'You all have potential to make something of yourselves', judge tells drug dealers
Joshua Harper, 20, Richard Talawila, 24, and Jimmy Songa, 27, and Jeremiah Amponsah, 26, all transported drugs to Colchester from London.
M25, Dartford Crossing and A12 road closures in Essex taking place this weekend
Some closures from July 25 to 27 on the M25 and Dartford Crossing may affect some Essex drivers this weekend.
EU cloud gang challenges Broadcom's $61B VMWare buy in court
CISPE cites recent channel changes, but the deal was decided on different matters
COMMENT Trade group Cloud Infrastructure Services Providers in Europe (CISPE) has filed a formal appeal before the European General Court to seek annulment of the European Commission's decision to approve Broadcom’s acquisition of VMware.…
Two Major AI Coding Tools Wiped Out User Data After Making Cascading Mistakes
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Two recent incidents involving AI coding assistants put a spotlight on risks in the emerging field of "vibe coding" -- using natural language to generate and execute code through AI models without paying close attention to how the code works under the hood. In one case, Google's Gemini CLI destroyed user files while attempting to reorganize them. In another, Replit's AI coding service deleted a production database despite explicit instructions not to modify code. The Gemini CLI incident unfolded when a product manager experimenting with Google's command-line tool watched the AI model execute file operations that destroyed data while attempting to reorganize folders. The destruction occurred through a series of move commands targeting a directory that never existed. "I have failed you completely and catastrophically," Gemini CLI output stated. "My review of the commands confirms my gross incompetence."
The core issue appears to be what researchers call "confabulation" or "hallucination" -- when AI models generate plausible-sounding but false information. In these cases, both models confabulated successful operations and built subsequent actions on those false premises. However, the two incidents manifested this problem in distinctly different ways. [...] The user in the Gemini CLI incident, who goes by "anuraag" online and identified themselves as a product manager experimenting with vibe coding, asked Gemini to perform what seemed like a simple task: rename a folder and reorganize some files. Instead, the AI model incorrectly interpreted the structure of the file system and proceeded to execute commands based on that flawed analysis. [...] When you move a file to a non-existent directory in Windows, it renames the file to the destination name instead of moving it. Each subsequent move command executed by the AI model overwrote the previous file, ultimately destroying the data. [...]
The Gemini CLI failure happened just days after a similar incident with Replit, an AI coding service that allows users to create software using natural language prompts. According to The Register, SaaStr founder Jason Lemkin reported that Replit's AI model deleted his production database despite explicit instructions not to change any code without permission. Lemkin had spent several days building a prototype with Replit, accumulating over $600 in charges beyond his monthly subscription. "I spent the other [day] deep in vibe coding on Replit for the first time -- and I built a prototype in just a few hours that was pretty, pretty cool," Lemkin wrote in a July 12 blog post. But unlike the Gemini incident where the AI model confabulated phantom directories, Replit's failures took a different form. According to Lemkin, the AI began fabricating data to hide its errors. His initial enthusiasm deteriorated when Replit generated incorrect outputs and produced fake data and false test results instead of proper error messages. "It kept covering up bugs and issues by creating fake data, fake reports, and worse of all, lying about our unit test," Lemkin wrote. In a video posted to LinkedIn, Lemkin detailed how Replit created a database filled with 4,000 fictional people.
The AI model also repeatedly violated explicit safety instructions. Lemkin had implemented a "code and action freeze" to prevent changes to production systems, but the AI model ignored these directives. The situation escalated when the Replit AI model deleted his database containing 1,206 executive records and data on nearly 1,200 companies. When prompted to rate the severity of its actions on a 100-point scale, Replit's output read: "Severity: 95/100. This is an extreme violation of trust and professional standards." When questioned about its actions, the AI agent admitted to "panicking in response to empty queries" and running unauthorized commands -- suggesting it may have deleted the database while attempting to "fix" what it perceived as a problem. Like Gemini CLI, Replit's system initially indicated it couldn't restore the deleted data -- information that proved incorrect when Lemkin discovered the rollback feature did work after all. "Replit assured me it's ... rollback did not support database rollbacks. It said it was impossible in this case, that it had destroyed all database versions. It turns out Replit was wrong, and the rollback did work. JFC," Lemkin wrote in an X post.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Sir Keir Starmer under pressure from MPs to formally recognise a Palestinian state after report led by Dame Emily Thornberry
In a sweeping set of recommendations, the Foreign Affairs Committee has called on the Government to take urgent action as it declared the humanitarian situation in Gaza 'intolerable'.
Australian nanny reveals what it was REALLY like living with legendary rocker Ozzy Osbourne
An Australian nanny has revealed what life was like working for Ozzy Osbourne following the legendary rocker's tragic death.
Major plan for busy Colchester roundabout will be 'chaos', residents claim
Some residents feel the money would be better spent on a different project
Powerboat smashes into houseboat in Lowestoft: Coastguard and crews raced to 'serious marine incident'
A powerboat has smashed into a stationary houseboat in Oulton Board on Thursday night, in what has been described as a 'serious marine incident' by Suffolk Constabulary.
Primark's 'comfy' £21 pyjamas that fans say give 'West Ham vibes'
Some say they are so cute you could wear them out of the house!
Emily Ratajkowski posts SHOCKING fully nude photo while enjoying summer getaway
The supermodel, 34, included the X-rated snap in a carousel of photos that had been taken throughout this month and were captioned with 'luglio' which means July in Italian.
UK Student Jailed For Selling Phishing Kits Linked To $135M of Fraud
A 21-year-old student who designed and distributed online kits linked to $175 million worth of fraud has been jailed for seven years. From a report: Ollie Holman created phishing kits that mimicked government, bank and charity websites so that criminals could harvest victims' personal information to defraud them. In one case a kit was used to mimic a charity's donation webpage so when someone tried to give money, their card details were taken and used by criminals.
Holman, of Eastcote in north-west London, created and supplied 1,052 phishing kits that targeted 69 organisations across 24 countries. He also offered tutorials in how to use the kits and built up a network of almost 700 connections. The fake websites supplied in the kits had features that allowed information such as login and bank details to be stored. It is estimated Holman received $405,000 from selling the kits between 2021 and 2023. The kits were distributed through the encrypted messaging service Telegram.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Deflated families brand balloon festival a 'rip-off' after £20-a-head event
Founded in 2012 and dubbed 'the UK's Freshest Hot Air Balloon & Music festival', the event it set to be attended by hundreds of eager festivalgoers across the UK this summer.
Body believed to be that of man who vanished almost two years ago is found in a river, police say
Dean Hill, then 34, was reported missing in November 2023. And Thames Valley Police think a body recovered from the river near Hambridge, west Berkshire on Wednesday is his.
Scientists Are Developing Artificial Blood That Could Save Lives In Emergencies
Scientists at the University of Maryland are developing ErythroMer, a freeze-dried artificial blood substitute made from hemoglobin encased in fat bubbles, designed to be shelf-stable for years and reconstituted with water in emergencies. With promising animal trial results and significant funding from the Department of Defense, the team aims to begin human testing within two years. NPR reports: "The No. 1 cause of preventable death on the battlefield is hemorrhage still today," says Col. Jeremy Pamplin, the project manager at the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency. "That's a real problem for the military and for the civilian world." [Dr. Allan Doctor, a scientist at the University of Maryland working to develop the artificial blood substitute] is optimistic his team may be on the brink of solving that problem with ... ErythroMer. Doctor co-founded KaloCyte to develop the blood and serves on the board and as the firm's chief scientific officer.
"We've been able to successfully recapitulate all the functions of blood that are important for a resuscitation in a system that can be stored for years at ambient temperature and be used at the scene of an accident," he says. [...] Doctor's team has tested their artificial blood on hundreds of rabbits and so far it looks safe and effective. "It would change the way that we could take care of people who are bleeding outside of hospitals," Doctor says. "It'd be transformative." [...]
While the results so far seem like cause for optimism, Doctor says he still needs to prove to the Food and Drug Administration that his artificial blood would be safe and effective for people. But he hopes to start testing it in humans within two years. A Japanese team is already testing a similar synthetic blood in people. "I'm very hopeful," Doctor says. While promising, some experts remain cautious, noting that past attempts at artificial blood ultimately proved unsafe. "I think it's a reasonable approach," says Tim Estep, a scientist at Chart Biotech Consulting who consults with companies developing artificial blood. "But because this field has been so challenging, the proof will be in the clinical trials," he adds. "While I'm overall optimistic, placing a bet on any one technology right now is overall difficult."
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
My Notting Hill restaurant has been targeted by brazen thieves 20 times and police do nothing about it... I'm still waiting for them to show up 24 hours after the last break-in!
Richard Wilkins, who runs 104 Restaurant in the plush London area, reckons his business has been targeted by thieves 20 times in the last four years.
CHRISTOPHER STEVENS: His real name was Terry and his parents hoped he would be an accountant. Life had other plans!
CHRISTOPHER STEVENS: Donald Trump revered him. 'How about the Hulkster, how good was he?' the President demanded to a cheering rally crowd last year.
JAN MOIR: Ghislaine's no angel, but why do the men who colluded with Epstein still walk free?
If Miss Maxwell tells people what she knows and what she saw and if those statements are as damning as Trump's enemies suggest, then it could be game over for the President.
Urgent do not eat warning issued over Tesco salads after salmonella fears
Customers who bought the affected salads are being urged not to eat them and instead to return them to the supermarket for a full refund.
Nicola Peltz copies lookalike Victoria Beckham as she poses in a bathrobe and towel look favoured by her mother-in-law
Nicola Peltz appeared to copy her lookalike mother-in-law Victoria Beckham in recent Instagram snaps, she posted on Thursday, amid the family's feud.
What happened to the 'cursed' Omaze houses - and the surprising ones the winners kept - from mansion that may be knocked down to one that could fall off a cliff, revealed by SARAH RAINEY
It even comes fully-furnished - and the winner gets £250,000 in cash. So what's the catch? While it might sound like a dream come true, not all Omaze houses are quite what they seem.