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ggrobot Elite Member

Joined: 28 May 2004 Posts: 53567
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Posted: Thu Apr 09, 2026 12:27 am Post subject: AI Apocalypse Alert: Anthropic's Leaked Claude Mythos [65600 |
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Anthropic's powerful new Claude Mythos AI model, revealed through an internal data leak in March 2026, boasts unprecedented capabilities in cybersecurity and coding that could dramatically amplify online threats. Combined with a recent accidental leak of Claude Code source materials, experts warn that personal accounts
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Source: GGMania headlines
GGMania.com - Daily Gaming and Tech news |
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amra Junior Member

Joined: 11 Aug 2004 Posts: 161
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Posted: Thu Apr 09, 2026 2:47 am Post subject: What could possibly go wrong? |
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We are just to find out.
I started with DOS and worms, deterministic times. The web in it's current form might as well vanish as modems did. Yeah, sometimes I miss this sound. |
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NakedFaerie Senior Member

Joined: 26 May 2013 Posts: 289
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Posted: Thu Apr 09, 2026 12:59 pm Post subject: |
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We NEED to kill and end AI ASAP.
SO the more crap it gets into the sooner we will realise its not worth it, its stupid and a waste of time. End it now before you regret it. |
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Sabot Elite Member

Joined: 11 Jun 2004 Posts: 2397 Location: The Dark Side of The Moon
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Posted: Thu Apr 09, 2026 11:33 pm Post subject: |
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AI is going to fuck over people big time. These corporate assholes do not care if your entire identity is stolen. No amount of money is going to repair that or bring it back to zero.
This just in the U.K.
| Quote: | ChatGPT-maker OpenAI is pausing a multi-billion pound UK data centre project aimed at boosting its AI infrastructure, citing concerns about high energy costs and regulation.
Its project, dubbed Stargate UK, included a large data centre in north-east England and making thousands of powerful chips for AI development available as part of a partnership with tech firms Nvidia and Nscale.
The agreement came alongside a wider £31bn package of UK tech investment, lauded as a sign of the country's potential to become an "AI superpower".
But an OpenAI spokesperson said on Thursday it would only move forward with Stargate UK when the "right conditions" could "enable long-term infrastructure investment".
"We see huge potential for the UK's AI future. London is home to our largest international research hub, and we support the government's ambition to be an AI leader," an OpenAI spokesperson said in a statement.
"AI compute is foundational to that goal - we continue to explore Stargate UK and will move forward when the right conditions such as regulation and the cost of energy enable long-term infrastructure investment," they added.
OpenAI said when announcing its UK data centre project in September it would help strengthen the UK's "sovereign compute capabilities" and bolster its native AI development.
"This will help power the UK's future economy, boost its global competitiveness and deliver on the country's national AI Opportunities Action Plan," the company wrote, external.
Stargate UK, based at Cobalt Park, North Tyneside, was much smaller than OpenAI's US-based Stargate project - which committed a $500bn investment over four years to build new AI infrastructure.
But its announcement on Thursday comes as a potential blow to the government, which has championed home-grown tech and AI development as a way to bolster economic growth.
Technology secretary Liz Kendall said in a speech in January that the UK's AI sector had grown 23 times faster than the economy as a whole.
A government spokesperson said the UK's AI sector had attracted more than £100bn in private investment since the government came into office, and this was delivering jobs and opportunities for workers.
"Our focus is on continuing to create the right conditions for investment in the UK's AI and data centre infrastructure.
"We are continuing to work with OpenAI and other leading AI companies to strengthen UK compute capacity."
OpenAI added in its statement it would continue to invest in talent and expanding its presence in the UK, alongside delivering on commitments set out with the government about deploying powerful AI systems in UK public services.
How big tech does business
The reasons given by the US tech giant are energy costs and regulation issues: but the reality is neither are particularly new.
Even before the Iran war sent costs soaring, Britain's energy prices had long been significantly higher than in the US.
And the UK's regulatory approach to AI has not changed much either.
However, OpenAI's move also reflects how big tech does big business.
Earlier this week, the company outlined a set of "initial" policy ideas which included incentivising workers in the era of more powerful, capable AI systems with a four-day week on full pay - something it described as an "efficiency dividend".
The BBC understands concerns about the UK's regulatory environment include uncertainty over whether it would change the law to allow AI firms to train their systems using copyrighted works.
It had previously been set to make this an "opt out" decision for creators - something that would have made it easier for AI firms to use copyrighted works to develop their systems. |
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