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European authorities arrest alleged admin of notorious Russian crime forum XSS

23 July 2025 at 15:45
French authorities say they wiretapped a server used by the administrator to access their private messages, which revealed activities relating to cybercrime and ransomware attacks.

Meet the cement transport ship that makes cement ingredients while sailing

16 July 2025 at 14:11
London-based Seabound has developed a carbon capture system that transforms CO2 from a ship's engine into limestone, which Heidelberg Materials will use to make cement.

Pro basketball player and 4 youths arrested in connection to ransomware crimes

10 July 2025 at 21:54

Authorities in Europe have detained five people, including a former Russian professional basketball player, in connection with crime syndicates responsible for ransomware attacks.

Until recently, one of the suspects, Daniil Kasatkin, played for MBA Moscow, a basketball team that’s part of the VTB United League, which includes teams from Russia and other Eastern European countries. Kasatkin also briefly played for Penn State University during the 2018–2019 season. He has denied the charges.

Unrelated ransomware attacks

The AFP and Le Monde on Wednesday reported that Kasatkin was arrested and detained on June 21 in France at the request of US authorities. The arrest occurred as the basketball player was at the de Gaulle airport while traveling with his fiancΓ©e, whom he had just proposed to. The 26-year-old has been under extradition arrest since June 23, Wednesday's news report said.

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How CISOs became the gatekeepers of $309B AI infrastructure spending

24 June 2025 at 15:05

Security vendors race to control $309B AI infrastructure market. How AgenticOps, eBPF and silicon-speed security will determine the winners.Read More

OpenAI cofounder tells new graduates the day is coming when AI 'will do all the things that we can'

9 June 2025 at 15:55
Ilya Sutskever
OpenAI cofounder Ilya Sutskever gave a convocation speech at the University of Toronto, his alma mater, last week.

JACK GUEZ/ Getty

  • OpenAI cofounder Ilya Sutskever says "the day will come when AI will do all the things that we can."
  • He spoke about the state of AI at the University of Toronto convocation last week.
  • Sutskever also advised graduates to "'accept reality as it is and try not to regret the past."

Ilya Sutskever says it might take years, but he believes AI will one day be able to accomplish everything humans can.

Sutskever, the cofounder and former chief scientist of ChatGPT maker OpenAI, spoke about the technology while giving a convocation speech at the University of Toronto, his alma mater, last week.

"The real challenge with AI is that it is really unprecedented and really extreme, and it's going to be very different in the future compared to the way it is today," he said.

Sutskever said that while AI is already better at some things than humans, "there are so many things it cannot do as well and it's so deficient, so you can say it still needs to catch up on a lot of things."

But, he said, he believes "AI will keep getting better and the day will come when AI will do all the things that we can do."

"How can I be so sure of that?" he continued. "We have a brain, the brain is a biological computer, so why can't a digital computer, a digital brain, do the same things? This is the one-sentence summary for why AI will be able to do all those things, because we have a brain and the brain is a biological computer."

As is customary at convocation and commencement ceremonies, Sutskever also gaveΒ advice to the new graduates.Β He implored them to "accept reality as it is, try not to regret the past, and try to improve the situation."

"It's so easy to think, 'Oh, some bad past decision or bad stroke of luck, something happened, something is unfair,'" he said. "It's so easy to spend so much time thinking like this while it's just so much better and more productive to say, 'Okay, things are the way they are, what's the next best step?'"

Sutskever hasn't always taken his own advice on the matter, though. He's said before that he regrets his involvement in the November 2023 ousting of OpenAI CEO Sam Altman.

Sutskever was a member of the board, which fired Altman after saying it "no longer has confidence" in his ability to lead OpenAI and that he was "not consistently candid in his communications."

A few days later, however, Sutskever expressed regret for his involvement in the ouster and was one of hundreds of OpenAI employees who signed an open letter threatening to quit unless Altman was reinstated as CEO.

"I deeply regret my participation in the board's actions," Sutskever said in a post on X at the time. "I never intended to harm OpenAI."

Altman was brought back as CEO the same month. Sutskever left OpenAI six months later and started a research lab focused on building "safe superintelligence."

Read the original article on Business Insider

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