US Judge dismisses lawsuit by Musk's X against hate speech researchers

US Judge dismisses lawsuit by Musk's X against hate speech researchers


X had sought millions of dollars in damages, arguing that the nonprofit’s reports led to the exodus of advertisers and the loss of ad revenue. Photo: Bloomberg


A federal judge has dismissed a lawsuit by Elon Musk’s X Corp. against the non-profit Center for Countering Digital Hate, which has documented the increase in hate speech on the site since it was acquired by the Tesla owner.


X, formerly known as Twitter, had argued the center’s researchers violated the site’s terms of service by improperly compiling public tweets, and that its subsequent reports on the rise of hate speech cost X millions of dollars when advertisers fled.


On Monday, U.S. District Court Judge Charles Breyer dismissed the suit, writing in his order that it was unabashedly and vociferously about one thing” punishing the nonprofit for its speech.


X had alleged that the nonprofit scraped its site for data, which is against its terms of service. But the judge found that X failed to allege losses based on technological harms that is, the company didn’t show how the scraping led to financial losses for X.


X had sought millions of dollars in damages, arguing that the nonprofit’s reports led to the exodus of advertisers and the loss of ad revenue.


But the judge agreed with CCDH’s argument saying X cannot seek damages for the independent acts of third parties based on CCDH’s reports, or its speech.


The center is a nonprofit with offices in the U.S. and United Kingdom. It regularly publishes reports on hate speech, extremism or harmful behavior on social media platforms like X, TikTok or Facebook. The organization has published several reports critical of Musk’s leadership, detailing a rise in anti-LGBTQ hate speech as well as climate misinformation since his purchase.


In a statement posted to X, the social media platform said it disagrees with the court’s decision and plans to appeal.


Imran Ahmed, the center’s founder and CEO, said the lawsuit amounted to a hypocritical campaign of harassment by a billionaire who talks about protecting free speech but who then uses his wealth to try to silence his critics. He said the lawsuit shows the need for a federal law requiring tech companies to release more information about their operations, so that the public can understand how these powerful platforms are shaping society.


We hope this landmark ruling will embolden public-interest researchers everywhere to continue, and even intensify, their vital work of holding social media companies accountable for the hate and disinformation they host and the harm they cause, said Ahmed.


Roberta Kaplan, the center’s attorney, said the dismissal of X’s suit shows even the wealthiest man cannot bend the rule of law to his will.


We are living in an age of bullies, and it’s social media that gives them the power that they have today, Kaplan said in an email to reporters. It takes great courage to stand up to these bullies; it takes an organization like the Center for Countering Digital Hate. We are proud and honored to represent CCDH.


The center is not the only group that has pointed to the rise of hateful material on X since Musk’s purchase in October 2022. Last November, several big advertisers including IBM, NBCUniversal and its parent company Comcast, said that they stopped advertising on X after a report from the liberal advocacy group Media Matters said their ads were appearing alongside material praising Nazis. It was yet another setback as X tries to win back big brands and their ad dollars, X’s main source of revenue. X has also sued Media Matters.


Later that month, Musk went on an expletive-ridden rant in response to advertisers that halted spending on X in response to antisemitic and other hateful material, saying they are are engaging in blackmail and, using a profanity, essentially told them to go away.

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mar 25 2024 | 11:59 PM IST



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US targets Russian fintech operators for Ukraine war sanctions evasion work

US targets Russian fintech operators for Ukraine war sanctions evasion work


The sanctions generally ban the designees from U.S. dollar transactions and the U.S. financial system.


The US Treasury on Monday said it had imposed sanctions on Russian financial services and technology players, including blockchain firm Atomyze, for developing or offering services in virtual assets aimed at evading Ukraine war-related sanctions on Russia.


The Treasury said its Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) designated 13 entities and two individuals in the latest round of sanctions targeting Russia’s core financial infrastructure to block its use of the international financial system to further its Ukraine war aims.

 


Five of the entities were designated for being owned or controlled by persons already sanctioned by OFAC. Among the firms targeted is Atomyze, a fintech firm controlled by sanctioned Russian billionaire Vladimir Potanin’s Interros Holding investment group.

 


Treasury said Atomyze was designated for its work to tokenize precious metals and diamonds for Russian companies and its partnership with sanctioned Russian banks Rosbank and Sovcombank.

 


Atomyze won Russia’s first government license to issue and exchange digital financial assets in February 2022, just three weeks before Russian forces invaded Ukraine. In July 2022, Atomyze launched the first digital token backed by palladium produced by Nornickel, a sanctioned metals producer also controlled by Potanin.


Other companies put on OFAC’s specially designated nationals list include fintech firm Lighthouse, which in June 2022 executed the first cash-backed Russian digital asset deal.

 


Treasury said Lighthouse has worked with Russia’s sanctioned central bank and sanctioned major lenders VTB and Sberbank.

Other financial technology firms hit with OFAC sanctions include B-Crypto, Masterchain and Veb3 Technology, the Treasury said.

The sanctions generally ban the designees from U.S. dollar transactions and the U.S. financial system.

First Published: Mar 25 2024 | 11:05 PM IST



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Behind the plot to break Nvidia's grasp on AI by targeting software: Report

Behind the plot to break Nvidia's grasp on AI by targeting software: Report



Nvidia earned its $2.2 trillion market cap by producing artificial-intelligence chips that have become the lifeblood powering the new era of generative AI developers from startups to Microsoft, OpenAI and Google parent Alphabet.


Almost as important to its hardware is the company’s nearly 20 years’ worth of computer code, which helps make competition with the company nearly impossible. More than 4 million global developers rely on Nvidia’s CUDA software platform to build AI and other apps.

Now a coalition of tech companies that includes Qualcomm, Google and Intel plans to loosen Nvidia’s chokehold by going after the chip giant’s secret weapon: the software that keeps developers tied to Nvidia chips. They are part of an expanding group of financiers and companies hacking away at Nvidia’s dominance in AI.

“We’re actually showing developers how you migrate out from an Nvidia platform,” Vinesh Sukumar, Qualcomm’s head of AI and machine learning, said in an interview with Reuters.Starting with a piece of technology developed by Intel called OneAPI, the UXL Foundation, a consortium of tech companies, plans to build a suite of software and tools that will be able to power multiple types of AI accelerator chips, executives involved with the group told Reuters.

The open-source project aims to make computer code run on any machine, regardless of what chip and hardware powers it.”It’s about specifically – in the context of machine learning frameworks – how do we create an open ecosystem, and promote productivity and choice in hardware,” Google’s director and chief technologist of high-performance computing, Bill Hugo, told Reuters in an interview.

Google is one of the founding members of UXL and helps determine the technical direction of the project, Hugo said.UXL’s technical steering committee is preparing to nail down technical specifications in the first half of this year.

Engineers plan to refine the technical details to a “mature” state by the end of the year, executives said.

These executives stressed the need to build a solid foundation to include contributions from multiple companies that can also be deployed on any chip or hardware.Beyond the initial companies involved, UXL will court cloud-computing companies such as Amazon.com and Microsoft’s Azure, as well as additional chipmakers.

Since its launch in September, UXL has already begun to receive technical contributions from third parties that include foundation members and outsiders keen on using the open-source technology, the executives involved said. Intel’s OneAPI is already useable, and the second step is to create a standard programming model of computing designed for AI.

UXL plans to put its resources toward addressing the most pressing computing problems dominated by a few chipmakers, such as the latest AI apps and high-performance computing applications.

Those early plans feed in to the organization’s longer-term goal of winning over a critical mass of developers to its platform.

UXL eventually aims to support Nvidia hardware and code, in the long run.When asked about the open source and venture-funded software efforts to break Nvidia’s AI dominance, Nvidia executive Ian Buck said in a statement: “The world is getting accelerated.

New ideas in accelerated computing are coming from all across the ecosystem, and that will help advance AI and the scope of what accelerated computing can achieve.

“NEARLY 100 STARTUPSThe UXL Foundation’s plans are one of many efforts to chip away at Nvidia’s hold on the software that powers AI. Venture financiers and corporate dollars have poured more than $4 billion into 93 separate efforts, according to custom data compiled by PitchBook at Reuters request.

The interest in unseating Nvidia through a potential weakness in software has ramped up in the last year, and startups aiming to poke holes in the company’s leadership gobbled up just over $2 billion in 2023 compared with $580 million from a year ago, according to the data from PitchBook.Success in the shadow of Nvidia’s group on AI data crunching is an achievement that few of the startups will be able to achieve.

Nvidia’s CUDA is a compelling piece of software on paper, as it is full-featured and is consistently growing both from Nvidia’s contributions and the developer community.”But that’s not what really matters,” said Jay Goldberg, chief executive of D2D Advisory, a finance and strategy consulting firm. “What matters is the fact that people have been using CUDA for 15 years, they built code around it.” 

First Published: Mar 25 2024 | 10:49 PM IST



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UK set to pin China-affiliated hackers for cyberattack on election watchdog

UK set to pin China-affiliated hackers for cyberattack on election watchdog


Britain’s government is expected to blame a string of cyberattacks targeting the U.K.’s election watchdog and lawmakers on hackers linked to the Chinese government,

Officials are expected to announce Monday measures against cyber organizations and individuals affiliated with the Chinese government for an attack that may have gained access to information on tens of millions of U.K. voters held by the Electoral Commission, as well as cyberattacks targeting lawmakers who have been outspoken about the China threat.


The Electoral Commission said in August that it identified a cyberattack on its system in October 2022, though it added that hostile actors had first been able to access its servers since 2021.


At the time, the watchdog said the data included the names and addresses of registered voters. But it added that much of the information was already in the public domain, and that possessing such information was unlikely to influence election results.


Separately, three lawmakers, including former Conservative Party leader Iain Duncan Smith and a member of the House of Lords, were reportedly called to a briefing by Parliament’s security director Monday over the cyberattacks.


The four politicians are members of the Inter-Parliamentary Alliance on China, an international pressure group focused on countering Beijing’s growing influence and calling out alleged rights abuses by the Chinese government.


Deputy Prime Minister Oliver Dowden is expected to give details in Parliament later Monday.


Ahead of that announcement, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak reiterated that China is behaving in an increasingly assertive way abroad and is the greatest state-based threat to our economic security.


It’s right that we take measures to protect ourselves, which is what we are doing,” he said, without providing details.


Responding to the reports, China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said countries should base their claims on evidence rather than smear others without factual basis.


Cybersecurity issues should not be politicized, ministry spokesperson Lin Jian said. We hope all parties will stop spreading false information, take a responsible attitude, and work together to maintain peace and security in cyberspace.

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mar 25 2024 | 7:15 PM IST



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Apple, Google, Meta targeted in EU's first Digital Markets Act probes

Apple, Google, Meta targeted in EU's first Digital Markets Act probes



By Samuel Stolton


Apple Inc., Alphabet Inc.’s Google and Meta Platforms Inc. face the risk of potentially hefty fines as the European Union opened a full-blown investigation into the firms’ compliance with strict new laws reining in the power of Big Tech. 

 


The European Commission said Monday that Apple and Google’s app store rules will be targeted in the first probes under the bloc’s Digital Markets Act, how Google search results might unfairly preference its own services and how Apple may make it harder for users to choose alternatives to its Safari browser.


New subscription fees for Meta’s Instagram and Facebook platforms will also be targeted by the probe, which could hit firms with fines of up to 10% of global revenue, or up to 20% in the case of repeated breaches.


“We suspect that the suggested solutions put forward by the three companies do not fully comply with the DMA,” EU antitrust chief Margrethe Vestager said. She added that the probes involve “serious cases.” 


The commission also warned about further scrutiny on Apple’s new fee structure for alternative app stores and Amazon.com Inc.’s ranking practices on its marketplace. 

An Apple spokesperson said the company is confident it complies with the DMA, while Google’s director for competition, Oliver Bethell, said the company has made significant changes to its services in Europe and that it will “continue to defend our approach in the coming months.” A spokesperson for Meta said the company designed its offerings to comply with overlapping regulatory obligations, including the DMA.


For Apple, the EU probe comes as a one-two punch with a sweeping antitrust probe in the US, where the Justice Department and 16 attorneys general sued the firm last week, accusing the iPhone maker of violating antitrust laws by blocking rivals from accessing hardware and software features on its popular devices. The EU also recently hit Apple with a €1.8 billion ($2 billion) fine for blocking music streaming apps from informing users of cheaper deals.


Bloomberg reported last week that the EU probes on Apple, Google and Meta were due imminently.


Daniel Friedlaender, who heads up European office of the Computer & Communications Industry Association — whose members include Apple, Google and Meta — said the timing of the probes so soon after the DMA came into force suggests “the commission could be jumping the gun.” 


Vestager, in a news conference, rejected that charge. “I definitely don’t think that this is rushed, it is very timely,” she said. 


Under the DMA, six tech giants — Alphabet, Apple, Amazon, Meta, TikTok owner ByteDance Ltd. and Microsoft Corp. — are subject to a range of new prohibitions and obligations. 


For Apple, that means having to break open its previously closed iPhone app ecosystem and allow users to download software from other online stores and from the web. 


Apple’s attempt to step into line with the rules in the EU involves jettisoning the up-to-30% commission it has has imposed on developers since its App Store launched in 2008. But the company has added other costs for software makers — including a 3% payment processing charge for apps that use Apple’s in-app purchase system. It also is imposing a €0.50 fee per app install — via Apple’s store or third-party marketplaces — for software installed more than 1 million times in a 12-month period. 


Last year, Google faced its fourth EU abuse of dominance case in recent years — with the Brussels watchdog probing the firm’s conduct in advertising technology. This came following fines of over €8 billion from the EU, as part of three other decisions that are still being challenged through the bloc’s courts. 

Meta, meanwhile, continues to face an ongoing EU abuse of dominance investigation into Facebook Marketplace, which the commission alleges harms competition for classified ad rivals. 

First Published: Mar 25 2024 | 4:55 PM IST



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Apple may not hold rumoured new iPad Air and iPad Pro launch on March 26

Apple may not hold rumoured new iPad Air and iPad Pro launch on March 26


Representative image: iPad Pro with M2


Apple is mulling the launch of updated iPad models after bringing no new devices last year. According to Bloomberg’s report in January, Apple was supposed to bring a new MacBook Air with M3 along with new iPad Air and iPad Pro models by the end of March. Although Apple had launched the M3-powered MacBook Air, the company has not yet confirmed any details about the upcoming iPad variants.


Last week, it was reported that Apple has started shipping the 2024 iPad Air to other countries from its manufacturing hubs in China, with a potential launch planned alongside the iPad Pro on March 26. Following the report, Apple analyst Mark Gurman posted on X (formerly Twitter) that the reports are false and there is no launch scheduled for March 26.

There are contradictory reports out there related to the launch dates, with each running their own versions of the expected features and specifications. However, there is a concurrent theme across reports. Below is a short summary on what to expect from the next-generation iPad models.


iPad Pro: What to expect


Similar to the recently launched MacBook Air, the iPad Pro will likely be powered by the M3 Chip and support MagSafe wireless charging. However, the biggest change for the high-end iPad model is expected to be in the display department. The 2024 iPad Pro will likely be the first iPad to sport an OLED panel. The OLED display would allow the Pro models to feature variable refresh rates, which is likely to reach as low as 10Hz – compared to 24Hz on the predecessor. Additionally, the iPad Pro will be offered in two different screen sizes of 11-inch and 13-inch with significantly thinner bezels on all sides compared to the current generation model.


The 2024 iPad Pro would likely get a redesigned rear camera bump with a rectangular module housing the cameras and the flash. It may even get the front camera in landscape orientation.


iPad Air: What to expect


The upcoming iPad Air model would likely be offered in a new 12.9-inch display option, alongside the standard 10.9-inch model. Despite a bigger sized variant, the 2024 iPad Air model is expected to retain the frame and chassis design from its predecessor. However, it might get a similar camera module redesign as the Pro model.


The 2024 iPad Air is expected to be powered by the M2 chipset and get support for Wi-Fi 6E and Bluetooth 5.3.

First Published: Mar 25 2024 | 2:47 PM IST





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