. "But what's even harder is that you have to be very good at bringing in all these weights, so that the multipliers always have the data they need in order to do the math that's required. [Wang] realized that the technology that we have in the interconnect of our FPGA, he could adapt to make an architecture that was extremely good at loading weights rapidly and efficiently, giving high performance and low power."

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US midterms 2018: The candidates looking to make history AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at October 31, 2018, 11:00 pm)

From the first expected Muslim congresswomen to the first expected openly gay governor, here's who to look out for.
Is Sri Lanka on the path to dictatorship? AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at October 31, 2018, 11:00 pm)

Political crisis deepens in Sri Lanka as protests erupt after prime minister sacked and replaced by a former president.
Hundreds of security firms vie for contracts at Qatar convention AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at October 31, 2018, 11:00 pm)

Milipol Qatar hosts hundreds of firms hoping to sign defence and intelligence contracts as World Cup 2022 draws closer.
Tiny Twitter Thumbnail Tweaked To Transport Different File Types Slashdotby msmash on twitter at January 1, 1970, 1:00 am (cached at October 31, 2018, 10:05 pm)

Security researcher David Buchanan has found that Twitter image uploads can be polyglot files, meaning they can be valid simultaneously in multiple formats, such as a .jpg, a .rar archive and a .zip archive. From a report: Using some Python code he wrote, he created a thumbnail image of William Shakespeare overlaid with the words, "Unzip Me" and posted it to Twitter. The .jpg image is also a valid .zip file, so if you download it, you can unzip it and extract the contents, a multipart .rar archive of the text of Shakespeare's plays. [...] Twitter performs some processing on uploaded images, which has the potential to mess with the data. But Buchanan found that his multi-format file survived this process. It may be that image itself (excluding the rather bulky metadata) is light enough not to trigger any compression or post-upload processing.

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[no title] Scripting News(cached at October 31, 2018, 10:03 pm)

Did you ever watch the movie Wag the Dog? Trump is doing exactly what the White House did in the movie with one big difference. They aren't hiding the con.
Shia group says Nigeria security forces killed scores in protests AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at October 31, 2018, 10:00 pm)

IMN says security forces opened fire on its members calling for the release of their leader, as 400 are arrested.
Switzerland suspends arms export to Saudi over Khashoggi case AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at October 31, 2018, 10:00 pm)

Bern temporarily stops sending spare parts and munitions for air-defence systems and firearms for private use.
How NASA Will Use Robots To Create Rocket Fuel From Martian Soil Slashdotby msmash on mars at January 1, 1970, 1:00 am (cached at October 31, 2018, 9:35 pm)

Engineers are building a prototype of a robotic factory that will create water, oxygen, and fuel on the surface of Mars. From a report: The year is 2038. After 18 months living and working on the surface of Mars, a crew of six explorers boards a deep-space transport rocket and leaves for Earth. No humans are staying behind, but work goes on without them: Autonomous robots will keep running a mining and chemical-synthesis plant they'd started years before this first crewed mission ever set foot on the planet. The plant produces water, oxygen, and rocket fuel using local resources, and it will methodically build up all the necessary supplies for the next Mars mission, set to arrive in another two years. This robot factory isn't science fiction: It's being developed jointly by multiple teams across NASA. One of them is the Swamp Works Lab at NASA's John F. Kennedy Space Center, in Florida, where I am a team lead. Officially, it's known as an in situ resource utilization (ISRU) system, but we like to call it a dust-to-thrust factory, because it turns simple dust into rocket fuel. This technology will one day allow humans to live and work on Mars -- and return to Earth to tell the story. But why synthesize stuff on Mars instead of just shipping it there from Earth? NASA invokes the "gear-ratio problem." By some estimates, to ship a single kilogram of fuel from Earth to Mars, today's rockets need to burn 225 kilograms of fuel in transit -- launching into low Earth orbit, shooting off toward Mars, slowing down to get into Mars orbit, and finally slowing to a safe landing on the surface of Mars. We'd start with 226 kg and end with 1 kg, which makes for a 226:1 gear ratio. And the ratio stays the same no matter what we ship. We would need 225 tons of fuel to send a ton of water, a ton of oxygen, or a ton of machinery. The only way to get around that harsh arithmetic is by making our water, oxygen, and fuel on-site. Different research and engineering groups at NASA have been working on different parts of this problem. More recently, our Swamp Works team began integrating many separate working modules in order to demonstrate the entire closed-loop system. It's still just a prototype, but it shows all the pieces that are necessary to make our dust-to-thrust factory a reality. And although the long-term plan is going to Mars, as an intermediate step NASA is focusing its attention on the moon. Most of the equipment will be tried out and fine-tuned on the lunar surface first, helping to reduce the risk over sending it all straight to Mars.

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Lime Recalls 2,000 Scooters After Reports of Some Catching Fire Slashdotby msmash on transportation at January 1, 1970, 1:00 am (cached at October 31, 2018, 9:05 pm)

Lime has recalled 2,000 of its electric scooters from the streets of Los Angeles, San Diego, and Lake Tahoe, the company said Wednesday, after the Washington Post contacted it about some catching on fire. From a report: In a statement, Lime said it was investigating the "unconfirmed" reported and had pulled the vulnerable models, manufactured by the Chinese company Segway Ninebot, from circulation. "At no time were riders or members of the public put at risk," Lime said. "Unfortunately, despite our efforts, we've recently received an unconfirmed report that another Segway Ninebot scooter model may also be vulnerable to battery failure, which we are currently investigating." Until the problem is solved, scooters will only be charged in Lime facilities and not available to "juicers," people who are paid by the company charge scooters after-hours. These facilities will be monitored 24/7, the company said, and all scooters in Lime's fleet, regardless of manufacturer, will undergo a "new daily diagnostic training program."

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Pittsburgh synagogue shooting suspect charged with 44 counts AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at October 31, 2018, 9:00 pm)

Robert Bowers, who has been charged with 44 counts, regularly made anti-Semitic comments on social media.
Pakistan PM calls for calm after Aasia Bibi cleared of blasphemy AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at October 31, 2018, 9:00 pm)

Imran Khan says far-right protesters must disperse after Christian woman acquitted following years on death row.
FIFA hints at expanding Qatar 2022 World Cup to wider Gulf region AL JAZEERA ENGLISH (AJE)(cached at October 31, 2018, 9:00 pm)

As blockade continues, FIFA head considers possible shared hosting rights in other Gulf countries and increasing teams.
Startling New Research Finds Large Buildup of Heat in the Oceans, Suggesting a Faste Slashdotby msmash on earth at January 1, 1970, 1:00 am (cached at October 31, 2018, 8:05 pm)

The world's oceans have been soaking up far more excess heat in recent decades than scientists realized, suggesting that Earth could be set to warm even faster than predicted in the years ahead, according to new research published Wednesday. From a report: Over the past quarter-century, the Earth's oceans have retained 60 percent more heat each year than scientists previously had thought, said Laure Resplandy, a geoscientist at Princeton University who led the startling study published Wednesday in the journal Nature. The difference represents an enormous amount of additional energy, originating from the sun and trapped by the Earth's atmosphere -- more than 8 times the world's energy consumption, year after year. In the scientific realm, the new findings help to resolve long-running doubts about the rate of the warming of the oceans before 2007, when reliable measurements from devices called "Argo floats" were put to use worldwide. Before that, different types of temperature records -- and an overall lack of them -- contributed to murkiness about how quickly the oceans were heating up. The higher-than-expected amount of heat in the oceans means more heat is being retained within the Earth's climate system each year, rather than escaping into space. In essence, more heat in the oceans signals that global warming itself is more advanced than scientists thought. "We thought that we got away with not a lot of warming in both the ocean and the atmosphere for the amount of CO2 that we emitted," said Resplandy, who published the work with experts from the Scripps Institution of Oceanography and several other institutions in the U.S., China, France and Germany. "But we were wrong. The planet warmed more than we thought. It was hidden from us just because we didn't sample it right. But it was there. It was in the ocean already." Wednesday's study also could have important policy implications. If ocean temperatures are rising more rapidly than previously calculated, that could leave nations even less time to dramatically cut the world's emissions of carbon dioxide, in hopes of limiting global warming to the ambitious goal of 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit) above preindustrial levels.

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