Traditional attacks try to break into systems, but model poisoning changes how systems behave after they are trusted.
A 4GB file called weights.bin may be sitting on your hard drive right now, put there by Chrome without your knowledge.
Hanff discovered a four-gigabyte file named “weights.bin,” in a directory called “OptGuideOnDeviceModel.” The file contains ...
Even if you aren’t using Google Gemini, it might be using your device. Security researcher Alexander Hanff, also known as ...
The Data Science and Modeling for Green Chemistry award aims to recognize the research and development of computational tools that guide the design of sustainable chemical processes and the execution ...
Google Chrome users who have noticed unusual disk activity or unexplained drops in available storage should look for a folder ...
Google Chrome is silently downloading a 4 GB Gemini Nano model to your device without consent. Here's what it is, where it ...
Jeff Carlson writes about mobile technology for CNET. He is also the author of dozens of how-to books covering a wide spectrum ranging from Apple devices and cameras to photo editing software and ...
Computational modelling, machine learning, and broader artificial (AI) intelligence approaches are now key approaches used to understanding and predicting ...
A licensed attorney with nearly a decade of experience in content production, Valerie Catalano knows how to help readers digest complicated information about the law ...
A woman suffers a heart attack because of an undiagnosed heart condition. Rather than asking her to trial different drugs to find the best one for ongoing treatment, doctors instead generate a digital ...