• progress_activity cloud_sync

    Reconnection to the server…

    Movim cannot talk with the server, please try again later


    • Public subscriptions

    • chevron_right

      coopr8

    • chevron_right

      gabagoo

    • chevron_right

      kenu_demon

    • chevron_right

      coopr8

    • chevron_right

      gabagoo

    • chevron_right

      kenu_demon

    • chevron_right

      coopr8

    • chevron_right

      gabagoo

    • chevron_right

      kenu_demon

  • Register Login

    Movim

    movim.chatterboxtown.us


  • group_work rss_feed
    add Follow

    ArsTechnica

    • Ar chevron_right

      Google’s RT-2 AI model brings us one step closer to WALL-E

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 28 July 2023

    A Google robot controlled by RT-2.

    Enlarge / A Google robot controlled by RT-2. (credit: Google)

    On Friday, Google DeepMind announced Robotic Transformer 2 (RT-2), a "first-of-its-kind" vision-language-action (VLA) model that uses data scraped from the Internet to enable better robotic control through plain language commands. The ultimate goal is to create general-purpose robots that can navigate human environments, similar to fictional robots like WALL-E or C-3PO.

    When a human wants to learn a task, we often read and observe. In a similar way, RT-2 utilizes a large language model (the tech behind ChatGPT ) that has been trained on text and images found online. RT-2 uses this information to recognize patterns and perform actions even if the robot hasn't been specifically trained to do those tasks—a concept called generalization.

    For example, Google says that RT-2 can allow a robot to recognize and throw away trash without having been specifically trained to do so. It uses its understanding of what trash is and how it is usually disposed to guide its actions. RT-2 even sees discarded food packaging or banana peels as trash, despite the potential ambiguity.

    Read 10 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    • tagai tagai tagai tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagdeepmind tagdeepmind tagdeepmind taggoogle taggoogle taggoogle taggoogle deepmind taggoogle deepmind taggoogle deepmind taggoogle robots taggoogle robots taggoogle robots tagmachine learning tagmachine learning tagmachine learning tagpalm-e tagpalm-e tagpalm-e tagrobotics tagrobotics tagrobotics tagrobots tagrobots tagrobots tagrt-2 tagrt-2 tagrt-2 tagwall-e tagwall-e tagwall-e tagai tagai tagai tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagdeepmind tagdeepmind tagdeepmind taggoogle taggoogle taggoogle taggoogle deepmind taggoogle deepmind taggoogle deepmind taggoogle robots taggoogle robots taggoogle robots tagmachine learning tagmachine learning tagmachine learning tagpalm-e tagpalm-e tagpalm-e tagrobotics tagrobotics tagrobotics tagrobots tagrobots tagrobots tagrt-2 tagrt-2 tagrt-2 tagwall-e tagwall-e tagwall-e tagai tagai tagai tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagdeepmind tagdeepmind tagdeepmind taggoogle taggoogle taggoogle taggoogle deepmind taggoogle deepmind taggoogle deepmind taggoogle robots taggoogle robots taggoogle robots tagmachine learning tagmachine learning tagmachine learning tagpalm-e tagpalm-e tagpalm-e tagrobotics tagrobotics tagrobotics tagrobots tagrobots tagrobots tagrt-2 tagrt-2 tagrt-2 tagwall-e tagwall-e tagwall-e

    • Ar chevron_right

      Google’s RT-2 AI model brings us one step closer to WALL-E

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 28 July 2023

    A Google robot controlled by RT-2.

    Enlarge / A Google robot controlled by RT-2. (credit: Google)

    On Friday, Google DeepMind announced Robotic Transformer 2 (RT-2), a "first-of-its-kind" vision-language-action (VLA) model that uses data scraped from the Internet to enable better robotic control through plain language commands. The ultimate goal is to create general-purpose robots that can navigate human environments, similar to fictional robots like WALL-E or C-3PO.

    When a human wants to learn a task, we often read and observe. In a similar way, RT-2 utilizes a large language model (the tech behind ChatGPT ) that has been trained on text and images found online. RT-2 uses this information to recognize patterns and perform actions even if the robot hasn't been specifically trained to do those tasks—a concept called generalization.

    For example, Google says that RT-2 can allow a robot to recognize and throw away trash without having been specifically trained to do so. It uses its understanding of what trash is and how it is usually disposed to guide its actions. RT-2 even sees discarded food packaging or banana peels as trash, despite the potential ambiguity.

    Read 10 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    • tagai tagai tagai tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagdeepmind tagdeepmind tagdeepmind taggoogle taggoogle taggoogle taggoogle deepmind taggoogle deepmind taggoogle deepmind taggoogle robots taggoogle robots taggoogle robots tagmachine learning tagmachine learning tagmachine learning tagpalm-e tagpalm-e tagpalm-e tagrobotics tagrobotics tagrobotics tagrobots tagrobots tagrobots tagrt-2 tagrt-2 tagrt-2 tagwall-e tagwall-e tagwall-e tagai tagai tagai tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagdeepmind tagdeepmind tagdeepmind taggoogle taggoogle taggoogle taggoogle deepmind taggoogle deepmind taggoogle deepmind taggoogle robots taggoogle robots taggoogle robots tagmachine learning tagmachine learning tagmachine learning tagpalm-e tagpalm-e tagpalm-e tagrobotics tagrobotics tagrobotics tagrobots tagrobots tagrobots tagrt-2 tagrt-2 tagrt-2 tagwall-e tagwall-e tagwall-e tagai tagai tagai tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagdeepmind tagdeepmind tagdeepmind taggoogle taggoogle taggoogle taggoogle deepmind taggoogle deepmind taggoogle deepmind taggoogle robots taggoogle robots taggoogle robots tagmachine learning tagmachine learning tagmachine learning tagpalm-e tagpalm-e tagpalm-e tagrobotics tagrobotics tagrobotics tagrobots tagrobots tagrobots tagrt-2 tagrt-2 tagrt-2 tagwall-e tagwall-e tagwall-e

    • Ar chevron_right

      Google’s RT-2 AI model brings us one step closer to WALL-E

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 28 July 2023

    A Google robot controlled by RT-2.

    Enlarge / A Google robot controlled by RT-2. (credit: Google)

    On Friday, Google DeepMind announced Robotic Transformer 2 (RT-2), a "first-of-its-kind" vision-language-action (VLA) model that uses data scraped from the Internet to enable better robotic control through plain language commands. The ultimate goal is to create general-purpose robots that can navigate human environments, similar to fictional robots like WALL-E or C-3PO.

    When a human wants to learn a task, we often read and observe. In a similar way, RT-2 utilizes a large language model (the tech behind ChatGPT ) that has been trained on text and images found online. RT-2 uses this information to recognize patterns and perform actions even if the robot hasn't been specifically trained to do those tasks—a concept called generalization.

    For example, Google says that RT-2 can allow a robot to recognize and throw away trash without having been specifically trained to do so. It uses its understanding of what trash is and how it is usually disposed to guide its actions. RT-2 even sees discarded food packaging or banana peels as trash, despite the potential ambiguity.

    Read 10 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    • tagai tagai tagai tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagdeepmind tagdeepmind tagdeepmind taggoogle taggoogle taggoogle taggoogle deepmind taggoogle deepmind taggoogle deepmind taggoogle robots taggoogle robots taggoogle robots tagmachine learning tagmachine learning tagmachine learning tagpalm-e tagpalm-e tagpalm-e tagrobotics tagrobotics tagrobotics tagrobots tagrobots tagrobots tagrt-2 tagrt-2 tagrt-2 tagwall-e tagwall-e tagwall-e tagai tagai tagai tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagdeepmind tagdeepmind tagdeepmind taggoogle taggoogle taggoogle taggoogle deepmind taggoogle deepmind taggoogle deepmind taggoogle robots taggoogle robots taggoogle robots tagmachine learning tagmachine learning tagmachine learning tagpalm-e tagpalm-e tagpalm-e tagrobotics tagrobotics tagrobotics tagrobots tagrobots tagrobots tagrt-2 tagrt-2 tagrt-2 tagwall-e tagwall-e tagwall-e tagai tagai tagai tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagdeepmind tagdeepmind tagdeepmind taggoogle taggoogle taggoogle taggoogle deepmind taggoogle deepmind taggoogle deepmind taggoogle robots taggoogle robots taggoogle robots tagmachine learning tagmachine learning tagmachine learning tagpalm-e tagpalm-e tagpalm-e tagrobotics tagrobotics tagrobotics tagrobots tagrobots tagrobots tagrt-2 tagrt-2 tagrt-2 tagwall-e tagwall-e tagwall-e

    • Ar chevron_right

      Reddit calls for “a few new mods” after axing, polarizing some of its best

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 28 July 2023 • 1 minute

    In this photo illustration the Reddit logo seen displayed on

    Enlarge (credit: Getty )

    Reddit is campaigning to replace numerous longstanding moderators who were removed from their positions after engaging in API protests. Over the past week, a Reddit employee has posted to subreddits with ousted mods , asking for new volunteers. But in its search, the company has failed to address the intricacies involved in moderating distinct and, in some cases, well-known subreddits. And it doesn't look like the knowledge from the previous moderators is being passed down.

    Redditors were enraged over suddenly high API access pricing, and the social media platform's subsequent responses to protests and feedback have beleaguered Reddit for weeks. A two-day blackout of over 8,000 subreddits, for example, shut Reddit down for three hours in June. Protestors complicated matters further with moves like suddenly making subreddits not-safe-for-work (NSFW), all about John Oliver, or focusing on some unhelpful tweak of its original topic (like r/malefashionadvice only allowing posts related to the stylings of the 18th century).

    It's a tough job...

    Reddit's response has included threatening to remove moderators who are engaging in protests to actually removing them. Recently, efforts to replace the departed volunteers who were booted or quit have picked up steam. A Reddit employee going by ModCodeofConduct (Reddit has refused to disclose the real names of admins representing the company on the platform) has posted to numerous subreddits over recent days, including r/IRLEasterEggs , r/donthelpjustfilm , r/ActLikeYouBelong , r/malefashionadvice , and r/AccidentalRenaissance .

    Read 27 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    • tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapi tagapi tagapi tagreddit tagreddit tagreddit tagsocial media tagsocial media tagsocial media tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapi tagapi tagapi tagreddit tagreddit tagreddit tagsocial media tagsocial media tagsocial media tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapi tagapi tagapi tagreddit tagreddit tagreddit tagsocial media tagsocial media tagsocial media

    • Ar chevron_right

      Reddit calls for “a few new mods” after axing, polarizing some of its best

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 28 July 2023 • 1 minute

    In this photo illustration the Reddit logo seen displayed on

    Enlarge (credit: Getty )

    Reddit is campaigning to replace numerous longstanding moderators who were removed from their positions after engaging in API protests. Over the past week, a Reddit employee has posted to subreddits with ousted mods , asking for new volunteers. But in its search, the company has failed to address the intricacies involved in moderating distinct and, in some cases, well-known subreddits. And it doesn't look like the knowledge from the previous moderators is being passed down.

    Redditors were enraged over suddenly high API access pricing, and the social media platform's subsequent responses to protests and feedback have beleaguered Reddit for weeks. A two-day blackout of over 8,000 subreddits, for example, shut Reddit down for three hours in June. Protestors complicated matters further with moves like suddenly making subreddits not-safe-for-work (NSFW), all about John Oliver, or focusing on some unhelpful tweak of its original topic (like r/malefashionadvice only allowing posts related to the stylings of the 18th century).

    It's a tough job...

    Reddit's response has included threatening to remove moderators who are engaging in protests to actually removing them. Recently, efforts to replace the departed volunteers who were booted or quit have picked up steam. A Reddit employee going by ModCodeofConduct (Reddit has refused to disclose the real names of admins representing the company on the platform) has posted to numerous subreddits over recent days, including r/IRLEasterEggs , r/donthelpjustfilm , r/ActLikeYouBelong , r/malefashionadvice , and r/AccidentalRenaissance .

    Read 27 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    • tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapi tagapi tagapi tagreddit tagreddit tagreddit tagsocial media tagsocial media tagsocial media tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapi tagapi tagapi tagreddit tagreddit tagreddit tagsocial media tagsocial media tagsocial media tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapi tagapi tagapi tagreddit tagreddit tagreddit tagsocial media tagsocial media tagsocial media

    • Ar chevron_right

      Reddit calls for “a few new mods” after axing, polarizing some of its best

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 28 July 2023 • 1 minute

    In this photo illustration the Reddit logo seen displayed on

    Enlarge (credit: Getty )

    Reddit is campaigning to replace numerous longstanding moderators who were removed from their positions after engaging in API protests. Over the past week, a Reddit employee has posted to subreddits with ousted mods , asking for new volunteers. But in its search, the company has failed to address the intricacies involved in moderating distinct and, in some cases, well-known subreddits. And it doesn't look like the knowledge from the previous moderators is being passed down.

    Redditors were enraged over suddenly high API access pricing, and the social media platform's subsequent responses to protests and feedback have beleaguered Reddit for weeks. A two-day blackout of over 8,000 subreddits, for example, shut Reddit down for three hours in June. Protestors complicated matters further with moves like suddenly making subreddits not-safe-for-work (NSFW), all about John Oliver, or focusing on some unhelpful tweak of its original topic (like r/malefashionadvice only allowing posts related to the stylings of the 18th century).

    It's a tough job...

    Reddit's response has included threatening to remove moderators who are engaging in protests to actually removing them. Recently, efforts to replace the departed volunteers who were booted or quit have picked up steam. A Reddit employee going by ModCodeofConduct (Reddit has refused to disclose the real names of admins representing the company on the platform) has posted to numerous subreddits over recent days, including r/IRLEasterEggs , r/donthelpjustfilm , r/ActLikeYouBelong , r/malefashionadvice , and r/AccidentalRenaissance .

    Read 27 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    • tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapi tagapi tagapi tagreddit tagreddit tagreddit tagsocial media tagsocial media tagsocial media tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapi tagapi tagapi tagreddit tagreddit tagreddit tagsocial media tagsocial media tagsocial media tagpolicy tagpolicy tagpolicy tagtech tagtech tagtech tagapi tagapi tagapi tagreddit tagreddit tagreddit tagsocial media tagsocial media tagsocial media

    • Ar chevron_right

      Android malware steals user credentials using optical character recognition

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 28 July 2023 • 1 minute

    Android malware steals user credentials using optical character recognition

    Enlarge (credit: Getty Images)

    Security researchers have unearthed a rare malware find: malicious Android apps that use optical character recognition to steal credentials displayed on phone screens.

    The malware, dubbed CherryBlos by researchers from security firm Trend Micro, has been embedded into at least four Android apps available outside of Google Play, specifically on sites promoting money-making scams. One of the apps was available for close to a month on Google Play but didn’t contain the malicious CherryBlos payload. The researchers also discovered suspicious apps on Google Play that were created by the same developers, but they also didn’t contain the payload.

    Advanced techniques

    The apps took great care to conceal their malicious functionality. They used a paid version of commercial software known as Jiagubao to encrypt code and code strings to prevent analysis that can detect such functionality. They also featured techniques to ensure the app remained active on phones that had installed it. When users opened legitimate apps for Binance and other cryptocurrency services, CherryBlos overlaid windows that mimicked those of the legitimate apps. During withdrawals, CherryBlos replaced the wallet address the victim selected to receive the funds with an address controlled by the attacker.

    Read 13 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    • tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagsecurity tagsecurity tagsecurity tagandroid tagandroid tagandroid tagmalware tagmalware tagmalware tagocr tagocr tagocr tagoptical character recognition tagoptical character recognition tagoptical character recognition tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagsecurity tagsecurity tagsecurity tagandroid tagandroid tagandroid tagmalware tagmalware tagmalware tagocr tagocr tagocr tagoptical character recognition tagoptical character recognition tagoptical character recognition tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagsecurity tagsecurity tagsecurity tagandroid tagandroid tagandroid tagmalware tagmalware tagmalware tagocr tagocr tagocr tagoptical character recognition tagoptical character recognition tagoptical character recognition

    • Ar chevron_right

      Android malware steals user credentials using optical character recognition

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 28 July 2023 • 1 minute

    Android malware steals user credentials using optical character recognition

    Enlarge (credit: Getty Images)

    Security researchers have unearthed a rare malware find: malicious Android apps that use optical character recognition to steal credentials displayed on phone screens.

    The malware, dubbed CherryBlos by researchers from security firm Trend Micro, has been embedded into at least four Android apps available outside of Google Play, specifically on sites promoting money-making scams. One of the apps was available for close to a month on Google Play but didn’t contain the malicious CherryBlos payload. The researchers also discovered suspicious apps on Google Play that were created by the same developers, but they also didn’t contain the payload.

    Advanced techniques

    The apps took great care to conceal their malicious functionality. They used a paid version of commercial software known as Jiagubao to encrypt code and code strings to prevent analysis that can detect such functionality. They also featured techniques to ensure the app remained active on phones that had installed it. When users opened legitimate apps for Binance and other cryptocurrency services, CherryBlos overlaid windows that mimicked those of the legitimate apps. During withdrawals, CherryBlos replaced the wallet address the victim selected to receive the funds with an address controlled by the attacker.

    Read 13 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    • tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagsecurity tagsecurity tagsecurity tagandroid tagandroid tagandroid tagmalware tagmalware tagmalware tagocr tagocr tagocr tagoptical character recognition tagoptical character recognition tagoptical character recognition tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagsecurity tagsecurity tagsecurity tagandroid tagandroid tagandroid tagmalware tagmalware tagmalware tagocr tagocr tagocr tagoptical character recognition tagoptical character recognition tagoptical character recognition tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagsecurity tagsecurity tagsecurity tagandroid tagandroid tagandroid tagmalware tagmalware tagmalware tagocr tagocr tagocr tagoptical character recognition tagoptical character recognition tagoptical character recognition

    • Ar chevron_right

      Android malware steals user credentials using optical character recognition

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 28 July 2023 • 1 minute

    Android malware steals user credentials using optical character recognition

    Enlarge (credit: Getty Images)

    Security researchers have unearthed a rare malware find: malicious Android apps that use optical character recognition to steal credentials displayed on phone screens.

    The malware, dubbed CherryBlos by researchers from security firm Trend Micro, has been embedded into at least four Android apps available outside of Google Play, specifically on sites promoting money-making scams. One of the apps was available for close to a month on Google Play but didn’t contain the malicious CherryBlos payload. The researchers also discovered suspicious apps on Google Play that were created by the same developers, but they also didn’t contain the payload.

    Advanced techniques

    The apps took great care to conceal their malicious functionality. They used a paid version of commercial software known as Jiagubao to encrypt code and code strings to prevent analysis that can detect such functionality. They also featured techniques to ensure the app remained active on phones that had installed it. When users opened legitimate apps for Binance and other cryptocurrency services, CherryBlos overlaid windows that mimicked those of the legitimate apps. During withdrawals, CherryBlos replaced the wallet address the victim selected to receive the funds with an address controlled by the attacker.

    Read 13 remaining paragraphs | Comments

    • tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagsecurity tagsecurity tagsecurity tagandroid tagandroid tagandroid tagmalware tagmalware tagmalware tagocr tagocr tagocr tagoptical character recognition tagoptical character recognition tagoptical character recognition tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagsecurity tagsecurity tagsecurity tagandroid tagandroid tagandroid tagmalware tagmalware tagmalware tagocr tagocr tagocr tagoptical character recognition tagoptical character recognition tagoptical character recognition tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagbiz & it tagsecurity tagsecurity tagsecurity tagandroid tagandroid tagandroid tagmalware tagmalware tagmalware tagocr tagocr tagocr tagoptical character recognition tagoptical character recognition tagoptical character recognition

  • history

    Get older posts

  • cloud_queue

    Powered by Movim