Toggle light / dark theme

Researchers propose ‘copyleft’ rules for generative AI

The rise of generative artificial intelligence (AI) poses challenges for the free and open-source software (FOSS) community, a global network committed to creating and maintaining publicly available software that anyone can use, modify and share. Many AI models have been built on open-source software but do not reciprocate the transparency that the FOSS community’s principles require, leaving open-source developers uncertain about how these AI tools are using their code.

A study by researchers at Yale’s Digital Ethics Center (DEC) explores a potential solution to this problem based on a concept used in free and open-source software known as “copyleft” licenses—a twist on typical copyright rules that obliges works derived from open-source materials to remain as free and transparent as the original work, rather than relicensing it under more restrictive terms. The study is published in the International Journal Of Law And Information Technology.

The authors propose what they call a Contextual Copyleft AI License (CCAI)—a novel extension of copyleft licensing that would treat generative AI models as derivative works and require AI developers training models on open-source code to make their architecture and training data freely available.

World-first spintronic p-bit on silicon chip points toward larger AI-ready p-computers

A Japan–U.S. collaborative research team has demonstrated the world’s first integrated spintronic probabilistic bit, or p-bit, fabricated on a silicon chip using semiconductor manufacturing processes. The team, consisting of researchers from Tohoku University and the National Institute of Standards and Technology, experimentally verified the operation of the p-bit, a key building block for probabilistic, or p-, computers. The achievement provides a pathway toward large-scale spintronic p-computers for applications such as AI and machine learning.

Many emerging computational problems require efficient exploration of enormous numbers of possible states. Conventional computers, which process binary information, 0 or 1, sequentially, are not always well suited to such highly parallel tasks. Probabilistic computers instead use probabilistic bits, or p-bits, which fluctuate stochastically between 0 and 1 by using intrinsic physical randomness.

Because p-computers can quickly take many states, they are attracting attention as a next-generation computing platform. Among several candidate technologies, spintronics is considered especially promising because nanoscale magnetic devices can naturally generate probabilistic behavior through magnetic fluctuations.

Malicious JetBrains Marketplace plugins steal AI API keys from developers

At least 15 malicious plugins found on the JetBrains Marketplace were designed to steal AI API keys from developers.

The campaign, discovered by Aikido Security, includes plugins that act as AI coding assistants, code-review tools, and Git utilities powered by popular AI services such as OpenAI, DeepSeek, and SiliconFlow.

“We detected a coordinated malware campaign on the JetBrains Marketplace,” warns Aikido.

The First Brain Upload Just Made Simulation Theory Real

The first real brain upload just happened — and it might be the strongest evidence yet that simulation theory isn’t just philosophy anymore. A startup called Eon Systems copied a complete biological brain (139,255 neurons, 54 million synapses) into a physics simulation, and the digital fly started walking, grooming, and feeding on its own. No training. No AI. Just the copied wiring on a laptop.
We break down how they did it, why a billion euros in previous brain simulation projects failed, what Nick Bostrom’s simulation argument actually says, and why a fruit fly on a laptop just moved the needle on whether our own reality could be simulated. We also look hard at the limitations — this work is not yet peer reviewed — and what it would actually take to scale this to a human brain.

Eon Systems announcement: https://theinnermostloop.substack.com… model paper: Shiu et al. (2024) Nature 634 — https://www.nature.com/articles/s4158… FlyWire connectome paper: Dorkenwald et al. (2024) Nature 634 — https://www.nature.com/articles/s4158… #simulationtheory #brainupload #consciousness.
Brain model paper: Shiu et al. (2024) Nature 634 — https://www.nature.com/articles/s4158
FlyWire connectome paper: Dorkenwald et al. (2024) Nature 634 — https://www.nature.com/articles/s4158

#simulationtheory #brainupload #consciousness

Scientists Just Found A Quantum Computer Hiding Inside You

FREE GUIDE: 📘 The Content Creator’s AI Blueprint – https://FirstMovers.ai/blueprint/

For 100 years the rule was absolute: to see quantum behavior, you freeze your machine to near absolute zero. In August 2025, a team at the University of Chicago broke it inside a living cell.

They turned enhanced yellow fluorescent protein from the same family that makes jellyfish glow into a working qubit, and detected the signal inside living mammalian cells and bacteria. Published in *Nature*, named a top-ten breakthrough of the year.

What you’ll learn:
✅ How a glowing protein became a real qubit.
✅ Why nature solved this before our best labs did.
✅ What genetically encoded quantum sensors mean by 2030.

There’s quantum machinery glowing inside you right now — and it’s more elegant than anything we’ve engineered.

#QuantumPhysics #Consciousness #Science.

Merging Humans and AI: The Rise of Biological Computers

Go to https://brilliant.org/Undecided/ and get 20% off your subscription and a 30 day free trial with Brilliant.org! It’s no secret that tech companies are racing to build “artificial general intelligence,” or AI that can match a human brain without needing a lifeline. But our brains already do the same heavy lifting with just a fraction of the resources. Whether it’s energy, water, land, components, or, you know… money… human brains are just way cheaper. Right now, you can either buy a human brain cell-based computer… or rent time on a remote one. Yep, even brainpower’s got a subscription plan these days. So what can these living computers actually do? How do they work? And, most importantly, should we be freaking out a little bit?

Watch how deep sea water is now drinkable • how deep sea water is now drinkable.

Video script and citations:
https://undecided.tech/how-living-com… my achieve energy security with solar guide: https://undecided.link/solar-guide Follow-up podcast: Video version — / @stilltbd Audio version — https://undecided.link/stilltbd-podcast Join the Undecided Discord server: https://undecided.link/discord 👋 Support Undecided on Patreon! / mattferrell ⚙️ Gear & Products I Like https://undecided.tech/shop/ Visit my Energysage Portal (US): Research solar panels, heat pumps, and more to get quotes for free! https://undecided.link/energysage For a curated solar buying experience (Canada) EnergyPal’s free personalized quotes: https://undecided.link/energypal 👉 Follow Me Mastodon https://mastodon.social/@mattferrell Instagram / undecidedtech Website https://undecided.tech Some music provided by Epidemic Sound https://undecided.link/epidemic I may earn a small commission for my endorsement or recommendation to products or services linked above, but I wouldn’t put them here if I didn’t like them. Your purchase helps support the channel and the videos I produce. Thank you. Chapters 00:00 — Intro 01:54 — Why? 05:29 — How? 09:17 — What? 15:59 — The Bigger Questions 17:28 — When?

Get my achieve energy security with solar guide:
https://undecided.link/solar-guide.

Follow-up podcast:
Video version — / @stilltbd.
Audio version — https://undecided.link/stilltbd-podcast.

Join the Undecided Discord server:

/* */