Google sued for negligence after man drives off collapsed bridge due to map

Google sued for negligence after man drives off collapsed bridge due to map



The family of a North Carolina man who died after driving his car off a collapsed bridge while following Google Maps directions is suing the technology giant for negligence, claiming it had been informed of the collapse but failed to update its navigation system.


Philip Paxson, a medical device salesman and father of two, drowned September 30, 2022, after his Jeep Gladiator plunged into Snow Creek in Hickory, according to a lawsuit filed Tuesday in Wake County Superior Court. Paxson was driving home from his daughter’s ninth birthday party through an unfamiliar neighbourhood when Google Maps allegedly directed him to cross a bridge that had collapsed nine years prior and was never repaired.


“Our girls ask how and why their daddy died, and I’m at a loss for words they can understand because, as an adult, I still can’t understand how those responsible for the GPS directions and the bridge could have acted with so little regard for human life,” his wife, Alicia Paxson, said.


State troopers who found Paxton’s body in his overturned and partially submerged truck had said there were no barriers or warning signs along the washed-out roadway. He had driven off an unguarded edge and crashed about 20 feet below, according to the lawsuit.


The North Carolina State Patrol had said the bridge was not maintained by local or state officials, and the original developer’s company had dissolved. The lawsuit names several private property management companies that it claims are responsible for the bridge and the adjoining land.


Multiple people had notified Google Maps about the collapse in the years leading up to Paxson’s death and had urged the company to update its route information, according to the lawsuit.


The Tuesday court filing includes email records from another Hickory resident who had used the map’s “suggest an edit” feature in September 2020 to alert the company that it was directing drivers over the collapsed bridge. A November 2020 email confirmation from Google confirms the company received her report and was reviewing the suggested change, but the lawsuit claims Google took no further actions.


“We have the deepest sympathies for the Paxson family,” Google spokesperson Jos Castaeda told The Associated Press. “Our goal is to provide accurate routing information in Maps and we are reviewing this lawsuit.

(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.)



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ChatGPT’s traffic rises again after declining as students return to school

ChatGPT’s traffic rises again after declining as students return to school



By Shirin Ghaffary


ChatGPT’s traffic is increasing again after declining throughout the summer, according to new estimates from third-party firms, in perhaps the clearest indication yet that the chatbot’s usage is directly impacted by the school calendar in the US.

 


Desktop and mobile web traffic to the chatbot created by artificial intelligence startup OpenAI climbed by around 12 per cent last week in the US compared to the week prior, according to data intelligence firm SimilarWeb. YipitData, another data analysis firm, said that daily ChatGPT usage hit a low point in August, then improved in the second half of the month.


Still, traffic is considerably lower than ChatGPT’s peak in spring, according to estimates.


The recent traffic bump, which comes as school is back in session in the US, may revive concerns around how widespread ChatGPT use is among students,  who can turn to the AI tool to generate code and summarize notes in a matter of seconds as well as write term papers and other assignments. It also raises questions around how much of ChatGPT’s user base is made up of students, who may be an unreliable source of future revenue for the company.


“The return to school appears to be a contributor to the rebound, but not the sole driver, based on our analysis,” according to a recent report from YipitData. The firm studied users believed to be students because they frequented education-related domains, and found traffic from that student group to ChatGPT grew by 21 per cent compared to 8 per cent for users outside of that group. SimilarWeb also cited a back-to-school effect as a likely contributor for the fall usage spike.


A third analytics firm, Sensor Tower, said that weekly worldwide ChatGPT app users grew by more than 10 per cent in both of the last two weeks of August, when a large portion of the US returned to school. The firm said that the increase is also due in part to a jump in the India and Brazil markets.


OpenAI declined to comment.


After launching in November, ChatGPT surpassed 100 million users in two months, according to a UBS report citing SimilarWeb data. But after months of skyrocketing growth, traffic started to decline. In the US, ChatGPT traffic dropped by 10 per cent in May, 15 per cent in June and another 4 per cent in July, according to SimilarWeb. 


The rise of ChatGPT has forced a reckoning in schools over the technology, with some choosing to ban it outright and others trying to incorporate it into their curriculums to help students learn. While some schools are adopting newly formed guidelines across the board, many are letting teachers decide how they want students to use AI tools in class.



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Nvidia CEO touts India as major AI market in a bid to hedge China risks

Nvidia CEO touts India as major AI market in a bid to hedge China risks



By Saritha Rai


During a five-day tour of India earlier this month, Nvidia Corp. Chief Executive Officer Jensen Huang visited four cities, dined with tech executives and researchers, took numerous selfies, and sat for a one-on-one conversation with Prime Minister Narendra Modi about the AI sector. Huang’s India itinerary was so crammed that he confessed to surviving entire work days on spicy masala omelets and cold coffees.

 


Huang may have been treated like a head of state, but the trip’s purpose was all business. For Nvidia, whose graphics processors are vital to the development of artificial intelligence systems, the South Asian nation of 1.4 billion people presents a rare opportunity. As the US increasingly clamps down on exports of high-end chips to China and the world seeks an alternative electronics manufacturing base, India could shape up to be a source of AI talent, site for chip production and market for Nvidia’s products.


At a meeting with leading researchers in Delhi, Huang spoke of re-training entire swaths of the country’s workforce and building future AI models using Indian data and talent, according to multiple attendees. Huang also told one executive in India’s tech hub Bangalore that he’s a big believer in the country’s engineering talent, particularly graduates from its top engineering schools, Indian Institutes of Technology. 


“You have the data, you have the talent,” Huang said at a news conference in Bangalore. Huang added:  “This is going to be one of the largest AI markets in the world.”


Nvidia and India have a shared interest in betting on, and speeding up, the country’s AI ascendancy. Chipmakers cannot sell top-end microprocessors to China, which accounts for a fifth of Nvidia’s sales, amid fears the chips could be used to develop autonomous weaponry or wage cyberwarfare. “India is the only market remaining so it isn’t surprising that Nvidia wants to put multiple eggs in that basket,” said Neil Shah, vice president of research at Counterpoint Technology Market Research.


While Indian engineers are a vital part of the digital workforce, the country is still far away from developing the cutting-edge capabilities needed to manufacture Nvidia’s sophisticated chips. But India has ambitions to boost electronics manufacturing as well as harness AI to buoy its digital economy. The country is plowing billions in subsidies to set up chip manufacturing infrastructure to lure the likes of Nvidia, Advanced Micro Devices Inc. and Intel Corp. 


“India is strategic to Nvidia’s future,” said Nandan Nilekani, chairman of Infosys Ltd. and a designer of vital portions of the country’s massive digital public infrastructure. “The government is aggressively building AI infrastructure and so are large private companies. That’s good news for Huang,” said Nilekani, who dined with the chip billionaire during the visit. 


In Delhi, the Taiwanese-American billionaire showed up at the prime minister’s residence in his trademark black leather jacket, braving sweltering 90-plus-degree summer temperatures. Modi later shared that the two talked about “the rich potential India offers in the world of AI.”


Huang and Nvidia saw signs of that potential during the trip.  India’s largest conglomerate, Reliance, owned by billionaire Mukesh Ambani, announced during Huang’s multi-city tour that its Jio Platforms would build AI computing infrastructure for the country. The AI cloud will use end-to-end Nvidia supercomputing technologies, the company said in a release. Reliance and another large conglomerate, Tata, will also build and operate state-of-the-art AI supercomputing data centers and offer AI infrastructure as a service for use by researchers, corporations and startups, Nvidia said, without giving details or sharing timelines.


India has had reasonable success in enticing giants Apple Inc. and Amazon.com Inc. to shift contract electronics manufacturing from China — to a point where, this month, Apple will sell India-made iPhone 15 devices on launch day. Now it’s turning to semiconductors, armed with some experience in chip design and no history whatsoever in semiconductor foundries. Nearly all cutting-edge chips, including those designed by Nvidia, are made in Taiwan. Over several decades, the country spent billions to reach current levels of manufacturing sophistication. 


India wants to catch up, but it faces challenges turning itself into an AI hub. The country currently has no exascale compute capacity — being able to handle a billion billion calculations per second — nor the ready AI talent capable of writing sophisticated software, said Sashikumaar Ganesan, who chairs the computational and data sciences department at Indian Institute of Science. “We have to build not just AI infrastructure but also high-performance computing workforce,” said Ganesan, who was among those invited to Huang’s meeting with AI researchers.


Still, India is a fast-maturing market for high-end technologies, said K. Krishna Moorthy, CEO of trade group India Electronics and Semiconductor Association. That’s created huge demand for Nvidia’s GPUs, or graphics processing units. “As India’s digital economy grows, the government is mandating data security, data privacy and data localization, and this could require over 100,000 GPUs to build AI cloud infrastructure,” Moorthy said.


The country has telecom giants like Reliance’s Jio which collect billions of data points daily from its half a billion mobile users and hundreds of millions of retailers. “The data generated from 1.4 billion Indians could set the country up for the next phase of digital growth,” said Moorthy. “Huang understands this is where the next phase of growth for AI-enabling chips will happen.”


Nvidia already has four engineering centers in India, including in Bangalore and in the Gurgaon suburbs of Delhi, with a total of 4,000 engineers, its second-biggest talent pool after the US. During his trip, Huang held town halls at each of the locations and stressed the importance of remaining competitive in a rapidly evolving AI marketplace. While speaking to employees, he repeated a line he’s used in public before, offering his twist on the hunt-or-be-hunted adage: Either you are running for food or running away from being food. 



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Big Tech told to show strong case for time to comply with data law

Big Tech told to show strong case for time to comply with data law



The government wants big tech companies to get ready to follow the digital data privacy law, while hinting at a breather of up to 12 months in terms of a transition period for startups, government entities and micro, small and medium enterprises. A graded approach for different categories is being planned for the transition period.          


Big tech platforms such as Google, Meta and Microsoft faced disappointment during a meeting with minister of state for electronics and IT Rajeev Chandrasekhar on Wednesday when they were told to start complying with the Digital Personal Data Protection (DPDP) Act, 2023. The minister said the big tech platforms would need to provide a “strong case” to justify any demand for a transition period as they are already compliant with the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).


The ministry of electronics and information technology (MeitY) had called the meeting with industry stakeholders to discuss the roadmap for the digital data privacy law and respond to queries on issues related to the recently cleared legislation.  


Chandrasekhar said the government may release the draft rules to enforce the law in the next four to six weeks. A data protection board is also likely to be set up in 30 days.


A category of data fiduciaries like government entities at the Centre or state, panchayats or MSMEs that do not have the digital readiness for storing or processing data, are likely to get maximum time for transition, followed by smaller private entities and start-ups.


“Companies that were aligned with GDPR should not take time, but wherever there are requirements that go beyond GDPR, so to speak, they should specify the time needed for transition. Non-digital companies (like manufacturing firms) will be given a longer period. Where there is a need for architectural enhancement and more time is needed, we will look into it,” the minister said.


EU’s GDPR, which came into effect in 2018, is seen amongst the toughest privacy and security laws in the world.  


As for India’s privacy law, it provides broad principles of data protection and a rulebook is expected to outline the implementation roadmap and processes along the way. The Act has defined 26 items on which the government can make rules. The minister said over the coming month, the government will release at least eight to nine necessary rules to offer clarity on some of these provisions.


Industry has voiced its concerns.


“Wherever the obligation is very similar to those in laws in other parts of the world, we do not expect a long period in terms of transition time. But where the obligation is unique to India and where the obligation has a dependency on a third party (for compliance), we would expect a longer transition period,” said Sunil Abraham, Public Policy Director – Data Economy and Emerging Tech – for India at Meta during the consultation.


A representative of instant messaging app Snap said the government should consider the technical complexities of some compliance requirements while finalising the timeframe for notification.


“From our perspective, the thing that will require the engineering effort is section 9 – the parental consent requirement. Our request is to get an opportunity to create a list of similar provisions that will require more effort,” Uthara Ganesh, head of public policy, India and South Asia, Snap Inc, said.


The government is open to the demand for a slightly longer transition to implement e-KYC requirements. “If you can give us real input as opposed to rhetoric about what parts of the Act require a slightly longer period for transition, that will be a useful conversation,” Chandrasekhar said.


The consultation was attended by about 125  representatives of companies including Meta, Microsoft, Lenovo, Dell, and Netflix, among others.


Law experts said there’s an utmost need for clarity on compliance requirements. For that, the subordinate rules and the authority must be in place.


“Since the beginning, there was an expectation that there would be some fitting period for compliance to start. Once you have the law, the rules and the authority under it are in place, then you understand what you are supposed to do (for compliance). Till then, there are a lot of ambiguities and confusion,” said Anupam Shukla, partner at Pioneer Legal, a law firm.


Passed in Parliament last month, the digital data privacy legislation caused a stir in the industry because of some tough clauses and the absence of a clear roadmap so far.


“The implication of this is that if there are any breaches under the law – today or after the time we notified the Act – those breaches will be taken up by the Data Protection Board on or after the day the Data Protection Board is constituted. So this window between now and the DPB’s constitution is not a holiday or a safe harbour (from compliance),” the minister said. He added that the data protection board, which has the power to prescribe penalties up to Rs 250 crore, will start adjudicating the cases of violations by platforms immediately after its formation.

 



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Jabra unveils Elite 8 Active, Elite 10 wireless earbuds with spatial sound

Jabra unveils Elite 8 Active, Elite 10 wireless earbuds with spatial sound


The Elite 8 Active are offered in caramel, navy, black and dark grey colours at Rs 17,999


Danish audio brand Jabra has unveiled the Elite 8 Active and Elite 10 wireless earbuds. The Elite 8 Active are offered in caramel, navy, black and dark grey colours at Rs 17,999. The Elite 10, on the other hand, are offered in cream, cocoa, gloss black and matte black colours at Rs 20,999. Both the wireless earbuds are now available for purchase on e-commerce platform Amazon India and offline at Croma and Jabra authorised resellers. Below are the products detail:


Jabra Elite 8 Active: Features


Aimed at outdoor enthusiasts, the Jabra Elite 8 Active are IP68 rated for water and dust resistance. Not just the earbuds, the case is also sealed for protection against dust and water splashes (IP54). These new wireless earbuds in the Jabra’s Active line boasts its ShakeGrip technology for secure and comfortable fit.


The earbuds support Jabra’s Adaptive Hybrid ANC technology, which it said optimises noise-cancelling based on ambient environment. The earbuds feature 6mm audio drivers on each unit and a total of six-mic setup. According to the company, these earbuds would deliver a battery life of up to eight hours without the case and up to 32 hours with the case.


The Elite 8 Active support Bluetooth multipoint connectivity for simultaneous connection with two devices. Besides, these support Google Assistant, Fast Pair, Swift Pair and Spotify Tap playback.


Jabra Elite 10: Features


The Elite 10 are powered by Dolby Atmos with support for Dolby Head Tracking feature, which optimises sound direction based on listeners head movement. The earbuds offer ComfortFit technology that Jabra said provides more comfort for long durations. The earbuds support advanced ANC, which Jabra said blocks twice the noise compared to standard ANC earbuds.


The Jabra Elite 10 feature a total of 6-mic, similar to the Elite 8 Active, and offers a battery life of up to 6 hours with ANC turned on that can be extended up to 27 hours with the charging case.

First Published: Sep 20 2023 | 6:10 PM IST



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Fitbit by may launch Charge 6 fitness wearable on Sept 28: Details here

Fitbit by may launch Charge 6 fitness wearable on Sept 28: Details here


The video teaser briefly shows a wearable device similar to Charge 5. Therefore, it is expected to be the successor, the Charge 6


Google-owned health-and-fitness wearable maker Fitbit has posted on X (formerly Twitter) a short video, possibly hinting at the launch of a new product on September 28. The video teaser briefly shows a wearable device similar to Charge 5. Therefore, it is expected to be the successor, the Charge 6.


According to 9to5Google, the Fitbit Charge 6 would be an incremental upgrade with no big changes in the design. It is said to bring back the physical side button, which is not available on the Charge 5. The Charge 6 is expected to run the user interface similar to the Charge 5, but it is expected to get Maps and YouTube Music apps from Google.


In related news, the wearable device maker rolled out a redesigned Fitbit smartphone app on September 20. The new app is based on Google’s Material You design. It has a new Coach tab for workouts, and offers improved tracking using the connected smartphone’s sensors, and more.


Fitbit app now shows collected data over three tabs: Today, Coach and You.


The main metrics under the Today tab have customisation options to highlight different focus areas. For example, sleep, heart, and more. The Today tab also provides some custom presets for common fitness goals.


The Coach tab shows curated workout data with other premium features like HIIT and more. The You section has the option to adjust personal settings such as daily steps, bedtime, active minutes. Redesigned achievement badges will also appear under this section.

First Published: Sep 20 2023 | 5:01 PM IST



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