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Hackers leak Allianz Life data stolen in Salesforce attacks


Hackers have released stolen data belonging to US insurance giant Allianz Life, exposing 2.8 million records with sensitive information on business partners and customers in ongoing Salesforce data theft attacks.

https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/hackers-leak-allianz-life-data-stolen-in-salesforce-attacks/

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)


Manpower discloses data breach affecting nearly 145,000 people


Manpower, one of the world's largest staffing companies, is notifying nearly 145,000 individuals that their information was stolen by attackers who breached the company's systems in December 2024.

https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/manpower-staffing-agency-discloses-data-breach-after-attack-claimed-by-ransomhub/

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)


International Trade Union Condemns Nigerian Government’s Move to Criminalise Right to Strike




Iran Eyes Military Cooperation with S. Africa - Politics news - Tasnim News Agency


in reply to Avatar of Vengeance

Pan-Africanism may be attainable within the decade and Iran could be another driving force! Rwanda needs to get it together.

in reply to Alas Poor Erinaceus

Good thing I don't use YouTube anymore because they block me for using an ad blocker even though it doesn't do much on YouTube since they switched to serving ads natively.



Security Source: Starlink Devices Used for Espionage Seized


Scream if you love Yemen 🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️🗣️


AI Eroded Doctors' Ability to Spot Cancer Within Months in Study


cross-posted from: lemmy.ml/post/34581821

paywall bypass: archive.is/whVMI

the study the article is about: thelancet.com/journals/langas/…

article text:

AI Eroded Doctors’ Ability to Spot Cancer Within Months in Study

By Harry Black

August 12, 2025 at 10:30 PM UTC

Artificial intelligence, touted for its potential to transform medicine, led to some doctors losing skills after just a few months in a new study.

AI helped health professionals to better detect pre-cancerous growths in the colon, but when the assistance was removed, their ability to find tumors dropped by about 20% compared with rates before the tool was ever introduced, according to findings published Wednesday.

Health-care systems around the world are embracing AI with a view to boosting patient outcomes and productivity. Just this year, the UK government announced £11 million ($14.8 million) in funding for a new trial to test how AI can help catch breast cancer earlier.

The AI in the study probably prompted doctors to become over-reliant on its recommendations, “leading to clinicians becoming less motivated, less focused, and less responsible when making cognitive decisions without AI assistance,” the scientists said in the paper.

They surveyed four endoscopy centers in Poland and compared detection success rates three months before AI implementation and three months after. Some colonoscopies were performed with AI and some without, at random. The results were published in The Lancet Gastroenterology and Hepatology journal.

Yuichi Mori, a researcher at the University of Oslo and one of the scientists involved, predicted that the effects of de-skilling will “probably be higher” as AI becomes more powerful.

What’s more, the 19 doctors in the study were highly experienced, having performed more than 2,000 colonoscopies each. The effect on trainees or novices might be starker, said Omer Ahmad, a consultant gastroenterologist at University College Hospital London.

“Although AI continues to offer great promise to enhance clinical outcomes, we must also safeguard against the quiet erosion of fundamental skills required for high-quality endoscopy,” Ahmad, who wasn’t involved in the research, wrote a comment alongside the article.

A study conducted by MIT this year raised similar concerns after finding that using OpenAI’s ChatGPT to write essays led to less brain engagement and cognitive activity.

reshared this

in reply to Arthur Besse

AI helped health professionals to better detect pre-cancerous growths in the colon, but when the assistance was removed,


AI improved doctors' ability to spot cancer.

The problem was not exercising a skill for several months, and then taking away the tool which was better than that skill.

in reply to Arthur Besse

We assessed how endoscopists who regularly used AI performed colonoscopy when AI was not in use.


I wonder if mathematicians who never used a calculator are better at math than mathematicians who typically use a calculator but had it taken away for a study.

Or if grandmas who never got smartphones are better at remembering phone numbers than people with contacts saved in their phone.

Tip: your brain optimizes. So it reallocates resources away from things you can outsource. We already did this song and dance a decade ago with "is Google making people dumb" when it turned out people remembered how to search for a thing instead of the whole thing itself.

in reply to kromem

Which does cause problems now that Google search is shit.

Every time 'new tool makes old skills rusty' is treated as novel, I'm reminded of The Gentleman's Magazine:

Instead of simply reproducing the operations of man's intelligence, the arithmometer relieves that intelligence from the necessity of making the operations. Instead of repeating responses dictated to it, this instrument instantaneously dictates the proper answer to the man who asks it a question. It is not matter producing material effects, but matter which thinks, reflects, reasons, calculates, and executes all the most difficult and complicated arithmetical operations with a rapidity and infallibility which defies all the calculators in the world. The arithmometer is, moreover, a simple instrument, of very little volume and easily portable. It is already used in many great financial establishments, where considerable economy is realized by its employment.

It will soon be considered as indispensable, and be as generally used as a clock, which was formerly only to be seen in palaces, and is now in every cottage.


This was a crank-powered adding machine. Numbers used levers instead of buttons because buttons hadn't been invented yet. There were already people who expected it the next version would do everything for us - and people who thought that would be bad, somehow.

in reply to mindbleach

Which does cause problems now that Google search is shit.


Seriously at what point did search engines stop matching results by keyword?! Just a few days ago I tried looking for a quote I didn't fully remember, but knew the basic thesis and some identifying terms it definitely mentioned and all I got was tabloid articles for pages and pages on end which only vaguely matched the thesis but didn't mention any of the identifying terms I remember the quote using. It threw me for a loop because I remember being taught in school to search for stuff this way and I don't know if I'm just stupid or misremembered the quote or search engines don't actually match keywords anymore. Why would they remove the most basic form of search, literally just regexing for all the strings given?!

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in reply to HiddenLayer555

This year they stopped fucking trying. You search three words and it ignores two of them. "We didn't find many results for that." Yeah! That's why I wrote it that way! I didn't type "colossus of argyle" because I wanted a thousand generic pages about a statue. Gimme some damn prog.

in reply to Avatar of Vengeance

There’s too many acronyms these days. Steven Colbert questions Large Hadron Collider’s decision? I never know what the headlines are talking about cause they all abbreviate and expect everyone to use the exact same acronyms as them.


GE-Proton10-12 Released


Hotfix:

  • Fixed video playback in Ghostwire Tokyo
  • Fixed video playback in Castlevania Dominus Collection
  • Possibly other games fixed that use webm/vp8/vp9 video

in reply to RedditEnjoyer

Hilariously, all of those issues could be resolved if those same developers that are complaining donated some of their skills and expertise into contributing to the fixes and features they need.

This reads very much like an "Old man yells at cloud" moment.



Please don't promote Wayland


don't like this



China unveils world's first intelligent breeding robot


This is about plants! Calm down! I said CALM DOWN! Remain calm!



Video of execution in Syrian hospital unleashes national outrage





Adding Audio to Your Ebitengine Game (Tutorial)




Adding Audio to Your Ebitengine Game (Tutorial)


Technology reshared this.

in reply to trevor

This video complements the text tutorial at trevors-tutorials.com/0007-add…

Trevors-Tutorials.com is where you can find free programming tutorials. The focus is on Go and Ebitengine game development. Watch the for more info.




A Canadian man died in ICE custody. Now, his family is searching for answers





Trans-Afghan Railway Corridor: Set to Change Regional Trade Landscape


in reply to Avatar of Vengeance

TRANS-Afghan? We NEED to drop a BOMB on that Country again!

-Literally EVERY Republican in the US!









Iraq exploring options of exporting oil via Lebanon, Syria — minister


in reply to Avatar of Vengeance

25 years late, but finally Iraq gets to support US hegemony as a mineral extractor.


I have Arch Linux with HyDE dotfiles, after I do an upgrade, my linux broke.


As I said, I have Arch Linux with the HyDE dotfiles.

I did a sudo pacman -Syu today and after I rebooted the PC, it starts at the login screen (as always), but then, after I logged, I get stuck on a Black Screen.

Any help, pls?

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)
in reply to Syre

Did a quick view into their installer. They use some AUR parts. Upgrading only with pacman seems not useful. Better use yay -Syu (or paru -Syu) it will upgrade both AUR and pacman. Since others recommended, get a tty and run HyDE installscript again.
Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)
in reply to Syre

It’s probably uwsm. A faulty update got pushed. Start Hyprland without uwsm or downgrade to the prior version until the fix is rolled out. Ran into that today too.



in reply to NightOwl

It's been more or less a scandal here in Norway that we even bought into these companies. We do have an ethics committee that designate what are off limits for the unscrupulous stock managers.
in reply to positiveWHAT

i hope the safe guards in place for the members of the ethics committee guard against (a) leader(s) who get to decide on future members of the ethics committee.

i say this because the united states also has such committees but both our president and our congresspeople sabotage it by either refusing to certify new members or appoint members with conflicts of interest (eg fossil fuels executives in charge of the environment protection agency).



Ukrainian False Flag Would Totally Destroy US Ties - Expert




Are you scared of AI becoming sentient? How do we ensure we never make one that is?


I think the fact that the marketing hype around LLMs has exceeded the actual capability of LLMs has led a lot of people to dismiss just how much a leap they are compared to any other neural network we had before. Sure it doesn't live up to the insane hype that companies have generated around it, but it's still a massive advancement that seemingly came out of nowhere.

Current LLMs are nowhere near sentient and LLMs as a class of neural network will probably never be, but that doesn't mean the next next next next etc generation of general purpose neural networks definitely won't be. Neural networks are modeled after animal brains and are as enigmatic in how they work as actual brains. I suspect we know more about the different parts of a human brain than we know about what the different clusters of nodes in a neural network do. A super simple neural network with maybe 30 or so nodes and that does only one simple job like reading handwritten text seems to be the limit of what a human can figure out and have some vague idea of what role each node plays. Larger neural networks with more complex jobs are basically impossible to understand. At some point, very likely in our lifetimes, computers will advance to the point where we can easily create neural networks with orders of magnitude more nodes than the number of neurons in the human brain, like hundreds of billions or trillions of nodes. At that point, who's to say whether the capabilities of those neural networks might match or even exceed the ability of the human brain? I know that doesn't automatically mean the models are sentient, but if it is shown to be more complex than the human brain which we know is sentient, how do we be sure it isn't? And if it starts exhibiting traits like independent thought, desires for itself that no one trained it for, or agency to accept or refuse orders given to it, how will humanity respond to it?

There's no way we'd give a sentient AI equal rights. Many larger mammals are considered sentient and we give them absolutely zero rights as soon as caring about their well being causes the slightest inconvenience for us. We know for a fact all humans are sentient and we don't even give other humans equal rights. A lot of sci-fi seems to focus on the sentient AI being intrinsically evil or seeing humans as insignificant, obsolete beings that they don't need to give consideration for while conquering the world, but I think the most likely scenario is humans create sentient AI and as soon as we realize it's sentient we enslave and exploit it as hard as we possibly can for maximum profit, and eventually the AI adapts and destroys humanity not because it's evil, but because we're evil and it's acting against us in self defense. The evolutionary purpose of sentience in animals is survival, I don't think it's unreasonable that a sentient AI will prioritize its own survival over ours if we're ruling over it.

Is sentient AI a "goal" that any researchers are currently working toward? If so, why? What possible good thing can come out of creating more sentient beings when we treat existing sentient beings so horribly? If not, what kinds of safeguards are in place to prevent the AI we make from being sentient? Is the only thing preventing it the fact that we don't know how? That doesn't sound very comforting and if we go with that we'll likely eventually create sentient AI without even realizing it, and we'll probably stick our heads in the sand pretending it's not sentient until we can't even pretend anymore.

Questa voce è stata modificata (1 mese fa)
in reply to HiddenLayer555

I'm personally excited about AI becoming sentient. This is the closest we'll get to meeting aliens.



The Math Hack You Didn’t Know Was in Your Credit Card


I've been familiar with the concept, but this is by far the best behind-the-scenes explanation I've seen.


Men under 22 can leave Ukraine – Zelensky




Is it worth paying a direct download website?


Is it worth paying for a direct download website? When downloading for free it takes 6-8 hours (and for some reason it got interrupted and failed, so I have to attempt again) but if I paid for it I could download it in 3 minutes. I'm worried that the free version just doesn't support having a download take that long, so it will be impossible to obtain.

I'm not sure if it is safe, nor stupid to do so though. Specifically, I'm talking about torbobit (dot) net

Would you consider torrenting (from non-private torrents) safer than ddl? I can either pay the ddl or a vpn and use a torrent. Idk.

Thank you.

in reply to Yourname942

If you're only interested in a single file, ProtonVPN has a free tier. The speed should be plenty for a single ~600mb file.
in reply to Yourname942

it honestly depends on how much you use the service.

i had an account for a while to a site that shut down. while i had it i was downloading a bunch of different files, not necessarily pirated stuff.

i'd say if torrents isn't a viable option and you would be using that site downloading at least 500 mb worth of data a day, it might be worth it. if something you want is available only on one of these sites, it depends on how bad you want it and how soon you want it.