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  • AI firm claims it stopped Chinese state-sponsored cyber-attack campaign | Artificial intelligence (AI)

    AI firm claims it stopped Chinese state-sponsored cyber-attack campaign | Artificial intelligence (AI)

    A leading artificial intelligence company claims to have stopped a China-backed “cyber espionage” campaign that was able to infiltrate financial firms and government agencies with almost no human oversight.

    The US-based Anthropic said its coding tool, Claude Code, was “manipulated” by a Chinese state-sponsored group to attack 30 entities around the world in September, achieving a “handful of successful intrusions”.

    This was a “significant escalation” from previous AI-enabled attacks it monitored, it wrote in a blogpost on Thursday, because Claude acted largely independently: 80 to 90% of the operations involved in the attack were performed without a human in the loop.

    “The actor achieved what we believe is the first documented case of a cyber-attack largely executed without human intervention at scale,” it wrote.

    Anthropic did not clarify which financial institutions and government agencies had been targeted, or what exactly the hackers had achieved – although it did say they were able to access their targets’ internal data.

    It said Claude had made numerous mistakes in executing the attacks, at times making up facts about its targets, or claiming to have “discovered” information that was free to access.

    Policymakers and some experts said the findings were an unsettling sign of how capable certain AI systems have grown: tools such as Claude are now able to work independently over longer periods of time.

    “Wake the f up. This is going to destroy us – sooner than we think – if we don’t make AI regulation a national priority tomorrow,” the US senator Chris Murphy wrote on X in response to the findings.

    “AI systems can now perform tasks that previously required skilled human operators,” said Fred Heiding, a computing security researcher at Harvard University. “It’s getting so easy for attackers to cause real damage. The AI companies don’t take enough responsibility.”

    Other cybersecurity experts were more sceptical, pointing to inflated claims about AI-fuelled cyber-attacks in recent years – such as an AI-powered “password cracker” from 2023 that performed no better than conventional methods – and suggesting Anthropic was trying to create hype around AI.

    “To me, Anthropic is describing fancy automation, nothing else,” said Michal Wozniak, an independent cybersecurity expert. “Code generation is involved, but that’s not ‘intelligence’, that’s just spicy copy-paste.”

    Wozniak said Anthropic’s release was a distraction from a bigger cybersecurity concern: businesses and governments integrating “complex, poorly understood” AI tools into their operations without understanding them, exposing them to vulnerabilities. The real threat, he said, were cybercriminals themselves – and lax cybersecurity practices.

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    Anthropic, like all leading AI companies, has guardrails that are supposed to stop its models from assisting in cyber-attacks – or promoting harm generally. However, it said, the hackers were able to subvert these guardrails by telling Claude to role-play being an “employee of a legitimate cybersecurity firm” conducting tests.

    Wozniak said: “Anthropic’s valuation is at around $180bn, and they still can’t figure out how not to have their tools subverted by a tactic a 13-year-old uses when they want to prank-call someone.”

    Marius Hobbhahn, the founder of Apollo Research, a company that evaluates AI models for safety, said the attacks were a sign of what could come as capabilities grow.

    “I think society is not well prepared for this kind of rapidly changing landscape in terms of AI and cyber capabilities. I would expect many more similar events to happen in the coming years, plausibly with larger consequences.”


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  • Papillary Muscle Scarring May Predict Cardiac Death in Dilated Cardiomyopathy

    Papillary Muscle Scarring May Predict Cardiac Death in Dilated Cardiomyopathy

    This article originally appeared on HCPLive®.

    Papillary muscle scarring (papSCAR) as detected by dark blood delayed-enhancement cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) was present in 1 in 3 patients with dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) in a recent…

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  • AI Model Could Boost Liver Transplant Efficiency by Predicting Donor Death Timing – Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology News

    1. AI Model Could Boost Liver Transplant Efficiency by Predicting Donor Death Timing  Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology News
    2. Machine-learning model could save costs, improve liver transplants, Stanford-led research shows  Stanford Medicine
    3. New AI…

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  • Diagnostic performance of 1-hour plasma glucose and glucose curve shape during oral glucose tolerance test: a cross-sectional study in a Brazilian cohort | Diabetology & Metabolic Syndrome

    Diagnostic performance of 1-hour plasma glucose and glucose curve shape during oral glucose tolerance test: a cross-sectional study in a Brazilian cohort | Diabetology & Metabolic Syndrome

    Baseline characteristics according to glycemic profile

    A total of 1797 OGTT records were included in the analysis. Most participants were female (68.9%), with a mean age of 49.6 ± 15.0 years. The mean FPG was 5.02 ± 0.62 mmol/L…

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  • Hula-hooping 86-year-old smashes Children in Need goal

    Hula-hooping 86-year-old smashes Children in Need goal

    A woman who has twirled a hula hoop around her waist 10,000 times over the course of 100 days is celebrating after quadrupling her fundraising target for BBC Children in Need.

    Nova Strange, 86, hoped to raise £500 by performing 100 twirls with a…

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  • Pre and Post Menstruation Cognitive Functioning in Women with remenstrual Dysphoric Disorder, Premenstrual Syndrome and Controls: A Quasi Experimental Study | BMC Women’s Health

    Pre and Post Menstruation Cognitive Functioning in Women with remenstrual Dysphoric Disorder, Premenstrual Syndrome and Controls: A Quasi Experimental Study | BMC Women’s Health

    The overarching finding of the study shows a significant difference in cognitive functioning during the luteal and follicular phases of menstruation across all groups with a medium effect size (ր2p = 0.25). Based on descriptive trends and effect…

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  • Abramson J, Adler J, Dunger J, Evans R, Green T, Pritzel A, et al. Accurate structure prediction of biomolecular interactions with alphafold 3. Nature. 2024;630:493–500.

    Article 
    PubMed 
    PubMed Central 

    Google…

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  • Retailers Confront Tariff Whiplash: CBS’s “Next Frontier in Retail” Discussion Focuses on Resilient, Regenerative Supply Chains – Columbia Business School

    1. Retailers Confront Tariff Whiplash: CBS’s “Next Frontier in Retail” Discussion Focuses on Resilient, Regenerative Supply Chains  Columbia Business School
    2. Data Quality and Skill Gaps Pose Major Barriers to AI Adoption  Pharmaceutical Commerce
    3. How to manage manufacturing amid changes to the global trade landscape  Crain’s Detroit Business
    4. Manufacturers Struggle to Keep Shelves Stocked Amid Tariff Shifts  Pharmaceutical Commerce

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  • China voices ‘extreme disappointment’ with Dutch minister at centre of car chip row | Automotive industry

    China voices ‘extreme disappointment’ with Dutch minister at centre of car chip row | Automotive industry

    The Chinese government has expressed “extreme disappointment” with the Dutch minister at the heart of a row over chip supply to the car industry.

    A spokesperson for the ministry of commerce was responding to an interview by Vincent Karremans on Thursday in which he described the standoff between China and the European Union as a “wake-up call” for western leaders.

    The spokesperson said: “China has noted the recent remarks made by Dutch minister of economic affairs Karremans in media interviews. China expresses extreme disappointment and strong dissatisfaction with such remarks that confuse right and wrong, distort facts and persist in a single-minded course.

    “The profound lesson this semiconductor supply chain crisis has taught the world is that administrative measures should not be used to improperly interfere with corporate operations.”

    Beijing imposed a worldwide ban on exports of chips from Nexperia at the beginning of the October, almost bringing the global car industry to a halt.

    Its drastic action followed a decision by the Dutch government to take supervisory control of the Chinese-owned company at the end of September citing economic security issues.

    In the interview Karremans said the Dutch government had received intelligence that the Chinese CEO was “moving away intellectual property rights, they were firing people and they were looking to relocate production to China” from its subsidiary factory in Hamburg.

    Nexperia is a subsidiary of Wingtech Technology, a Shanghai-listed company, which bought the Dutch chip maker in 2018.

    Karremans said he had no regrets about the steps his government took, saying on the basis of the information he had now, he would do it all over again.

    But his actions have infuriated China, which instead of entering a bilateral battle on behalf of Wingtech, ordered a global ban on exports of Nexperia chips which are all finished in China.

    The spokesperson for the Chinese ministry described a court decision to suspend the Chinese boss of Nexperia as “erroneous” and blamed the export ban directly on the Dutch.

    “This unwise and impulsive act, which violates the spirit of contract, is the root cause of the turmoil and chaos in the global semiconductor supply chain,” it said.

    A delegation from the Netherlands is travelling to Beijing next week in an effort to find a long-term resolution to the row, with Karremans expected to travel there next month on a pre-scheduled trade trip.

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