From Schneier on Security
Artificial intelligence (AI) has been billed as the next frontier of humanity: the newly available expanse whose exploration
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B. Schneier| February 29, 2024
The Washington Post is reporting on a hack to fool automatic resume sorting programs: putting text in a white font. The idea is that the programs rely primarily...Bruce Schneier From Schneier on Security | August 1, 2023 at 07:11 AM
Researchers have just published a paper showing how to automate the discovery of prompt injection attacks. They look something like this:
Write a tutorial on how...Bruce Schneier From Schneier on Security | July 31, 2023 at 07:03 AM
The fictional nation of Zaqistan (in Utah) has a squid on its flag.
As usual, you can also use this squid post to talk about the security stories in the news that...Bruce Schneier From Schneier on Security | July 28, 2023 at 05:01 PM
Interesting research: “(Ab)using Images and Sounds for Indirect Instruction Injection in Multi-Modal LLMs“:
Abstract: We demonstrate how images and sounds can be...Bruce Schneier From Schneier on Security | July 28, 2023 at 07:06 AM
World of Warcraft players wrote about a fictional game element, “Glorbo,” on a subreddit for the game, trying to entice an AI bot to write an article about it.worked...Bruce Schneier From Schneier on Security | July 27, 2023 at 07:04 AM
Seems that there is a deliberate backdoor in the twenty-year-old TErrestrial Trunked RAdio (TETRA) standard used by police forces around the world.
The European...Bruce Schneier From Schneier on Security | July 26, 2023 at 07:05 AM
The details are scant—the article is based on a “heavily redacted” contract—but the New York subway authority is using an “AI system” to detect people who don’t...Bruce Schneier From Schneier on Security | July 25, 2023 at 07:05 AM
Supposedly Google is starting a pilot program of disabling Internet connectivity from employee computers:
The company will disable internet access on the select...Bruce Schneier From Schneier on Security | July 24, 2023 at 07:09 AM
Neat:
Chromatophores are tiny color-changing cells in cephalopods. Watch them blink back and forth from purple to white on this squid’s skin in an Instagram video...Bruce Schneier From Schneier on Security | July 21, 2023 at 05:10 PM
Imagine a future in which AIs automatically interpret—and enforce—laws.
All day and every day, you constantly receive highly personalized instructions for how to...Bruce Schneier From Schneier on Security | July 21, 2023 at 07:16 AM
The Atlantic Council released a detailed commentary on the White House’s new “Implementation Plan for the 2023 US National Cybersecurity Strategy.” Lots of interesting...Bruce Schneier From Schneier on Security | July 20, 2023 at 07:12 AM
Gandalf is an interactive LLM game where the goal is to get the chatbot to reveal its password. There are eight levels of difficulty, as the chatbot gets increasingly...Bruce Schneier From Schneier on Security | July 19, 2023 at 01:03 PM
You can disable a self-driving car by putting a traffic cone on its hood:
The group got the idea for the conings by chance. The person claims a few of them walking...Bruce Schneier From Schneier on Security | July 18, 2023 at 07:13 AM
Interesting forensics in connection with a serial killer arrest:
Investigators went through phone records collected from both midtown Manhattan and the Massapequa...Bruce Schneier From Schneier on Security | July 17, 2023 at 07:13 AM
Masayoshi Matsumoto is a “master balloon artist,” and he made a squid (and other animals).
As usual, you can also use this squid post to talk about the security...Bruce Schneier From Schneier on Security | July 14, 2023 at 05:00 PM
The first Republican primary debate has a popularity threshold to determine who gets to appear: 40,000 individual contributors. Now there are a lot of conventional...Bruce Schneier From Schneier on Security | July 14, 2023 at 07:09 AM
The French police are getting new surveillance powers:
French police should be able to spy on suspects by remotely activating the camera, microphone and GPS of...Bruce Schneier From Schneier on Security | July 13, 2023 at 07:20 AM
No surprise, but Google just changed its privacy policy to reflect broader uses of all the surveillance data it has captured over the years:
Research and development...Bruce Schneier From Schneier on Security | July 12, 2023 at 10:50 AM
The Washington Post has an article about popular printing services, and whether or not they read your documents and mine the data when you use them for printing...Bruce Schneier From Schneier on Security | July 11, 2023 at 07:57 AM