Auteur Sujet: tysj Google buys artificial intelligence company  (Lu 2 fois)

MethrenRaf

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Messages: 138203
    • uiqb Amnesia Patient Doesn t Know Who He Is
tysj Google buys artificial intelligence company
« le: Décembre 18, 2024, 12:48:08 pm »
Nyjq Painting a human canvas
 With the massive wildfire burning north of Los Angeles more than half contained, hand crews were working Sunday to keep the fi vaso stanley re s eastern flank from crossing a rural mountain highway, a U.S. Forest Service spokeswoman said.The fire, which started Aug. 26, has killed two firefighters, blackened nearly 246 square miles of the Angeles National Forest and destroyed at least 76 homes. Fire agencies so far have spent $43.5 million fighting the blaze.Authorities on Sunday were trying to determine who set the deadly fire.At least a dozen investigators were working Saturday to analyze clues found at a burnt hillside near Angeles Crest Highway - the place where fire started more than a week ago. But officials, who say the cause of the fire was arson, were hesitant to release any of their findings to the media. Arsonists are not stupid. They can read,  said U.S. Forest Service  stanley cup uk Cmdr. Rita Wears, who supervises federal agents investigating the fire.  I have to be very ca stanley cup reful.         The fire was 51 percent contained Sunday as crews built new protective lines near Highway 39 in the San Gabriel Wilderness, U.S. Forest Service spokeswoman Jennifer Sanchez said.No homes were immediately threatened.More coverage of the California wildfires from CBS News station KCBS in Los AngelesThe fire jumped a dozer line near the closed Angeles Crest Highway and burned about 500 new acres in the Pleasant View Ridge Wilderness Area, said incident commander Mike Dietrich said. Flames were within about fiv Mbsk Google Glass Owners Can Get an Updated Pair For Free
 Most people think of Skype as a secure means of communication, with messages kindly delivered using end-to-end encryption. But a new report by Ars Technica suggests that   far from  stanley mug the case鈥攁nd Microsoft is often dipping into your communications.     Having teamed up with security researcher Ashkan Soltani, Ars sent fresh web links across Skype, and found that half of them were accessed by a machine with an IP address belonging to Microsoft as they traversed the internet. That means that Skype messages are sent across the web in such a way that allows Microsoft to study plaintext within them, and clearly its a technique it uses regularly. Matt Green, a professor specializing in encryption at Johns Hopkins University, told Ars: The problem right now is that there   a mismatch betwe stanley thermos en the privacy people expect and what Microsoft is actually delivering. Even if Microsoft is only scanning links for good ; purposes, say detecting malicious URLs, this indicates that they can intercept some of your text messages. And that means they could potentially intercept a lot more of them. It   not clear how the text is scrutinized by Microsoft: whole messages could be being scanned on Microsoft servers, end-user Skype installs could  stanley cup send snippets to be checked, or something else entirely could be happening. What is clear, though, is that the ability to extract content is very, very real. Perhaps it shouldn ;t come as a massive surprise that Mi