Daily Archives: December 30, 2024
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The best stories of 2024 — updated!
ISSUE 21.53 • 2024-12-30 Look for our BONUS issue on January 6, 2025! PUBLIC DEFENDER
By Brian Livingston
The year 2024 is now in the books. I’m pleased to report some positive moves this year that may make the tech industry’s products better for us all.
I’ll give you some important updates today on (1) keeping artificial-intelligence services from creating malicious images, (2) minimizing social-media websites’ negative effects on users’ mental health, and (3) discovering how “answer engines” are improving on the tiresome linkfests of old-guard search giants.
Read the full story in our Plus Newsletter (21.53.0, 2024-12-30).
This story also appears in our public Newsletter. -
LLMs can’t reason
AI
By Michael A. Covington
The word is out — large language models, systems like ChatGPT, can’t reason.
That’s a problem, because reasoning is what we normally expect computers to do. They’re not just copying machines. They’re supposed to compute things. We knew already that chatbots were prone to “hallucinations” and, more insidiously, to presenting wrong answers confidently as facts.
But now, researchers at Apple have shown that large language models (LLMs) often fail on mathematical word problems.
Read the full story in our Plus Newsletter (21.53.0, 2024-12-30).
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Microsoft 365 and Office in 2024 and beyond
MICROSOFT 365
By Peter Deegan
Let’s do a low drone pass over another year of innovation and hype in Microsoft 365 and Office.
Amazingly, there were some non-AI highlights.
As I review what happened in 2024, I’ll also provide a few notes about what to watch out for in 2025.
Read the full story in our Plus Newsletter (21.53.0, 2024-12-30).
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Am I part of the attack bot?
ON SECURITY
By Susan Bradley
The other day, a headline popped up that made me stop and read the news story.
It was all about the American government’s considering blocking the vendor TP-Link from selling routers. TP-link happens to be a vendor I rely on for my wireless access point, but it has also been called out by Microsoft and other vendors who say its products may be used in attacks.
Many of these units not been updated by the vendor to fix issues that allow them to be used by other bad actors in group attacks.
Read the full story in our Plus Newsletter (21.53.0, 2024-12-30).