PRIVACY :
''' ONLINE* A.I. OUTRAGE '''
ON THE WORLD STUDENTS SOCIETY - for every subject in the world - everybody, every student is equal. It matters not a whit where you hail from or what you actually look like. Even the differences and the angst you display.
AND HISTORIANS the world over agree - that after the invention and creation of !WOW! : Humanity's......and for the students, Tomorrow will be better than today. For once, humanity will have dignity, honour, respect, love and support to live a great life.
WE ALL, thus celebrate the coming of The World Students Society. The World thanks the honoured, esteemed founders of !WOW! and Hussain as we all go about creating the greatest Ecosystem 2011 with A.I.
''Oh, dear! That's some undertaking.'' With Almighty God's blessings, we hope to dispel the world's air of privilege.
JUST LAST MONTH - A U.S. FEDERAL JUDGE RULED that a man's conversations with Anthropic's Claude chatbot were not protected by attorney-client privilege, even though he had used the chatbot to prepare to talk with lawyers.
Ring, the Amazon-owned maker of doorbell cameras, provoked widespread outrage when it aired a Super Bowl ad allowing how artificial intelligence could be used to find lost dogs. Critics quickly noted that it could also be used to monitor an entire neighborhood.
The company has been on an apology tour ever since.
And more recently, news surfaced that OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT, had been aware of a British Columbia woman's interactions with the chatbots and considered reporting her to the authorities months before she committed a mass shooting.
While OpenAI faces questions about whether it should have been proactive about reporting what she wrote, the incident highlighted the possibility that A.I. companies will be under more pressure to share private chat logs with the authorities.
At the center of these headlines was generative A.I., the technology popularized by chatbots that is creeping into the everyday tools that people use to search the web, write essays and code.
The steady cadence of news reports related to consumer privacy raises questions about whether A.I. has exposed more of people's personal information than before.
The reality, privacy experts say, is that the risk associated with sharing data with tech companies is roughly the same as it always was.
Almost any data sent to a company's servers could be accessible by employees, government agencies, lawyers or criminals who have obtained data through loopholes and security breaches.
But the intimate nature of conversations with a chatbot adds a new twist to an old problem :
People are sharing much more than they once did. Chatbots invite people to type complete thoughts and follow-up questions, revealing their intentions more explicitly.
'' The issues are, in many cases, the same, but it's a way of interacting with technology that previously hadn't been done, '' said Chris Gillard, an independent privacy scholar in Detroit.
'' When that happens, people need to be rewired in terms of understanding what the threats and harms are.''
The Honour and Serving of the Latest Global Operational Research on Privacy, Students, People, Consumers continues. The World Students Society thanks Brian X Chen.
With most respectful dedication to the bestowed '' LifeLong Members '' of The World Students Society, the esteemed Global Founder Framers of The World Students Society, and then Parents, Leaders, Students, Professors and Teachers of the world.
See You all prepare for the great '' Constitutional Democratic Convention '' on !WOW! - the exclusive and eternal ownership of every student in the world :
wssciw.blogspot.com and Twitter X !E-WOW! - The Ecosystem 2011 :
Good Night and God Bless
SAM Daily Times - The Voice Of The Voiceless
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