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TechCrunch
- US government confirms arrest of Chinese national accused of stealing COVID research and mass-hacking email servers
US air traffic control still runs on Windows 95 and floppy disks
On Wednesday, acting FAAΒ Administrator Chris RocheleauΒ told the House Appropriations Committee that the Federal Aviation Administration plans to replace its aging air traffic control systems, which still rely on floppy disks and Windows 95 computers, Tom's HardwareΒ reports. The agency has issued a Request For Information to gather proposals from companies willing to tackle the massive infrastructure overhaul.
"The whole idea is to replace the system. No more floppy disks or paper strips," Rocheleau said during the committee hearing. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy called the project "the most important infrastructure project that we've had in this country for decades," describing it as a bipartisan priority.
Most air traffic control towers and facilities across the US currently operate with technology that seems frozen in the 20th century, although that isn't necessarily a bad thingβwhen it works.Β Some controllers currently useΒ paper stripsΒ to track aircraft movements and transfer data between systems using floppy disks, while their computers run Microsoft'sΒ Windows 95 operating system, which launched in 1995.
Β© Getty Images
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Ars Technica
- βIn 10 years, all bets are offββAnthropic CEO opposes decadelong freeze on state AI laws
βIn 10 years, all bets are offββAnthropic CEO opposes decadelong freeze on state AI laws
On Thursday, Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei argued against a proposed 10-year moratorium on state AI regulation in a New York Times opinion piece, calling the measure shortsighted and overbroad as Congress considers including it in President Trump's tax policy bill. Anthropic makes Claude, an AI assistant similar to ChatGPT.
Amodei warned that AI is advancing too fast for such a long freeze, predicting these systems "could change the world, fundamentally, within two years; in 10 years, all bets are off."
As we covered in May, the moratorium would prevent states from regulating AI for a decade. A bipartisan group of state attorneys general has opposed the measure, which would preempt AI laws and regulations recently passed in dozens of states.
Β© Bloomberg via Getty Images