Wednesday, June 14, 2023

Underground China Poetry Capcom 40th Anniversary Google Bard More: Wednesday Afternoon ResearchBuzz June 14 2023

Underground China Poetry, Capcom 40th Anniversary, Google Bard, More: Wednesday Afternoon ResearchBuzz, June 14, 2023
By ResearchBuzz

NEW RESOURCES

Leiden University Libraries: Octogenarian underground poets, political language turned on its head, and more: unofficial poetry from China in Digital Collections. “Over 30.000 pages of new material have been added to the online collection of unofficial poetry publications from China in the Leiden Digital Collections. Produced outside the system, these journals and books are hugely influential yet very hard to find. To address this paradox, Leiden University Libraries (UBL) is making its unique collection of this material freely accessible online.”

Video Game Chronicles: Capcom has launched a 40th anniversary site with a museum and playable retro games. “The Museum section features over 500 pieces of artwork, design documents and video and music selections from a number of Capcom series including Monster Hunter, Resident Evil, Street Fighter, Mega Man, Devil May Cry, Ace Attorney and Ghosts ‘n Goblins.”

TWEAKS AND UPDATES

Independent: Major Google Bard update allows it to not just write code, but execute it. “Google has unveiled a major new update to its AI chatbot Bard that significantly improves its powers of logic and reasoning. The latest version of the ChatGPT rival is now capable of both writing and executing code by itself, the tech giant announced, allowing it to figure out problems on a far deeper level than current generative AI systems.”

AROUND THE INTERNET WORLD

New York Times: A ‘Crown Jewel of Comedy’: The Joan Rivers Card Catalog of Jokes Finds a Home. “…Rivers is donating the extensive collection to the National Comedy Center, the high-tech museum in Jamestown, N.Y., joining the archives of A-list comics like George Carlin and Carl Reiner. The fact that the jokes will be accessible is only one of the reasons for Melissa Rivers’s decision.”

PC Magazine: Google Translate vs. ChatGPT: Which One Is the Best Language Translator?. “…we decided to put ChatGPT to the test. Does it have the chops to replace Google Translate as the go-to translation service for travel, work, cross-border romance, and any other language needs? And how does it compare to its sister chatbots, Microsoft Bing, and Google Bard?”

SECURITY & LEGAL

North Carolina State University: Fitness App Loophole Allows Access to Home Addresses. “Despite attempts to anonymize user data, the fitness app Strava allows anyone to find personal information – including home addresses – about some users. The finding, which is detailed in a new study, raises significant privacy concerns.”

Bloomberg Law: OpenAI Hit With First Defamation Suit Over ChatGPT Hallucination. “OpenAI LLC is facing a defamation lawsuit from a Georgia radio host who claimed the viral artificial intelligence program ChatGPT generated a false legal complaint accusing him of embezzling money.”

Saransh Saraf: Uncovering the Secrets : The Potential of Web Archive in Bug Bounty Programs. “Although the WayBack Machine logs various aspects for its intended purpose, it also inadvertently captures vulnerabilities present in applications and sensitive information that was never intended to be made public. These may include confidential details like discount coupons, various types of tokens, hidden GET or query parameters, and similar information. If utilized correctly, these seemingly minor details can potentially lead bug bounty hunters to discover critical and groundbreaking vulnerabilities.” I don’t know enough about Internet security to completely understand this, but what I did understand unfolded my brain a little bit. Good read.

RESEARCH & OPINION

University of Kansas: Digital Tool Spots Academic Text Spawned By ChatGPT With 99% Accuracy. “Heather Desaire, a chemist who uses machine learning in biomedical research at the University of Kansas, has unveiled a new tool that detects with 99% accuracy scientific text generated by ChatGPT, the artificial intelligence text generator.”

University of Oregon: Grad student uses data science to explore biological diversity. “Using data science applied to plant and animal records at natural history museums, UO graduate student Jordan Rodriguez is finding new ways to study the evolution of key proteins. As an undergraduate, Rodriguez embarked on a research project looking at the biases and limitations of biodiversity records from natural history collections and databases like iNaturalist. That work led to a recent publication in Nature Ecology and Evolution.” Good afternoon, Internet…

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June 15, 2023 at 12:17AM
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