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  • Arm’s high-stakes licensing suit against Qualcomm ends in mistrial, but Qualcomm prevails in key areas – Computerworld

    Arm’s high-stakes licensing suit against Qualcomm ends in mistrial, but Qualcomm prevails in key areas – Computerworld

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    This is where things became a bit muddy. Why did Arm decide to sue over a relatively small sum, and why did Qualcomm refuse to concede? This week in court, a wide range of arguments and counter arguments were laid out, mostly saying that each company believed the other was trying to sabotage its business.

    Make Qualcomm great again

    As it attempts to diversify away from relying on mobile chips, Qualcomm’s Snapdragon SoC platform is seen as critical for its future. This, it hopes, will allow it to take on Intel and AMD in the general microprocessor market while integrating the new-fangled AI capabilities important to the PC sector.

    In October, Arm cancelled Qualcomm’s license to the Nuvia ALA. It also demanded the destruction of Nuvia designs developed prior to the merger. Clearly, a verdict in favor of Arm would put Qualcomm in a tight corner, and also a who’s who of tech companies — Microsoft, Acer, Asus, Dell, HP, Lenovo, and Samsung — currently using Qualcomm’s Snapdragon designs.

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  • On Arm PC return rates and CEO posturing

    On Arm PC return rates and CEO posturing

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    With her claim that retailers are seeing high returns of Arm PCs, Intel interim CEO Michelle Johnston Holthaus appears to be trying to scare buyers off the rival processor architecture. But enterprise buyers who look before they leap have little to fear.

    Speaking at Barclay’s annual technology conference late last week, Holthaus said “if you look at the return rate for Arm PCs, you go talk to any retailer, their number one concern is, ‘I get a large percentage of these back because you go to set them up and the things that we just expect [to work], don’t work.’”

    Continue reading on CIO.com.

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  • For December’s Patch Tuesday, 74 updates and a zero-day fix for Windows – Computerworld

    For December’s Patch Tuesday, 74 updates and a zero-day fix for Windows – Computerworld

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    • Windows Remote Desktop and related routing servers
    • Windows Kernel and Kernel Mode Drivers
    • Printing
    • Microsoft Hyper-V
    • Microsoft LDAP and LSASS
    • Windows Error Reporting

    Unfortunately, there is a zero-day (CVE-2024-49138) that has been reported as publicly disclosed and exploited in the wild that affects how Windows creates error log files. Add these Windows updates your Patch Now cycle.

    Microsoft Office 

    Microsoft released nine patches to Office, all rated important. In addition, the company  offered some additional security measures and mitigations to the platform with the release of the advisory ADV240002, which covers the following areas:

    • Perimeter Defense
    • Network Security
    • Endpoint Protection
    • Application Security

    This month’s update affects Microsoft Excel, SharePoint and core Microsoft Office libraries. Add these patches to your standard Office release schedule.

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  • Google’s Agentspace will put AI agents in the hands of workers – Computerworld

    Google’s Agentspace will put AI agents in the hands of workers – Computerworld

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    One is to serve as the “launch point” for custom AI agents. These agents combine generative AI (genAI) large language models with multi-step workflows to automate repetitive tasks. Google said the application has an “intuitive interface” and intends it to serve as a space where workers can access pre-built agents created in Google’s VertexAI Agent Builder. A low-code tool is also in the works to enable a wider range of employees to set up their own agents.

    Agentspace also provides an enterprise search function that Google said will help workers find information held in applications across their organization, includingboth structured and unstructured data such as documents and emails. Agentspace search is “multimodal,” Google said, meaning it should be possible to search across video and image files as well as text documents. 

    Agentspace search can access data from a range of sources using connectors to third-party tools such as Confluence, Google Drive, Jira, Microsoft SharePoint, ServiceNow, and others. 

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  • Scientists make more discoveries with help from AI – Computerworld

    Scientists make more discoveries with help from AI – Computerworld

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    A new study by a PhD student at MIT indicates that AI tools can help scientists make more discoveries, according to Nature.

    In the study by Aidan Toner-Rodgers, an unspecified laboratory in the US with 1,018 researchers used an unspecified custom machine-learning tool. The work teams that were randomly assigned to use the AI ​​tool then discovered 44% more materials and created 39% more patent applications than those that did not use the tool.

    At the same time, the technology had different effects on how productivity was distributed. The bottom third of researchers saw little benefit, while output doubled for top researchers.

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  • OpenAI announces ChatGPT Pro, priced at 0 per month – Computerworld

    OpenAI announces ChatGPT Pro, priced at $200 per month – Computerworld

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    ‘Plus’ remains competitive

    But, he said, “the value add between ‘Plus’ and ‘Pro’ is not currently clear from a marketing perspective. The average user of ChatGPT will still do well with the free option, perhaps being persuaded to pay for ‘Plus’  if they are using it more extensively for content writing or coding. When priced against other tools, ChatGPT’s ‘Plus’ will remain very competitive against its rivals.”

    According to Randall, “Anthropic is still trying to achieve market share (though it has recently fumbled with an ambiguous marketing campaign), while Gemini is not currently accurate enough in its outputs to effectively position itself. As an example, when I asked ChatGPT, Anthropic’s Claude, and Gemini to give me a list of 100 historical events for a certain country, ChatGPT and Anthropic were comparable, but Gemini would only list up to 40, but still call it a list of 100.”

    As for Microsoft Copilot, he said, it “still struggles to showcase the value-add of its rather expensive licensing. While Microsoft certainly needs to show revenue return from the amount it has invested in Copilot, the product has not been immediately popular, and was perhaps released too early. We may end up seeing a rebrand, or Copilot eventually being packaged with Microsoft’s enterprise plans.”

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  • AI created less than 1% of the disinformation around 2024 elections – Computerworld

    AI created less than 1% of the disinformation around 2024 elections – Computerworld

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    AI-generated content accounted for less than 1% of the disinformation fact-checkers linked to political elections that took place worldwide in 2024, according to social media giant Meta. The company cited political elections in the United States, Great Britain, Bangladesh, Indonesia, India, Pakistan, France, South Africa, Mexico and Brazil, as well as the EU elections.

    “At the beginning of the year, many warned about the potential impact that generative AI could have on the upcoming elections, including the risk of widespread deepfakes and AI-powered disinformation campaigns,” Meta President of Global Affairs Nick Clegg wrote. “Based on what we have monitored through our services, it appears that these risks did not materialize in a significant way and that any impact was modest and limited in scope.”

    Meta did not provide detailed information on how much AI-generated disinformation its fact-checking uncovered related to major elections.

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  • Will AI help doctors decide whether you live or die? – Computerworld

    Will AI help doctors decide whether you live or die? – Computerworld

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    “Clinicians may also become de-skilled as over-reliance on the outputs of AI diminishes critical thinking,” Shegewi said. “Large-scale deployments will likely raise issues concerning patient data privacy and regulatory compliance. The risk for bias, inherent in any AI model, is also huge and might harm underrepresented populations.”

    Additionally, AI’s increasing use by healthcare insurance companies doesn’t typically translate into what’s best for a patient. Doctors who face an onslaught of AI-generated patient care denials from insurance companies are fighting back — and they’re using the same technology to automate their appeals.

    “One reason the AI outperformed humans is that it’s very good at thinking about why it might be wrong,” Rodman said. “So, it’s good at what doesn’t fit with the hypothesis, which is a skill humans aren’t very good at. We’re not good at disagreeing with ourselves. We have cognitive biases.”

    Of course, AI has its own biases, Rodman noted. The higher ratio of sex and racial biases has been well documented with LLMs, but it’s probably less prone to biases than people are, he said.

    Even so, bias in classical AI has been a longstanding problem, and genAI has the potential to exacerbate the problem, according to Gartner’s Walk. “I think one of the biggest risks is that the technology is outpacing the industry’s ability to train and prepare clinicians to detect, respond to, and report these biases,” she said. 

    GenAI models are inherently prone to bias due to their training on datasets that may disproportionately represent certain populations or scenarios. For example, models trained primarily on data from dominant demographic groups might perform poorly for underrepresented groups, said Mutaz Shegewi, a senior research director with IDC’s Worldwide Healthcare Provider Digital Strategies group.

    “Prompt design can further amplify bias, as poorly crafted prompts may reinforce disparities,” he said. “Additionally, genAI’s focus on common patterns risks overlooking rare but important cases.”

    For example, research literature that’s ingested by LLMs is often skewed toward white males, creating critical data gaps regarding other populations, Mutaz said. “Due to this, AI models might not recognize atypical disease presentations in different groups. Symptoms for certain diseases, for example, can have stark differences between groups, and a failure to acknowledge such differences could lead to delayed or misguided treatment,” he said.

    With current regulatory structures, LLMs and their genAI interfaces can’t accept liability and responsibility the way a human clinician can. So, for “official purposes,” it’s likely a human will still be needed in the loop for liability, judgement, nuance, and the many other layers of evaluation and support patients need.

    Chen said it wouldn’t surprise him if physicians were already using LLMs for low-stakes purposes, like explaining medical charts or generating treatment options  for less-severe symptoms.

    “Good or bad, ready or not, Pandora’s box has already been opened, and we need to figure out how to effectively use these tools and counsel patients and clinicians on appropriately safe and reliable ways to do so,” Chen said.

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  • the conversation that never ends – Computerworld

    the conversation that never ends – Computerworld

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    All this, due in large part to the explosion of ChatGPT. In fact, six months after the chatbot’s release, the Future of Life Institute asked for a pause in its development in an open letter, saying its risks could not be controlled, even going so far as to say that it could pose a danger to our civilization as we know it if systems were built that surpassed humans. More than 31,000 people signed the letter, including industry figures such as Apple cofounder Steve Wozniak and OpenAI cofounder Elon Musk.

    ChatGPT broke all predictions. A study by UBS found that it was the fastest consumer application to reach 100 million users, in just two months, although it has since been surpassed by Meta’s social network Threads. And, at the business level, it has one million licenses. In total, it has more than 180.5 million monthly active users as of April of this year, and its page was accessed by 1,625 million visitors in the month of February, according to PrimeWeb.

    “It has transformed the way we interact with technology,” says Fernando Maldonado, an independent analyst. “Today, anyone can access AI without the need for advanced knowledge or intermediaries, something that was previously reserved for specialists.” 

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  • FTC opens antitrust investigation into Microsoft’s cloud, AI, and cybersecurity practices – Computerworld

    FTC opens antitrust investigation into Microsoft’s cloud, AI, and cybersecurity practices – Computerworld

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    Focus on market dominance and security practices

    The investigation centers on Microsoft’s bundling of office productivity and security software with its cloud services, a practice critics argue disadvantages competitors in the authentication and cybersecurity markets. The FTC is particularly examining Microsoft Entra ID, its user authentication service, amid complaints that licensing terms and integration with its cloud offerings impede rival companies.

    Microsoft’s role as a major government contractor and recent cybersecurity incidents involving its products have added urgency to the probe. The company provides billions of dollars in services to US agencies, including the Department of Defense, making its practices critical to national security.

    In November 2023, FTC flagged concerns about the concentrated nature of the cloud market, warning that outages or performance issues could ripple through the economy. The authority had then collected feedback from civil society, industry stakeholders, and academia to prepare its report. As per the feedback, the majority of the concerns were related to competition and licensing practices.

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