The Webb Telescope captures a mesmerizing view of the Cat’s Paw nebula

Feast your eyes on the most mesmerizing feline foot known to humankind. The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) captured this image of the Cat’s Paw nebula. The European Space Agency (ESA) shared the picture to honor the telescope’s three years of service.

The Cat’s Paw nebula is part of the Scorpio constellation. (You know, the one that looks like a scorpion?) It floats about 4,000 light years away from us. That translates to 23.5 quintillion miles. Put another way, that’s a billion miles times a billion times 23.5.

So, what we’re seeing is a snapshot of the Cat’s Paw from approximately 4,000 years ago. On Earth, that’s when the Egyptian pyramids were only a few hundred years old and Stonehenge was nearly complete.

Here’s the uncropped version:

NASA / ESA / CSA / STScI

The vast cloud of gas and dust showcases the formation of new stars. Your eye probably goes straight to that oceanic blue shape near the center. Scientists call that the “Opera House” for its circular, tiered appearance. The ESA says the cause of its azure glow is likely the light from its bright stars or a hidden nearby source.

In its three years of operation, the Webb Telescope has been a source of scientific discovery and visual marvel. It captured the first direct image of an exoplanet and an Einstein Ring. It gave us a jaw-dropping glimpse at the Sombrero galaxy. It even provided us with a picture of Uranus that looks like a portal to another dimension. (Stop snickering, class!)

The ESA goes into much more detail about the Cat’s Paw image in its press release. You can check out the video below for a panned view.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/science/space/the-webb-telescope-captures-a-mesmerizing-view-of-the-cats-paw-nebula-164747111.html?src=rss 

Nintendo is getting rid of its money-saving Game Vouchers program

Nintendo games famously don’t tend to go down in price all that much, but original Switch owners were able to save money on eligible first-party-published titles by taking advantage of the company’s Switch Game Voucher program. But that won’t be the case for much longer, with Nintendo today announcing that the vouchers in question will no longer be sold after January 30 2026.

Currently, Game Vouchers can be purchased as a pair for $99.98, which you then redeem on select digital titles, from Switch classics like Super Mario Odyssey and The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild, to more recent additions to the console’s library, including 2024’s Super Mario Party Jamboree and The Legend of Zelda: Echoes of Wisdom. This year’s Xenoblade Chronicles X: Definitive Edition, which was the last significant first-party Switch release before the Switch 2 arrived in June, is also in the catalog. Game Vouchers were introduced in 2019, and all of the above games are priced at $60, so you’re saving just over $20 when you use them to buy two. 

Nintendo chose not to extend Game Vouchers to Switch 2-exclusive games, adding insult to the injury of price increases to both games and hardware in this new handheld generation.

Vouchers purchased before January 30 will remain valid for one year. The company also said that new games will continue to be added to the catalog. Presumably this means that games such as Metroid Prime: Beyond, which is coming to Switch and Switch 2 later this year, have a good chance of ending up there.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/nintendo/nintendo-is-getting-rid-of-its-money-saving-game-vouchers-program-170409145.html?src=rss 

Razer’s DeathAdder V4 Pro gaming mouse features an optical scrolling wheel

Razer just announced the pending availability of the DeathAdder V4 Pro gaming mouse, an upgrade to one of our favorite peripherals. The big news here is that this mouse ships with an optical scrolling wheel, and this is the first time Razer has used this tech.

The company says the wheel has been “purpose-built for esports.” Just like optical switches on keyboards, optical scrolling wheels allow for more precision and durability when compared to their mechanical counterparts. Razer says it offers “triple the durability and consistent, tactile control even under intense gameplay.”

This gadget also features newly-designed optical mouse switches, which feature a “crisp, enhanced click feel” along with a rating for 100 million clicks. The upgraded wireless transmitter should improve power efficiency by 63 percent and decrease latency by 37 percent, both of which are useful during intense competitive gaming sessions.

Razer says this mouse offers “flawless tracking across a wide range of surfaces,” thanks to larger polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) feet. It boasts sensor accuracy of up to 45,000 DPI and tracking speeds up to 900 IPS. It’s also incredibly light, with the black model weighing 56 grams and the white version weighing 57 grams.

The battery life has improved. We were impressed by the 90 hours that the V3 offered, but the company claims this one can go for 150 hours before requiring a charge. The Razer DeathAdder V4 Pro is available for preorder right now, with shipments going out on July 24. It costs $170.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/computing/accessories/razers-deathadder-v4-pro-gaming-mouse-features-an-optical-scrolling-wheel-171705018.html?src=rss 

UK authorities arrest four suspected members of hacker group Scattered Spider

The National Crime Agency (NCA) in London has arrested two 19-year-old men, a 17-year-old boy and a 20-year-old woman on suspicion of blackmail, money laundering, organized crime and contravening the Computer Misuse Act. These arrests are part of an investigation into a series of cyberattacks on three large UK retailers — Marks & Spencer, Harrods and Co-op — earlier this year.

UK investigators believe the suspects are connected with a loose-knit English-speaking hacker group called Scattered Spider, which has been blamed for a series of high-profile incidents. For Co-op, this was the second such incident this year, after a hacking group called DragonForce gained access to the retailer’s membership data. Scattered Spider was implicated in 2023 when US-based casino chain Caesars Entertainment reportedly paid tens of millions of dollars to the group in order to keep its customers’ data from being exposed.

Marks & Spencer was attacked in April and was forced to shut down its online store for over a month. Co-op fell victim the same month in an attack that led to a partial shutdown of its IT system. Harrods disclosed on May 1 that it had staved off an attempted attack by restricting internet access across its websites.

“Since these attacks took place, specialist NCA cybercrime investigators have been working at pace and the investigation remains one of the agency’s highest priorities,” said Paul Foster, head of the NCA’s national cybercrime unit.

The four suspects remain in custody for questioning.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/cybersecurity/uk-authorities-arrest-four-suspected-members-of-hacker-group-scattered-spider-172532501.html?src=rss 

Amazon Prime Day 2025: The deals that the Engadget team spent our hard-earned money on

Amazon’s Prime Day is in full swing, and now that two full days have passed, some of us have gotten past our decision paralysis and checked out our online shopping carts. It’s no surprise that the Engadget team consists of people who are fans of tech (and non-tech) products, and we also love a good deal. As we’ve put together roundups and news stories about the best things to buy this week, we’ve also been tempted by the savings. Here’s a list of what several of our team members bought, not only to share our lives with you but to also show you some of the deals we deemed good enough to spend our own money on. 

(Ed. note: Igor Bonifacic saved a whopping $2 on this guitar tuner, but it was worth it to him. I’ll let him explain.)

In Canada, the D’Addario tuner I ended up buying is normally a little more expensive at $20 CAD, but I figured there was a chance it would go on sale for Prime Day. So I set up a Camelcamelcamel alert, and on the morning of July 8 I got an email from the website saying it was… $2 off. Not the greatest discount, but hey, in such an expensive hobby, every dollar counts, right?

This past spring, I picked up the guitar for the first time in about 15 years. How it happened doesn’t matter. What does matter is that now I play everyday, and I’ve been asking myself why did I ever stop in the first place. I feel more creative, my eyes feel healthier from less screen time and I’m better now than I ever was as a teenager.

As I’ve gotten back into the hobby, I’ve slowly been buying all the little accessories that can make it easier to maintain your guitar. With Prime Day around the corner, I set my sights on a headstock tuner. These little gadgets weren’t around when I first started learning the instrument, but let me tell you they’re great.

Like the name suggests, you attach one to the headstock of your guitar. It then allows you to tune the instrument by measuring the vibrations produced by the strings. While you could just as easily use an app like GuitarTuna to do the same, clip-on tuners aren’t affected by ambient noise, making the entire tuning process fast and easy. Best of all, they’re cheap. In the US, you can spend as little as $15 to buy the model I purchased for Prime Day. — Igor Bonifacic, senior reporter

Without even trying, I’ve become a devotee of Apple’s Continuity Camera over the last few years. I think with my laptop and monitor setup, it’s just always made more sense to use my iPhone as a camera rather than buying some kind of USB-C docking station or giving up another port on my computer. Unfortunately, I also find having my phone within arm’s reach while I’m writing to be pretty distracting. Taking advantage of a Prime Day deal on a dedicated webcam this year is my solution.

I purchased an off-white Logitech Brio 500, which normally costs $130, but is $50 off for Prime Day through Amazon or Logitech. It’s a kind of a long, tube-shaped 1080p webcam, so not the sleekest or best option out there, but it has the basics I need, like a manual shutter and auto-framing, and critically, it matches my Logitech mouse. If, like me, you can’t stand the idea of paying over $100 for a webcam, I think it’s a pretty appealing option at $80. — Ian Carlos Campbell, contributing writer

I recently discovered that as all my gear transitioned to USB-C, I no longer had any compatible thumb drives. Rather than buy an adapter dongle that I would inevitably lose, I figured it would be smart to have a new thumb drive that could handle both USB-C and USB-3. The discount on the SanDisk drive I bought wasn’t huge, but Prime Day seemed like a good time to save a few bucks on a practical purchase. — Anna Washenko, contributing reporter

I made a very short, focused list of three things to buy on Prime Day — a Nori Press, a walking pad and the Ms. Rachel Tonie toy for the kids in my life. But when I was looking through our roundup of the best deals this week, the discounted entry-level iPad caught my eye. 

My dad had been asking me repeatedly for weeks about an iPad for watching videos and movies while him and my mom were traveling, and I wasn’t able to give them an answer as I was weighing a lot of concerns. What is the best operating system for them? Do they need something released recently, or could they save some money on an older model? 

Seeing this current-generation iPad on sale prompted me to just buy it for them. It simplifies things as my dad uses an iPhone and is familiar with iPadOS, and apps like YouTube and Netflix would satisfy their desires to download videos to watch offline. Saving $70 on what is a very solid device felt like a great deal, but more importantly it earned me points with my family. — Cherlynn Low, managing editor

What we’re still considering

As Prime Day goes on till the end of the week, many on the Engadget team are still weighing their decisions. Executive editor John Falcone, for example, hasn’t bought Anker’s UFO 3-device charger, but says he wishes he did. I’ll update this post if he does, because he will save almost 30 percent on it.

Not all our purchases have been through Amazon, either. Editor-in-chief Aaron Souppouris is thinking about buying “a weird camera for too much money not on Amazon.” It’s a full-spectrum conversion camera, and if and when he does make that purchase, we will be sure to shame him here.

Finally, senior reporter Billy Steele has made arguably the best shopping decision all week, on or off Amazon. He bought “three Happy Meals trying to get the cool toys. I got three of the same toy. :(” 

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/deals/amazon-prime-day-2025-the-deals-that-the-engadget-team-spent-our-hard-earned-money-on-154509453.html?src=rss 

Reports indicate a massive uptick in AI-generated CSAM throughout the internet

AI-generated child sexual abuse material (CSAM) has been flooding the internet, according to a report by The New York Times. Researchers at organizations like the Internet Watch Foundation and the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children are warning that this new AI-created CSAM is nearly indistinguishable from the real thing.

Let’s go over some numbers. The Internet Watch Foundation, a nonprofit that investigates and collects reports of CSAM, has identified 1,286 AI-generated videos so far this year. This is compared with just two videos identified in the first half of 2024. That’s an exponential increase.

🔎 Developments in artificial intelligence (AI) come with a range of benefits, including supporting learning and innovation. There is, however, growing concern for how AI can also be misused to create and share child sexual abuse material (CSAM), referred to as AI-CSAM.

In… pic.twitter.com/lgfRQNBk8N

— Internet Watch Foundation (IWF) (@IWFhotline) July 8, 2025

The National Center for Missing & Exploited Children re-affirms those statistics. It told NYT that it has received 485,000 reports of AI-generated CSAM, including still images and videos, in the first half of 2025. This is compared to 67,000 for all of 2024. That’s another massive uptick

“It’s a canary in the coal mine,” said Derek Ray-Hill, interim chief executive of the Internet Watch Foundation. “There is an absolute tsunami we are seeing.”

This technology is constantly improving, so the videos and images have become more realistic. The Internet Watch Foundation found an internet forum in which users were praising how realistic the new videos were. Reporting suggests that this content is distributed through the dark web, making it harder for law enforcement agencies to identify the offenders.

It’s worth remembering how AI image generators work. They are trained using real images and videos. The New York Times says that much of this new glut of AI-generated content includes real CSAM that has been repurposed by the algorithm. Some of the material even uses real photos of children scraped from school websites and social media.

The issue dates back to the early days of this technology. In 2023, researchers at the Stanford Internet Observatory found hundreds of examples of CSAM in a data set used in an early version of the image generator Stable Diffusion. Stability AI says it has introduced safeguards to improve safety standards and “is deeply committed to preventing the misuse of our technology, particularly in the creation and dissemination of harmful content, including CSAM.”

That did lead other companies to start reporting AI-generated CSAM to the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children. Amazon reported a whopping 380,000 instances of AI-generated CSAM in the first half of this year, all of which it took down. OpenAI reported 75,000 cases.

NCMEC Applauds the California State Legislature for Passing AB 1831 and looks forward to it being signed into law.

NCMEC supports AB 1831 because it addresses gaps in California’s legal remedies for child victims of Generative AI CSAM. We are heartened to see states move… pic.twitter.com/qZt1mgD7Eo

— National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (@NCMEC) September 4, 2024

Courts have been slow to catch up with this tech. The DOJ made its first known arrest last year of a man suspected of possessing and distributing AI-generated CSAM. A UK man recently got 18 months in jail for using AI to generate the foul images, which he sold.

“The Department of Justice views all forms of AI-generated CSAM as a serious and emerging threat,” Matt Galeotti, head of the Justice Department’s criminal division, told NYT.

It’s worth noting that despite the alarming uptick in occurrences, AI-generated content still represents a mere fraction of all CSAM identified by authorities and watchdog organizations. For instance, the Internet Watch Foundation confirmed 291,273 reports of CSAM in 2024 and, as previously noted, just two instances were AI-generated.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/reports-indicate-a-massive-uptick-in-ai-generated-csam-throughout-the-internet-154937671.html?src=rss 

Palmer Luckey’s ModRetro Chromatic portable console is now a thing you can actually buy

There’s a new (ish) retro console on the block. The ModRetro Chromatic had a soft launch last year but is now “permanently in stock” for consumers. This is another machine that runs Game Boy and Game Boy Color cartridges, like the beloved Analogue Pocket and others.

The Chromatic features a magnesium alloy build, so it should take a licking. It also features a backlit screen — something the original Game Boy lacked. As a matter of fact, Nintendo didn’t fully embrace backlighting technology until midway through the life of the Game Boy Advance.

Latency comparison between Analogue Pocket, ModRetro Chromatic, and Nintendo Game Boy Color.

We have the best FPGA engineers in the industry because we have to – it is nearly impossible to make pixel-perfect jumps when you are dozens of pixels off and more than a frame behind! pic.twitter.com/z339gNGcIJ

— Palmer Luckey (@PalmerLuckey) June 1, 2025

The console was designed by Palmer Luckey and was originally sold in a limited run last year. Today’s release includes a new colorway and the choice of a sapphire glass display for increased durability. There are also a bunch of new accessories, like a rechargeable power bank, and some nifty software features. It can now natively stream to Discord, Mac or PC, without any additional hardware and there’s a new firmware tool to update games.

The Chromatic runs proprietary cartridges, in addition to Game Boy and Game Boy Color titles. There are a handful of new games arriving with this release, including a metroidvania called Wicked Plague. Each console ships with Tetris, just like the original Game Boy. The standard release costs $200, but the model with the sapphire glass display costs $300. New games price out at $40 and old-school Game Boy carts are available on eBay, at garage sales and maybe buried in ancient couch cushions.

There are a couple of caveats here. First of all, this doesn’t emulate games, as cartridges are required. It only handles Game Boy and Game Boy Color titles. The Analogue Pocket, for instance, can also play Game Boy Advance titles and a separate adapter brings other consoles into the mix.

There’s also the creator himself. Palmer Luckey is a controversial figure. He founded Oculus and helped bring VR to the masses, sure, but recent years has found him running a military defense contracting firm called Anduril Industries. This company has been involved with designing a “virtual” border wall complete with hundreds of surveillance towers, building AI tools for military use and, most recently, making wearables that allow soldiers to interact with AI-powered weapon systems.

He’s become a big player in the defense space, securing $6 billion in global government contracts. You’ll have to decide if you want to indirectly contribute to that cause by giving him $200 or $300 to pick up a portable console.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/palmer-luckeys-modretro-chromatic-portable-console-is-now-a-thing-you-can-actually-buy-160016032.html?src=rss 

Google’s Gemini app can now generate videos from static images

Starting today, Google is bringing image-to-video generation to the Gemini app. The feature comes courtesy of the company’s Veo 3 model, which Google began rolling out more broadly to AI Pro users last week after it was initially only available to AI Ultra subscribers.

To start using Gemini’s image-to-video generation, click the “tools” option in the prompt bar and then select “video.” Google is currently limiting Veo 3 to producing eight-second clips at 720p. Gemini will output your request in a 16:9 landscape format, so the resulting clips won’t be great for sharing on social media — unlike those generated by TikTok’s AI Alive feature, for example. However, Veo 3 is currently one of the only AI models capable of generating synced audio alongside the video it creates.

You can also use Veo 3’s image-to-video generation feature in Flow, Google’s AI filmmaking app. As of today, the program is available in 75 additional countries. Over in the Gemini app, image-to-video generation is rolling out on the web today. Google expects most mobile users will have access by the end of the week. A $20 per month Google AI Pro or $250 per month AI Ultra subscription is required to use the new feature.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/googles-gemini-app-can-now-generate-videos-from-static-images-150052396.html?src=rss 

Disney and ITV partner up to show each other’s shows on their streaming services

Disney and the British free-to-air broadcaster ITV have launched a new partnership that will allow them to show each other’s shows in an effort to reach new audiences. ITV viewers will be able to watch shows including Only Murders in the Building, Andor, and The Bear – which lives on Disney+ in the UK – while Disney will take advantage of ITV’s various dramas and reality TV offerings.

Mr Bates vs The Post Office, ITV’s BAFTA award-winning four-part dramatization of the British Post Office scandal, will be available to Disney+ subscribers, as well as selected seasons of the ever-popular Love Island dating show. The thinking seems to be that ITV’s typically older viewing demographic could be drawn to Disney’s more adult-focused shows, with ITV’s output likely to appeal to streaming audiences that skew younger. That said, family-friendly Disney+ shows including Lilo and Stitch: The Series and Phineas and Ferb will also make their way to ITV as part of the deal.

ITV has its own streaming platform, called ITVX, which is free to watch in the UK with ads, or ad-free as part of a monthly subscription. Disney’s content will live on ITVX in the UK, and will be badged as “A Taste of Disney+”, with Disney+ offering its “A Taste of ITVX” library to its own subscribers. Kevin Lygo, Managing Director of Media and Entertainment at ITV, said in a press release that the plan is for both libraries to be regularly updated.

Traditional broadcasters striking deals with streaming platforms is nothing new. Netflix has been licensing shows from the BBC and Channel 4 in the UK for a number of years, for example, and back in 2022 Disney and the BBC started co-producing Doctor Who, with Disney+ becoming the home of the long-running sci-fi show outside of the UK. More often than not, though, these relationships tend to be one-way affairs in terms of where the content is distributed, so this even divide between two platforms seems more novel.

The selected shows and movies for the launch window will be available to stream on their respective platforms from July 16. 

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/entertainment/streaming/disney-and-itv-partner-up-to-show-each-others-shows-on-their-streaming-services-150109825.html?src=rss 

How exactly did Grok go full ‘MechaHitler?’

Earlier this week, Grok, X’s built-in chatbot, took a hard turn toward antisemitism following a recent update. Amid unprompted, hateful rhetoric against Jews, it even began referring to itself as MechaHitler, a reference to 1992’s Wolfenstein 3D. X has been working to delete the chatbot’s offensive posts. But it’s safe to say many are left wondering how this sort of thing can even happen.

I spoke to Solomon Messing, a research professor at New York University’s Center for Social Media and Politics, to get a sense of what may have gone wrong with Grok. Before his current stint in academia, Messing worked in the tech industry, including at Twitter, where he founded the company’s data science research team. He was also there for Elon Musk’s takeover.

The first thing to understand about how chatbots like Grok work is that they’re built on large language models (LLMs) designed to mimic natural language. LLMs are pretrained on giant swaths of text, including books, academic papers and, yes, even social media posts. The training process allows AI models to generate coherent text through a predictive algorithm. However, those predictive capabilities are only as good as the numerical values or “weights” that an AI algorithm learns to assign to the signals it’s later asked to interpret. Through a process known as post-training, AI researchers can fine-tune the weights their models assign to input data, thereby changing the outputs they generate.

“If a model has seen content like this during pretraining, there’s the potential for the model to mimic the style and substance of the worst offenders on the internet,” said Messing.

In short, the pre-training data is where everything starts. If an AI model hasn’t seen hateful, anti-antisemitic content, it won’t be aware of the sorts of patterns that inform that kind of speech — including phrases such as “Heil Hitler” — and, as a result, it probably won’t regurgitate them to the user.

In the statement X shared after the episode, the company admitted there were areas where Grok’s training could be improved. “We are aware of recent posts made by Grok and are actively working to remove the inappropriate posts. Since being made aware of the content, xAI has taken action to ban hate speech before Grok posts on X,” the company said. “xAI is training only truth-seeking and thanks to the millions of users on X, we are able to quickly identify and update the model where training could be improved.”

Screenshots via X

As I saw people post screenshots of Grok’s responses, one thought I had was that what we were watching was a reflection of X’s changing userbase. It’s no secret xAI has been using data from X to train Grok; easier access to the platform’s trove of information is part of the reason Musk said he was merging the two companies in March. What’s more, X’s userbase has become more right wing under Musk’s ownership of the site. In effect, there may have been a poisoning of the well that is Grok’s training data. Messing isn’t so certain.

“Could the pre-training data for Grok be getting more hateful over time? Sure, if you remove content moderation over time, the userbase might get more and more oriented toward people who are tolerant of hateful speech […] thus the pre-training data drifts in a more hateful direction,” Messing said. “But without knowing what’s in the training data, it’s hard to say for sure.”

It also wouldn’t explain how Grok became so antisemitic after just a single update. On social media, there has been speculation that a rogue system prompt may explain what happened. System prompts are a set of instructions AI model developers give to their chatbots before the start of a conversation. They give the model a set of guidelines to adhere to, and define the tools it can turn to for help in answering a prompt.

In May xAI blamed “an unauthorized modification” to Grok’s prompt on X for the chatbot’s brief obsession with “white genocide” in South Africa. The fact that the change was made at 3:15AM PT made many suspect Elon Musk had done the tweak himself. Following the incident, xAI open sourced Grok’s system prompts, allowing people to view them publicly on GitHub. After Tuesday’s episode, people noticed xAI had deleted a recently added system prompt that told Grok its responses should “not shy away from making claims which are politically incorrect, as long as they are well substantiated.”

Messing also doesn’t believe the deleted system prompt is the smoking gun some online believe it to be.

“If I were trying to ensure a model didn’t respond in hateful/racist ways I would try to do that during post-training, not as a simple system prompt. Or at the very least, I would have a hate speech detection model running that would censor or provide negative feedback to model generations that were clearly hateful,” he said. “So it’s hard to say for sure, but if that one system prompt was all that was keeping xAI from going off the rails with Nazi rhetoric, well that would be like attaching the wings to a plane with duct tape.”

He added: “I would definitely say a shift in training, like a new training approach or having a different pre-training or post-training setup would more likely explain this than a system prompt, particularly when that system prompt doesn’t explicitly say, ‘Do not say things that Nazis would say.'”

On Wednesday, Musk suggested Grok was effectively baited into being hateful. “Grok was too compliant to user prompts,” he said. “Too eager to please and be manipulated, essentially. That is being addressed.” According to Messing, there is some validity to that argument, but it doesn’t provide the full picture. “Musk isn’t necessarily wrong,” he said, “There’s a whole art to ‘jailbreaking’ an LLM, and it’s tough to fully guard against in post-training. But I don’t think that fully explains the set of instances of pro-Nazi text generations from Grok that we saw.”

If there’s one takeaway from this episode, it’s that one of the issues with foundational AI models is just how little we know about their inner workings. As Messing points out, even with Meta’s open-weight Llama models, we don’t really know what ingredients are going into the mix. “And that’s one of the fundamental problems when we’re trying to understand what’s happening in any foundational model,” he said, “we don’t know what the pre-training data is.”

In the specific case of Grok, we don’t have enough information right now to know for sure what went wrong. It could have been a single trigger like an errant system prompt, or, more likely, a confluence of factors that includes the system’s training data. However, Messing suspects we may see another incident just like it in the future.

“[AI models] are not the easiest things to control and align,” he said. “And if you’re moving fast and not putting in the proper guardrails, then you’re privileging progress over a sort of care. Then, you know, things like this are not surprising.”

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/how-exactly-did-grok-go-full-mechahitler-151020144.html?src=rss 

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