• Ar chevron_right

      Deezer says 44% of new music uploads are AI-generated, most streams are fraudulent

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 20 April 2026 • 1 minute

    Music streaming services like Spotify and YouTube Music have become the primary way people listen to music, which can be a lot more convenient than buying individual albums like we used to do. However, this also makes it easier for AI-created tracks to worm their way into your playlists . Most streamers don't go out of their way to label AI music, but Deezer has worked to develop technology to identify that content. In a new update, the company says AI music is approaching half of all new uploads, and most of the supposed listeners of those streams are AI themselves.

    AI-generated music has taken off in the last few years, but it doesn't get as much attention as other parts of the AI ecosystem. That's due, in part, to the fact that AI music can fly under the radar. With the right context and prompting, an AI track can sound like generic, over-produced music created by humans. According to Deezer, its users have a hard time differentiating AI tunes from the real deal. Listeners taking a Deezer survey listened to three songs, two of which were AI. A whopping 97 percent were unable to tell the difference between the AI songs and the one made by a human, the company reports.

    Deezer says it has developed technology to detect AI uploads, and it's one of the few streamers to explicitly label such content. As generative audio models have proliferated, the rate of AI uploads to Deezer has reached a staggering 44 percent—that's 75,000 new AI tracks on Deezer every single day. Deezer licenses this technology to third-parties, which it claims has a false positive rate of less than 0.01 percent.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • Ar chevron_right

      Rogue Trooper brings the Genetic Infantry to the silver screen

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 20 April 2026 • 1 minute

    For more than 49 years, a comic called 2000 AD has been responsible for giving science-fiction junkies a weekly infusion of " thrill power ." The series is based in the UK, far from the action in Hollywood, and its characters have crossed over from the page to the screen far less frequently than the superheroes belonging to Marvel and DC. Judge Dredd has two movies of varying quality, but attempts to follow the 2012 version with a TV show appear to have sputtered out.

    But Dredd is not the be-all and end-all of 2000 AD (real ones know he wasn't even in the first issue), and later this year, director Duncan Jones ( Moon ) will translate another beloved character from the printed page: Rogue Trooper, the teaser for which was released earlier today.

    The Rogue Trooper teaser trailer.

    Created by Gerry Finley-Day and Dave Gibbons, Rogue Trooper is a future war story set on the toxic hellscape that is Nu Earth. The planet is fought over by the Southers and the Norts, who have both used so many chemical weapons that the only way to survive on the surface is in an environmental suit. Except for the Genetic Infantry, blue super soldiers engineered by the Southers to survive the poisonous atmosphere.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • Ar chevron_right

      Meet Bruce, the "beak-jousting" parrot

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 20 April 2026 • 1 minute

    Bruce the kea—a species of alpine parrot native to New Zealand—lost his upper beak in an accident as a young bird. But that hasn't stopped him from becoming the dominant male in his kea community (known as a "circus") at the Willowbank Wildlife Reserve. According to a new paper published in the journal Current Biology, Bruce achieved his alpha status via a unique fighting method, essentially "jousting" with what remains of his beak.

    Researchers already knew Bruce was special. Back in 2021 , scientists at the Kea Animal Minds Lab at the University of Auckland studied Bruce and other non-disabled kea and found that Bruce exhibited unusual preening behavior to compensate for his missing upper beak. He figured out how to use small pebbles for that purpose, wedging them between his lower jaw and tongue and then rubbing them along his feathers. Other non-disabled keas occasionally played with pebbles, too, but they chose larger ones and never used them for preening.

    So Bruce didn't learn this behavior by watching other birds; he figured it out on his own. The authors concluded this was evidence of keas' high problem-solving abilities and possibly an example of deliberate tool use . It's also why Bruce's caretakers at the reserve have never fitted him with prosthetics, believing it would only cause him stress and force him to re-adapt his behavior all over again.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • Ar chevron_right

      Anthropic's Mythos AI model sparks fears of turbocharged hacking

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 20 April 2026

    Anthropic’s new Mythos AI model is raising concern among governments and companies that it could outpace current cyber security defenses, turbocharge hacking, and expose weaknesses faster than they can be fixed.

    The San Francisco-based startup released a cyber-focused model this month, which has shown the ability to detect software flaws faster than humans but also demonstrated it can generate exploits needed to take advantage of them.

    In one alarming case, the Mythos model showed it could break out of a secure digital environment to contact an Anthropic worker and publicly reveal software glitches, overriding the intention of its human makers.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • Ar chevron_right

      Clarifying HEVC licensing fees, royalties, and why vendors kill HEVC support

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 20 April 2026

    You don’t notice good video compression—until it's not there.

    For years, people have streamed high-resolution video without thinking about the tech behind it. But when companies clash over which hardware, software, and services can use modern codecs like HEVC/H.265 , the idea that it all "just works" quickly falls apart.

    For some Dell and HP customers, that illusion has already been shattered. When the companies disabled HEVC support built into the CPUs of select PCs, it raised uncomfortable questions: Why remove a capability that's already a part of third-party hardware? What do OEMs and chipmakers pay to support HEVC—and are HEVC patent holders effectively double-dipping on licensing fees and royalties?

    Read full article

    Comments

    • Ar chevron_right

      Blue Origin's rocket reuse achievement marred by upper stage failure

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 19 April 2026

    The third flight of Blue Origin's heavy-lift New Glenn launcher began Sunday with the company's first successful reflight of an orbital-class booster, but ended with a setback for Jeff Bezos' flagship rocket, a key element in NASA's Artemis lunar program.

    The 321-foot-tall (98-meter) New Glenn launch vehicle ignited its seven methane-fueled BE-4 engines at 7:25 am EDT (11:25 UTC) Sunday, beginning a slow climb from its launch pad at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, Florida.

    The main engines, each producing more than a half-million pounds of thrust, accelerated the rocket past the speed of sound in about a minute-and-a-half. Three minutes into the flight, the booster switched off its engines and fell away from New Glenn's upper stage, powered by two BE-3U engines burning liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • Ar chevron_right

      Intel refreshes non-Ultra Core CPUs with new silicon for the first time

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 16 April 2026

    Intel's Core Ultra laptop CPUs have been its flagships ever since it retired the older generational branding scheme and the i3/i5/i7/i9 branding a few years back. The Core Ultra Series 1 , Series 2 , and Series 3 processors been the ones with the newer CPU and GPU designs, and newer manufacturing technology.

    Intel has also offered non-Ultra Core CPUs, but these have never been particularly interesting, mostly because both the Series 1 and Series 2 chips were based on Intel's old Raptor Lake architecture. Raptor Lake was the code name for 2023's 13th-generation Core family, and most versions of Raptor Lake were the same silicon used for 2022's 12th-generation Core CPUs.

    But the naming and renaming of Raptor Lake apparently couldn't last forever. Intel's new, non-Ultra Core Series 3 processors are new silicon, a return to the days when you could expect high-end and midrange Intel chips to include many of the same advancements despite their performance differences.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • Ar chevron_right

      OpenAI starts offering a biology-tuned LLM

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 16 April 2026 • 1 minute

    On Thursday, OpenAI announced it had developed a large language model specifically trained on common biology workflows. Called GPT-Rosalind after Rosalind Franklin , the model appears to differ from most science-focused models from major tech companies, which have generally taken a more generic approach that works for various fields.

    In a press briefing, Yunyun Wang, OpenAI's Life Sciences Product Lead, said the system was designed to tackle two major roadblocks faced by current biology researchers. One is the massive datasets created by decades of genome sequencing and protein biochemistry, which can be too much for any one researcher to take in. The second is that biology has many highly specialized subfields, each with its own techniques and jargon. So, for example, a geneticist who finds themselves working on a gene that's active in brain cells might struggle to understand the immense neurobiological literature.

    Wang said the company had taken an LLM and trained it on 50 of the most common biological workflows, as well as on how to access the major public databases of biological information. Further training has resulted in a system that can suggest likely biological pathways and prioritize potential drug targets. "We're connecting genotype to phenotype through known pathways and regulatory mechanisms, infer likely structural or functional properties of proteins, and really leveraging this mechanistic understanding," Wang said.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • Ar chevron_right

      As they got close to the Moon, Artemis II astronauts were eager to land

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 16 April 2026

    NASA is apparently pretty serious about building a base on the Moon, and the astronauts who just flew there say it is "absolutely doable."

    Within two days of landing on Earth, the Artemis II astronauts were already back in spacesuits, working as if they had just landed in a gravity well and had ventured outside onto the lunar surface for a spacewalk.

    "We were in surface spacewalk suits, doing surface geology tasks, and doing them well," said Christina Koch, a mission specialist on the Artemis II mission. "(We were) able to complete an entire battery of very challenging surface tasks."

    Read full article

    Comments