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50,000 Workers On Vegas Strip Threaten To Walk Out Of Casinos
Las Vegas hotel and casino workers want a bigger share of casino profits, and protections against the use of robots and AI to automate service jobs.
Has AI reached the point where a software program can do better work than you?
NPR's Rob Schmitz talks to Ethan Mollick of the University of Pennsylvania about an artificial intelligence program that uses AI to compose college essays, news stories, poems and even sitcoms.
Listen
•
6:48
With AI, artists reckon with the muddy questions of authorship
NPR's Scott Detrow speaks with the anonymous digital artist who goes by "Claire Silver" about the use of artificial intelligence in artistic creations.
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•
8:06
U.S. Charges Alleged Chinese Government Spy With Stealing U.S. Trade Secrets
Alleged Chinese spy Yanjun Xu was extradited from Belgium to the U.S. to face prosecution. He faces four charges, including conspiracy to conduct economic espionage and steal trade secrets.
Key Moments From The U.S. Spy Chief's Annual 'Litany Of Doom'
In testimony before the Senate Armed Services Committee, National Intelligence Director James Clapper says "unpredictable instability has become the new normal."
China's Microsoft Hack May Have Had A Bigger Purpose Than Just Spying
China broke into tens of thousands of email accounts in January. Now officials fear the breach wasn't just about spying. It was to build the next generation of artificial intelligence.
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•
7:58
How easy is it to make the AI behind chatbots go rogue? Hackers at Defcon test it out
Thousands of hackers probed AI chatbots for misinformation, bias and security flaws at the annual Defcon hacking convention in Las Vegas to see how easy is it to make the AI go off the rails.
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•
3:54
A rocky past haunts the mysterious company behind the Lensa AI photo app
Little was previously known about the artificial intelligence company founded by five Russian tech workers who for years have been quietly developing AI tools from its homebase of Cyprus.
In 'Agency,' William Gibson Builds A Bomb That Doesn't Boom (And That's OK)
Gibson's new novel is a sequel to 2014's The Peripheral, jumping back and forth in time as investigators, military contractors and killers chase down a rogue AI, and tensions flare in the Middle East.
In McEwan's Latest, The 'Machine' Is Too Much Like You
Ian McEwan imagines an alternate, technologically-advanced 1982 England in his new novel, in which the development of lifelike, artificially intelligent cyborgs leads to some uncomfortable questions.
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