Tech
‘Father of the cell phone’ says one day we’ll have devices embedded under our skin
Published
4 weeks agoon
By
ironity

“The next generation will have the phone embedded under the skin of their ears,” Marty Cooper, who’s credited with inventing the first phone in 1973, told CNBC in an interview at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona on Monday.
Such devices won’t need to be charged, as “your body is the perfect charger,” Cooper said. “When you eat food, your body creates energy, right?”
“You ingest food, your body creates energy. It takes a tiny bit of energy to run this earpiece,” he added.
His vision hints at a possible future stage of humanity where our bodies are augmented with powerful microchips and sensors.
Several startups are developing technologies that seek to combine computers with the human brain, for example, such as Elon Musk’s Neuralink.
AP
Cooper said the smartphone today has gotten too complex with numerous applications and a screen that doesn’t suit the curvature of the human face.
“Whenever I make a phone call and don’t have an earpiece, I have to take this flat piece of material against my curved head [and] hold my arm up in an awkward position,” he said.
The smartphone market has stagnated over the last few years, and there’s a feeling in the industry that manufacturers are struggling to come up with new innovative designs.
The prevalence of phones today has resulted in a litany of problems, from social media addiction to privacy infringements.
“Privacy is a very serious problem, addiction is a problem,” Cooper said, acknowledging the ills of his creation.
But he struck an optimistic tone for the future, suggesting the technology’s best days may still be ahead of it in fields like education and health care.
“I have an abiding faith in humanity,” Cooper said. “I look at history and look at all of the advances that we’ve had with technology, and somehow people have figured it out.”
“People are better off now. And they live longer. They are wealthier, they are healthier than they’ve ever been before. We have ups and downs. But in general, humanity is progressing.”
Cooper received a lifetime achievement award at MWC this week to mark 50 years since he made the first phone call on Sixth Avenue. Using the Motorola DynaTAC 8000X, referenced in the popular movie “Wall Street,” he made a call out to his chief competitor at AT&T, Joel S. Engel.
Cooper says he never could have imagined phones becoming the portable computers they are today.

“50 years ago was a really primitive time,” he said. “There was no internet, there were no large-scale integrated circuits, there were no digital cameras.”
“The idea that someday your phone would become a camera and an encyclopedia had never entered our minds.”
However, he added: “We did know that connecting was important. And we did tell a joke, that someday, when you were born, you would be assigned a phone number. And if you didn’t answer the phone, you were dead.”
“So we just knew that someday everybody would have a mobile phone. And it’s almost happened.”
There are now more mobile phone subscriptions in the world than there are people, according to Cooper, while two thirds of the earth’s population have personal cell phones. “The phone is becoming an extension of the person,” he said.
WATCH: Three decades after inventing the web, Tim Berners-Lee has some ideas on how to fix it
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Kevin Mazur | Getty Images
Affirm dropped 4% on the news.
Apple Pay Later users will be able to manage, track and repay their loans in their Apple Wallet, the company said in a release Tuesday. Individuals can apply for Apple Pay Later loans between $50 and $1,000 and use them for in-app and online purchases made through merchants that accept Apple Pay. Payments have no interest and no fees.
Users can apply for a loan within the Apple Wallet app without it impacting their credit score, Apple said. Once they select the amount they would like to withdraw, a soft credit pull will be conducted to make sure they are in “a good financial position” to take on a loan, according to the release.
Apple will invite select people to access a prelease version of Apple Pay Later Tuesday, and the company said it plans to expand access to all eligible users in the coming months.
Approved users will see a “Pay Later” option while using Apple Pay to check out online and in apps on iPhones and iPads. They will also be able to apply for a loan right at checkout. Apple said purchases using the software will be authenticated using Face ID, Touch ID or a passcode.
The company said users can see the amount due for their existing loans, as well as the total amount due in the next 30 days, in Apple Wallet. Users will be asked to link a debit card as their loan repayment method. Credit cards won’t be accepted.
This story is developing. Please check back for updates.
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Tech
Microsoft introduces an A.I. chatbot for cybersecurity experts
Published
6 hours agoon
March 28, 2023By
ironity
John Taggart | Bloomberg | Getty Images
The company has been busy bolstering its software with artificial intelligence models from startup OpenAI after OpenAI’s ChatGPT bot captured the public imagination following its November debut.
The resulting generative AI software can at times be “usefully wrong,” as Microsoft put it earlier this month when talking up new features in Word and other productivity apps. But Microsoft is proceeding nevertheless, as it seeks to keep growing a cybersecurity business that fetched more than $20 billion in 2022 revenue.
The Microsoft Security Copilot draws on GPT-4, the latest large language model from OpenAI — in which Microsoft has invested billions — and a security-specific model Microsoft built using daily activity data it gathers. The system also knows a given customer’s security environment, but that data won’t be used to train models.
The chatbot can compose PowerPoint slides summarizing security incidents, describe exposure to an active vulnerability or specify the accounts involved in an exploit in response to a text prompt that a person types in.
A user can hit a button to confirm an answer if it’s right or select an “off-target” button to signal a mistake. That sort of input will help the service learn, Vasu Jakkal, corporate vice president of security, compliance, identity, management and privacy at Microsoft, told CNBC in an interview.
Engineers inside Microsoft have been using the Security Copilot to do their jobs. “It can process 1,000 alerts and give you the two incidents that matter in seconds,” Jakkal said. The tool also reverse-engineered a piece of malicious code for an analyst who didn’t know how to do that, she said.
That type of assistance can make a difference for companies that run into trouble hiring experts and end up hiring employees who are inexperienced in some areas. “There’s a learning curve, and it takes time,” Jakkal said. “And now Security Copilot with the skills built in can augment you. So it is going to help you do more with less.”
Microsoft isn’t talking about how much Security Copilot will cost when it becomes more widely available.
Jakkal said the hope is that many workers inside a given company will use it, rather than just a handful of executives. That means over time Microsoft wants to make the tool capable of holding discussions in a wider variety of domains.
The service will work with Microsoft security products such as Sentinel for tracking threats. Microsoft will determine if it should add support for third-party tools such as Splunk based on input from early users in the next few months, Jakkal said.
If Microsoft were to require customers to use Sentinel or other Microsoft products if they want to turn on the Security Copilot, that could very well influence the purchasing decisions, said Frank Dickson, group vice president for security and trust at technology industry researcher IDC.
“For me, I was like, ‘Wow, this may be the single biggest announcement in security this calendar year,’” he said.
There’s nothing stopping Microsoft’s security rivals, such as Palo Alto Networks, from releasing chatbots of their own, but getting out first means Microsoft will have a head start, Dickson said.
Security Copilot will be available to a small set of Microsoft clients in a private preview before wider release at a later date.
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Tech
Sam Bankman-Fried paid over $40 million to bribe at least one official in China, DOJ alleges in new indictment
Published
7 hours agoon
March 28, 2023By
ironity
David Dee Delgado | Reuters
The indictment said accounts belonging to Bankman-Fried’s hedge fund, Alameda Research, were the target of a freezing order from Chinese police “in or around” November 2021.
The indictment alleges that Bankman-Fried and others “directed and caused the transfer” of at least $40 million in cryptocurrency “intended for the benefit of one or more Chinese government officials in order to influence and induce them” to unfreeze some of these accounts.
Bankman-Fried and his associates considered and tried “numerous methods” to unfreeze the accounts, which contained around $1 billion worth of cryptocurrency, prosecutors allege. Ultimately, after both legal and personal efforts failed, Bankman-Fried agreed to and directed a multimillion-dollar bribe to have the frozen accounts unlocked, prosecutors alleged.
Bankman-Fried’s hedge fund used the unfrozen assets to continue to fund Alameda’s loss-generating trades, continuing on what the government says was a fraud upon customers and investors for another year. FTX and Alameda imploded in November 2022 after concerns about their balance sheet turned into a veritable bank run. Bankman-Fried now faces a federal indictment and civil charges from both the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
The charges indicate that new evidence has been obtained by the federal government about Bankman-Fried’s international dealings, and come one day after U.S. regulators slapped crypto exchange Binance with allegations of facilitating terrorist financing and violations of U.S. derivatives law.
Meanwhile, Bankman-Fried’s collapsed FTX remains mired in Delaware bankruptcy court proceedings.
A spokesperson for Bankman-Fried did not immediately respond to CNBC’s request for comment.
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