Your 90-second guide to the day in tech
Welcome to Wednesday all. Here’s some news that caught our eye.
Don’t forget to tune in for the Startup Daily show on Ausbiz.com.au every weekday, 2-2.45pm. Watch online, download the ausbiz app or via 7Plus.
University of Buffalo researchers think they’ve found a way to tell in a video clip is a “deepfake” (think: those recent Tom Cruise fakes).
The Next Web found the paper the published on the project.
“Sophisticated generative adversary network (GAN) models are now able to synthesize highly realistic human faces that are difficult to discern from real ones visually. In this work, we show that GAN synthesized faces can be exposed with the inconsistent corneal specular highlights between two eyes. The inconsistency is caused by the lack of physical/physiological constraints in the GAN models,” the abstract says.
Read more here.
California has taken aim of those BS tricks companies use – dubbed “dark patterns” to trick you into giving away data privacy or slow your ability unsubscribe.
State attorney-general Xavier Becerra announced strengthened privacy laws that ban dark patterns
“These protections ensure that consumers will not be confused or misled when seeking to exercise their data privacy rights. The regulations include an eye-catching Privacy Options icon that guides consumers to where they can opt-out of the sale of their personal information,” he said
CCPA grants California consumers the right to know, the right to delete, and the right to opt-out of the sale of the personal information collected by businesses. It also affords additional protections for minors. The initial regulations came into effect in August 2020.
The newly-approved regulations ban so-called “dark patterns” that delay or obscure the process for opting out of the sale of personal information, prohibiting companies from burdening consumers with confusing language or unnecessary steps such as forcing them to click through multiple screens or listen to reasons why they shouldn’t opt out.
When we heard about this yesterday, we didn’t mention it because it sounded like something written by The Betoota Advocate, but Tesla’s billionaire dude of doge has changed his job title to “Technoking of Tesla”, while CFO Zach Kirkhorn will now officially – yes, they put this in corporate filings – as the company’s “Master of Coin”.
Given Musk’s governance increasingly looks like something from a Kevin Smith movie, we’re just going to call the duo Jay & Silent Bob.
Doge day afternoon
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) March 13, 2021
Billionaire part-time Kiwi and startup investor Peter Thiel is backing a former Mithril Capital (his VC firm) principal JD Vance, author of Hillbilly Elegy (there’s a film of it on Netflix) to run as a Republican senate candidate in Ohio in 2022.
It’s not the first time the outspokenly conservative Thiel has backed GOP candidates (and Trump), but the reported $10 million he’s giving Vance is a figure most startups would dream of. Vox has more on the “Silicon Valley iconclast” and his plans here.
The NSW government has appointed 11 AI experts as the inaugural members of the state’s Artificial Intelligence Advisory Committee to provide ongoing strategic advice on the use of AI in government services.
NSW Chief Data Scientist, Dr Ian Oppermann, will chair the committee. The other members are: Theresa Anderson, Data & AI Ethicist, Research fellow at the School of Illinois; Fang Chen, Executive Director Data Science/Distinguished Professor at UTS; Lee Hickin, National Technology Officer at Microsoft Australia; Aurelie Jacquet, Chief Legal and Data Ethics Officer at Innovations Accelerated; Peter Leonard, Principal at Data Synergies, Professor of Practice at UNSW Business School; Maria Milosavljevic, Inaugural Chief Data Officer for Services Australia; Edward Santow, Human Rights Commissioner; Bill Simpson Young, co-founder and CEO of Gradient Institute; Neil Soderlund, CEO of Quantium Health & Government; and Martin Stewart-Weeks, Principal, Public Purpose Pty Ltd.
Current uses of AI in NSW Government include:
1/ Listened to the most recent @theallinpod and as always knowledge bombs galore
Something in particular I took away from this particular episode was @chamath brought up with regards to the $69.3mm @beeple NFT sale was the breakdown of participants in the auction pic.twitter.com/Cm88cS1PQm
— Liam Killingstad (@LiamKillingstad) March 17, 2021
Comments