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Mar 16, 2019
Japan to back int’l efforts to regulate AI-equipped ‘killer robots’
Posted by Michael Lance in categories: government, policy, robotics/AI
Japan is hoping to play a lead role in crafting international rules on what has been called lethal autonomous weapons systems or LAWS.
Japan is planning to give its backing to international efforts to regulate the development of lethal weapons controlled by artificial intelligence at a UN conference in Geneva late this month, government sources said Saturday.
It would mark a departure from Japan’s current policy. The government was already opposed to the development of so-called killer robots that could kill without human involvement. But it had called for careful discussions when it comes to rules so as to make sure that commercial development of AI would not be hampered.
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Mar 16, 2019
Finding the right “dose” for solar geoengineering
Posted by Mark Larkento in category: engineering
Leaving aside my opinion of Steven Pinker, a straight guy who has no clue about how he affects others, mmmm k I’ll give him this one.
Just saying.
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Mar 16, 2019
Study highlights danger of vitamin B12 deficiency
Posted by Ours Ondine in categories: biotech/medical, health
Using roundworms, one of Earth’s simplest animals, Rice University bioscientists have found the first direct link between a diet with too little vitamin B12 and an increased risk of infection by two potentially deadly pathogens.
Despite their simplicity, 1-millimeter-long nematodes called Caenorhabditis elegans (C. elegans) share an important limitation with humans: They cannot make B12 and must get all they need from their diet. In a study published today in PLOS Genetics, researchers from the lab of Rice biochemist and cancer researcher Natasha Kirienko describe how a B12-deficient diet harms C. elegans’ health at a cellular level, reducing the worms’ ability to metabolize branched-chain amino acids (BCAA). The research showed that the reduced ability to break down BCAAs led to a toxic buildup of partially metabolized BCAA byproducts that damaged mitochondrial health.
Researchers studied the health of two populations of worms, one with a diet sufficient in B12 and another that got too little B12 from its diet. Like the second population of worms, at least 10 percent of U.S. adults get too little B12 in their diet, a risk that increases with age.
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Mar 16, 2019
The first woman to fly commercial to space describes what it’s like to see Earth from 55 miles up
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: futurism, space
Mar 16, 2019
Self-driving cars begin transporting groceries to Texas homes
Posted by Genevieve Klien in categories: robotics/AI, transportation
First, there came self-checkout.
Now, it’s self-driving cars to make the delivery.
Two Kroger markets in Houston are rolling out a self-driving car program, in which orders can be placed online and delivered right to your home without a driver.
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Mar 16, 2019
Pancreatic cancer: Two-hit treatment approach shows promise
Posted by Paul Battista in category: biotech/medical
Autophagy inhibitors could be more potent against pancreatic cancer by first applying a drug that makes the cancer cells dependent on autophagy for energy.
Mar 16, 2019
Paralyzed Patients Can Now Control Android Tablets With Their Minds
Posted by Paul Battista in categories: biotech/medical, robotics/AI
Signals from the electrical cacophony within groups of neurons inside the motor cortex were passed on to a computer running custom software for decoding.