Categories
Health

Moderna inventory jumps after Oppenheimer improve on pipeline potential

Artur Widak | Nurphoto | Getty Images

Shares of Moderna closed more than 13% higher on Tuesday after Oppenheimer upgraded the stock to “outperform,” saying the Covid vaccine maker could market five products by 2026.

The upgrade follows a dismal 2023 for Moderna, whose only commercially available product is its Covid shot. The company’s stock has long been tied to its vaccine, and its shares fell nearly 45% last year as demand for Covid products plummeted worldwide. 

Oppenheimer analyst Hartaj Singh said the company’s Covid sales could hit a low point in 2024 due to factors such as vaccine fatigue. But the firm expects Covid vaccine sales to rise in 2025 and beyond as education about Covid and spending on awareness about the disease increase.

Singh was even more upbeat about Moderna’s pipeline potential, highlighting a handful of possible product launches over the next 12 to 18 months that could boost sales in 2025. 

That includes a potential approval this year for Moderna’s experimental vaccine that aims to protect older adults from respiratory syncytial virus, which typically causes mild, cold-like symptoms but more severe cases in seniors and children.

The company has said that the Food and Drug Administration will make a decision on its RSV vaccine in April. 

Moderna’s experimental flu vaccine could also win approval in 2024 or 2025, Singh said. In September, the company said its shot produced a stronger immune response against four strains of the virus than a currently available flu vaccine in a late-stage trial. 

Singh also said Moderna could file for FDA approval of its experimental personalized cancer vaccine in 2024 or 2025. The company may apply under the FDA’s accelerated approval pathway, which allows for expedited approval of drugs that treat serious conditions and fill what the agency calls an “unmet medical need” based on a specific clinical trial metric.

Moderna and its partner Merck are currently studying the shot in combination with Merck’s blockbuster therapy Keytruda for the treatment of patients with a deadly skin cancer called melanoma and other cancers. 

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Also on Tuesday, Moderna reiterated in a shareholder letter that it expects to see sales growth in 2025. The company highlighted its RSV vaccine and the possible approval for its combination shot targeting Covid and the flu, which could come “as early as 2025.”

Moderna in its third-quarter earnings release in November said it expects revenue to fall to $4 billion in 2024 before it grows again in 2025. The company expects to “break even” in 2026. The company also said in November that it would only hit the low end of its sales forecast of $6 billion to $8 billion for 2023, reflecting weaker demand for Covid vaccines.

Moderna has also said it plans to launch up to 15 products in the next five years — a goal it first outlined during its annual research and development day in September.

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Correction: Moderna shares fell nearly 45% last year. An earlier version misstated the percentage.

Categories
Sport

Michigan’s Jim Harbaugh has thrived on confrontation, controversy

By Paolo Uggetti, Kyle Bonagura and Adam Rittenberg

LOS ANGELES — Jim Harbaugh is nowhere to be seen, but his influence is everywhere.

As Michigan players and coaches assemble around microphones ahead of their third straight College Football Playoff appearance (vs. Alabama, Monday, 5 ET, ESPN), Harbaugh’s presence can be felt throughout the interview rooms.

Even though Harbaugh is still a few days away from speaking himself, you can hear him as players answer questions, reverting to Harbaugh’s mantras like they’re reading from a script authored by their head coach. They’re not talking points as much as they are a result of Harbaugh’s deep influence, which has permeated this Wolverines team.

You can see it too when every question about him — his quirks, character and coaching style — produces a response preceded by a smile or a full laugh, an acknowledgment of his peculiar nature, but always backed by a full endorsement.

“I love Coach and his unique personality,” edge rusher Jaylen Harrell said. “He’s a different guy, a different animal.”

They say a team often takes on the personality of its head coach, and it doesn’t take much to see how Michigan has done just that. To call Harbaugh’s personality unique would not only be an understatement, but also a disservice to how much his approach has shaped his career.

At nearly every stop, Harbaugh hasn’t just won but thrived by creating a tight-knit environment where the narrative — and its protagonists and antagonists — has been clear. The “us against the world” mentality is a coaching trope, but for Harbaugh, it’s an inextricable part of his journey as he’s gone from Stanford to the NFL and now Ann Arbor.

AP Photo/Rick Scuteri

This season, perhaps more than any other, Harbaugh’s tendency to use adversity in his team’s favor has been thrust into the spotlight. After he was suspended three games to start the season — a university-imposed penalty amid an NCAA investigation into alleged recruiting violations during the COVID-19 dead period — Michigan became the subject of another NCAA investigation, this one into a sign-stealing scheme orchestrated by off-field analyst Connor Stalions. Harbaugh was suspended for the last three games of the regular season by the Big Ten.

“I think it just made us stronger as a team,” defensive back Rod Moore said. “You don’t have your head coach for about six games of the season and you still go undefeated. It makes you a strong team overall. I think it made us come together more.”

Without missing a beat, Harbaugh and Michigan used the suspensions and the backlash to the sign-stealing scheme to both fuel their national title aspirations and ardently defend their head coach at every turn. Instead of the controversy distracting the Wolverines, it’s only emboldened them in their belief that it is really them against the world.

“Coach tells us he doesn’t hold grudges, but he remembers everything,” linebacker Junior Colson said. “That’s the way he lives, and that’s the way we all live.”

BOB BOWLSBY HAD been an athletic director for more than two decades when he selected Harbaugh to lead Stanford’s program in December 2006. Bowlsby had made hires across a swath of sports, and understood the ingredients that drove coaches.

Harbaugh, who previously coached the University of San Diego, an FCS program, took things to the extreme.

“I’ve been around a lot of highly competitive people before,” said Bowlsby, who led athletic departments at Northern Iowa and Iowa before Stanford. “But I don’t know if I’ve been around anybody that’s any more competitive than he is.”

Bowlsby didn’t know Harbaugh well before bringing him to Stanford, but he soon saw how he worked with players and assistants. Harbaugh constantly “looked for things that can jazz up his guys,” Bowlsby recalled.

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When Wolverines players and coaches arrived for the team’s Nov. 11 game at Penn State — the first of Harbaugh’s Big Ten-imposed suspension — wearing “Michigan vs. Everybody” and “Free Harbaugh” merch, Bowlsby saw it as fitting perfectly with Harbaugh’s motivational master plan. The same tactic worked at Stanford — even when no one, really, was hell-bent on the Cardinal’s demise. But with Michigan mired in controversy, Harbaugh couldn’t have asked for a better opportunity to lean into it.

Throughout his career, he has exhibited a clear belief that even the perceived existence of enemies outside the locker room carries value for a football team. If that meant picking a fight with the biggest bully, such as USC and coach Pete Carroll, so be it.

In Harbaugh’s first year at Stanford, the Cardinal upset USC as a 41-point underdog, igniting a rivalry between him and Carroll that would carry over into the NFL. His animosity toward Carroll was most prominently on display in 2009, when he went for two late in a 55-21 win, prompting Carroll to famously ask Harbaugh, “What’s your deal?” in the postgame handshake. Any exercise to gain even the slightest edge is something Harbaugh believes is worth doing.

Former Stanford linebacker A.J. Tarpley, who had a brief NFL career, spent just one season under Harbaugh on the Farm, but quickly came to understand how the coach operated.

“It just felt like he always had our back outwardly,” Tarpley said. “So whatever was going on in the locker room and practices could be miserable, but outside of that, it was him and us against the world.”

Who, exactly, was reciprocating that attitude toward Stanford wasn’t always obvious and, often, didn’t really matter.

“It was anybody, and that could have been internal, it could have been a player, a coach,” Tarpley said. “It was one of those things where you were either with us or against us, and there was very little room for gray area in there.”

Added Bowlsby: “I suppose that there were times when some of it was manufactured.”

Much of that general mantra stems from Harbaugh’s time as a Michigan player.

While at Stanford, Jim Harbaugh didn’t shy away from taking on Pac-12 power USC and Pete Carroll. AP Photo/Matt Sayles

“For Jim, it’s just like it was for Bo Schembechler — ‘The team, the team, the team’ — and the more it can be us against them, the more he’s likely to get the outcome that he wants,” Bowlsby said. “Coaches in general sort of thrive on controversy and competition. It comes in different forms at different times, but [Harbaugh] definitely does.”

Bowlsby sees a direct link between Harbaugh’s success and his desire for an adversarial environment. In four years at Stanford, Harbaugh compiled a 29-21 record after inheriting a team that went 1-11 in 2006, capping his stay with a 12-1 season and a No. 4 final ranking in 2010.

“He sometimes does things that annoy you, but you like him quite a bit on Saturdays,” Bowlsby said.

Harbaugh’s success at Stanford was followed by even more in the NFL with the San Francisco 49ers, whom he guided to three straight NFC title games and a Super Bowl in 2012. He brought that “with us or against us” spirit from Stanford to the NFL — and not even the team’s wealthy owner was off limits.

His time with the 49ers was shaded by a contentious, adversarial relationship with team owner Jed York that was an open secret but never discussed publicly.

Harbaugh might have been able to get away with being an annoyance to Stanford administrators, but it didn’t work that way with York. After he missed the playoffs for the first time with an 8-8 record in 2014, Harbaugh’s tenure ended.

The 49ers tried to frame Harbaugh’s departure as a mutual parting of ways, but Harbaugh dismissed that portrayal after taking the job at Michigan, telling the Tim Kawakami podcast, “I was told I wouldn’t be the coach anymore. … I didn’t leave the 49ers. I felt like the 49er hierarchy left me.”

Harbaugh remained cold toward York publicly for years. In one case, after his brother-in-law, Tom Crean, was fired as the men’s basketball coach at Indiana in 2017, Harbaugh found a way to compare it to his 49ers exit three years earlier.

“Much like my situation in San Francisco, the people that are doing the micromanaging … when it comes to building a ball team, what they know could not blow up a small balloon,” Harbaugh told Sports Illustrated. “In my case, an owner and a general manager.”

The only benefit from those adversarial relationships, it seems, is that they fostered his return to Michigan in late 2014.

MICHIGAN WIDE RECEIVER Roman Wilson was awoken from a nap on the team plane headed to Penn State in early November and was met with the news: The Big Ten had suspended his head coach.

“Blake [Corum] woke me up and showed me his phone and I saw the headline, he’s suspended,” Wilson said. “Then we get on the bus and we see Coach Harbaugh walking on the bus. It was kind of unreal. Somebody shouldn’t be suspended like that.”

In the middle of a season in which he had already missed three games, Harbaugh and the Wolverines had another adversary besides the Nittany Lions or any other team remaining on their schedule: their own conference. And this suspension didn’t come during the nonconference portion of the schedule, it would include the most important game of the season, against Ohio State.

The “Free Harbaugh” sentiment expressed by fans and players after the Big Ten’s suspension fit the coach’s ethos perfectly. Scott Taetsch/Getty Images

“You could tell when he came back and also when it happened, he was just real upset,” defensive back Rod Moore said. “When we saw him on the runway after the Penn State game, his voice was gone. So you could tell he was in the hotel yelling.”

While shock and anger became the initial teamwide reactions, Harbaugh quickly tapped into a familiar feeling, using the events to galvanize his players not just for the game against Penn State, but for the season going forward. After much back and forth, Michigan and Harbaugh accepted the three-game suspension.

“In some ways when he got suspended, it was almost like a blessing,” Wilson said. “It just gave us that extra boost of motivation and energy.”

As the discourse around Michigan’s sign stealing grew during the following weeks and the program became the antagonist to the rest of the college football world, Harbaugh reinforced the narrative internally to his advantage, and his players followed suit.

“You don’t have anything good to say about us or don’t support us, saying bad things, it’s all right, we don’t really need you,” tight end Colston Loveland said. “It’s us versus everyone who doesn’t want to see us succeed. So I think he took that and ran with it for sure.”

“Everyone was trying to take away all the stuff we’ve done all year and just take away how good we’ve actually been playing,” defensive lineman Mason Graham said. “So I feel like that was a little jab to us. I mean, [Harbaugh] was the key guy leading it.”

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As players such as offensive lineman Trevor Keegan describe it, once the initial fervor around the suspension cooled off, Harbaugh was back to his smiling self, cracking jokes to loosen up the team and shift its focus from frustration to motivation. In some ways, this has always been what Harbaugh is best at.

“Deep down he definitely kind of likes being the bad guy,” Wilson said. “He likes being that villain, but he is a good guy at the end of the day.”

Even to his own players, Harbaugh is a bit of a paradox. Yes, he is a khaki-wearing, jolly good fellow who sings Bon Jovi on the team bus, preaches with off-the-wall analogies, and his eccentricity connects with those who see themselves as being cut from the same cloth where the main thread is still football. But he is also a prickly personality who doesn’t just appear to welcome confrontations but relishes the adversarial nature of the sport, utilizing it to his and the team’s advantage even when some of that conflict may be coming from inside the house.

“In the two years I’ve been here previously to this year, I’ve never seen him as happy as he was this year, even with everything that was going on,” quarterback J.J. McCarthy said. “Just being able to see how he handled everything and just the effect that he had on the players and the coaches, just taking everything on the chin, always welcoming the hate, welcoming all the noise his way and trying to deflect it off his players and coaches, it’s like everything you want in a leader.”

IN LATE JUNE, Michigan president Santa Ono and athletic director Warde Manuel met with ESPN inside a conference room down the hall from Ono’s campus office. Ono had requested the joint interview with Manuel, and made it clear the two of them, along with Harbaugh, had built a synergy during a time of great success for the program, while also navigating some controversies along the way.

“We’re three peas in a pod,” Ono said. “It’s incredible alignment.”

Manuel followed Ono’s answer by mentioning, unprompted, the reported tension between him and Harbaugh. Michigan insider John U. Bacon reported in January 2023 that Harbaugh and Manuel had not spoken in months.

The fact that Ono broke the news on social media that Harbaugh would remain at Michigan for the 2023 season — after speaking directly with Harbaugh — rather than Manuel, who isn’t on social media, amplified speculation about the Harbaugh-Manuel dynamic. Manuel and Harbaugh were teammates at Michigan in 1986 under Schembechler, when Harbaugh was a team captain and Manuel a freshman lineman. Although Manuel did not hire Harbaugh, the two remained in contact. Harbaugh interrupted Manuel’s introductory news conference at Michigan by presenting him with a personalized Michigan football jersey with the No. 79, which Manuel had worn for the Wolverines.

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“It was just a joke that this is even a question or concern because of what was on social media,” Manuel said. “Jim and I have a great relationship, from my perspective. We always have. We’ve had an open communication since the day I started.”

Manuel went on to add: “I wish Jim was here because when we talked about it, we both were like, ‘Where the hell does this come from? Where’s this coming from that these stories are being made up?’ It doesn’t bother me, but it’s ridiculous.”

Manuel said in June that there’s “healthy” tension between him and Harbaugh on certain topics, just like there would be with any significant and close administrator-coach relationship. They have differences, but the support, Manuel said, is unwavering.

On the morning of the Penn State game, when it became clear that Harbaugh wouldn’t coach, Manuel issued the most direct and notable statement of his tenure as AD. Manuel criticized the Big Ten for imposing a penalty without the full NCAA investigative process concluding, calling it, “an assault on the rights of everyone.” He went after other Big Ten coaches and administrators who had urged the league to act, writing that they “can rejoice today that someone was ‘held accountable,’ but they should be worried about the new standard of judgment [without a complete investigation] that has been unleashed in this conference.”

Manuel also fully backed Harbaugh, who was serving the suspension imposed by the league on Michigan, not on the coach directly.

“You may have removed him from our sidelines today, but Jim Harbaugh is our head football coach,” Manuel’s statement read. “He has instilled his pride, passion, and the team’s belief in themselves to achieve greatness. I will continue to support Jim throughout this process, my coaches and staff, and especially our student-athletes as we continue to play this game and fight to win for Michigan and all who love us.”

The Big Ten suspension only seemed to further embolden not just Michigan’s stance on the matter, but Harbaugh himself to squeeze every ounce of motivation out of the situation. And it worked. Michigan beat Ohio State for the third straight season and advanced to the College Football Playoff.

WITH TWO OPEN Diet Cokes in his hands, Jim Harbaugh walked to the lectern bearing his name on Rose Bowl media day. There was a problem: The chair he was supposed to sit in was too short for his liking.

Michigan staff scrambled to find something to prop the chair on, trying multiple things — even a different chair — to no avail. Finally, a footstool that elevated the chair was found that was appropriate for the man everyone had come to hear from.

Michigan players said Jim Harbaugh has been as happy as they’ve seen him despite (or because of?) this season’s turmoil. Kirby Lee/USA TODAY Sports

Harbaugh’s idiosyncrasies were on full display. He said he thought Jesus would be using sports and agriculture for his analogies if he lived today. He said Jesus would be a five-star. He talked about how this season has been a “spiritual journey” and how his team had been “galvanized” by everything that has happened this year.

“We have a one-track mind,” Harbaugh said of how his team has handled the ups and downs of the year. “That’s really worked for us. That mindset of a one-track mind is in a lot of ways what has gotten us here.”

Michigan touts its collective harmony, but it’s evident that Harbaugh’s ethos is the magnetic force that drives it. Whether he’s been present physically or not, his ability to embrace the villain role and utilize it as a positive bonding agent has given Michigan an edge it may have previously lacked.

“He’s just a steel wall that blocks everything out,” McCarthy said. “But he’s also a filter, negative energy just goes through him, and he passes out positive energy. He never flinches, no matter what comes his way, no matter what allegations he has to face, he’s the same guy. Just being able to look at that every single day, it really is just like invaluable.”

Following the Penn State victory, Harbaugh was quick to crown his team with a new moniker.

“I would have to say it’s America’s team,” Harbaugh said at the time. “America loves a team that beats the odds, beats the adversity, overcomes what the naysayers, critics, so-called experts think. That’s my favorite kind of team.”

Yet despite Harbaugh’s repeated affinity for this Michigan team and what it has a chance to do after everything it’s gone through, it’s impossible to ignore what looms. No matter the outcome in the CFP, Harbaugh’s name — which has been linked to NFL teams in the past — will continue to be mentioned with vacant NFL jobs following the season while a contract extension with Michigan remains unsigned. On Saturday, ESPN also reported that Harbaugh had hired agent Don Yee, who represents Tom Brady and Sean Payton among others and has deep NFL ties.

With not one but two NCAA investigations involving him and yearly NFL rumors, there’s a question of how much of Harbaugh a program can take. On the other hand, just as his team has been galvanized throughout this season, Harbaugh’s commitment to Michigan going forward may have been strengthened through this process, too.

“It’s been a happy mission,” Harbaugh said. “It’s been a joy to watch guys make the choice to play as a team, to be unselfish, to play for each other, to give it their very best. As I said before, you know when you’re on a real ball team, and that’s what our team is.”

As, for the third time in three seasons, Michigan stands on the brink of a game that would give it a chance to win the national title, the one adversity Harbaugh can’t deflect or turn into a positive is that Michigan has lost in this position two years in a row. Overwhelmed by Georgia in 2021 and upset by TCU in 2022, if the Wolverines can’t beat Alabama, three would constitute a pattern.

As Bowlsby said, plenty have put up with Harbaugh because he wins. And while he has beaten Ohio State three years in a row, being unable to reach the national title game, let alone win it, could soon become the defining struggle of his Michigan tenure.

Whether Michigan wins or loses, however, the one thing this season has shown is that this isn’t America’s team. It’s Harbaugh’s, so long as he wants it.

Categories
Technology

Cybersecurity guru Mikko Hyppönen’s 5 largest AI threats for 2024

Mikko Hyppönen has spent decades on the frontlines of the fight against malware. The 54-year-old has vanquished some of the world’s most destructive computer worms, tracked down the creators of the first-ever PC virus, and sold his own software since he was a teenager in Helsinki.

In the intervening years, he’s earned Vanity Fair profiles, spots on Foreign Policy’s Top 100 Global Thinkers, and the role of Chief Research Officer at WithSecure— the largest cybersecurity firm in the Nordics.

The ponytailed Finn is also the curator of the online Malware Museum. Yet all the history in his archives could be overshadowed by the new era in tech: the age of artificial intelligence.

“AI changes everything,” Hyppönen tells TNW on a video call. “The AI revolution is going to be bigger than the internet revolution.”

As a self-described optimistic, the hacker hunter expects the revolution to leave a positive impact. But he’s also worried about the cyber threats it will unleash.

At the dawn of 2024, Hyppönen revealed his five most pressing concerns for the year to come. They come in no particular order — although there is one that’s causing the most sleepless nights.

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Researchers have long described deepfakes as the most alarming use of AI for crime, but the synthetic media still hasn’t fulfilled their predictions. Not yet, anyway.

In recent months, however, their fears have started to materialise. Deepfake fraud attempts are up 3,000% in 2023, according to research from Onfido, an ID verification unicorn based in London.

In the world of information warfare, fabricated videos are also advancing. The crude deepfakes of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy from the early days of Russia’s full-scale invasion have lately been superseded by sophisticated media manipulations.

Deepfakes are also now emerging in simple cons. The most notable example was discovered in October, when a video appeared on TikTok that claimed to show MrBeast offering new iPhones for just $2.

Lots of people are getting this deepfake scam ad of me… are social media platforms ready to handle the rise of AI deepfakes? This is a serious problem pic.twitter.com/llkhxswQSw

— MrBeast (@MrBeast) October 3, 2023

Still, financial scams that harness convincing deepfakes remain rare. Hyppönen has only seen three so far — but he expects this number to quickly proliferate. As deepfakes become more refined, accessible, and affordable, their scale could expand rapidly.

“It’s not happening in massive scale just yet, but it’s going be a problem in a very short time,” Hyppönen says.

To reduce the risk, he suggests an old-fashioned defence: safe words.

Picture a video call with colleagues or family members. If someone demands sensitive information, such as a cash transfer or confidential document, you would request the safe word before fulfilling the request.

“Right now, it sounds a little bit ridiculous, but we should be doing it nevertheless,” Hyppönen advises.

“Setting up a safe word right now is a very cheap insurance against when this starts happening in large scale. That’s what we should be taking away right now for 2024.”

Despite resembling deepfakes in name, deep scams don’t necessarily involve manipulated media. In their case, the “deep” refers to the massive scale of the scam. This is reached through automation, which can expand the targets from a handful to endless.

The techniques can turbocharge all manner of scams. Investment scams, phishing scams, property scams, ticket scams, romance scams… wherever there’s manual work, there’s room for automation.

Remember the Tinder Swindler? The conman stole an estimated $10 million from women he met online. Imagine if he had been equipped with large language models (LLMs) to disseminate his lies, image generators to add apparent photographic evidence, and language converters to translate his messages. The pool of potential victims would be enormous.

“You could be scamming 10,000 victims at the same time instead of three or four,” Hyppönen says.

Airbnb scammers can also reap the benefits. Currently, they typically use stolen images from real listings to convince holidaymakers to make a booking. It’s a laborious process that can be foiled with a reverse image search. With GenAI, those barriers no longer exist.

“With Stable Diffusion, DALL-E, and Midjourney you can just generate unlimited amounts of completely plausible Airbnbs which no one will be able to find.”

AI is already writing malware. Hyppönen’s team has discovered three worms that launch LLMs to rewrite code every time the malware replicates. None have been found in real networks yet, but they’ve been published in GitHub — and they work.

Using an OpenAI API, the worms harness GPT to generate different code for every target it infects. That makes them difficult to detect. OpenAI can, however, blacklist the behaviour of the malware.

“This is doable with the most powerful code-writing generative AI systems because they are closed source,” Hyppönen says.

“If you could download the whole large language model, then you could run it locally or on your own server. They couldn’t blacklist you anymore. This is the benefit of closed-source generative AI systems.”

The benefit also applies to image generator algorithms. Offer open access to the code and watch your restrictions on violence, porn, and deception get dismantled.

With that in mind, it’s unsurprising that OpenAI is more closed than its name suggests. Well, that and all the income they would lose to copycat developers, of course.

Another emerging concern involves zero-day exploits, which are discovered by attackers before developers have created a solution to the problem. AI can detect these threats — but it can also create them.

“It’s great when you can use an AI assistant to find zero-days in your code so you can fix them,” Hyppönen says. “And it’s awful when someone else is using AI to find zero-days in your code so they can exploit you.

“We’re not exactly there yet, but I believe that this will be a reality — and probably a reality in the shorter term.”

A student working at WithSecure has already demonstrated the threat. In a thesis assignment, they were given regular user rights to access the command line on a Windows 11 computer. The student then fully automated the process of scanning for vulnerabilities to become the local admin. WithSecure decided to classify the thesis.

“We didn’t think it was responsible to publish the research,” Hyppönen says. “It was too good.”

WithSecure has baked automation into its defences for decades. That gives the company an edge over attackers, who still largely rely on manual operations. For criminals, there’s a clear way to close the gap: fully automated malware campaigns.

“That would turn the game into good AI versus bad AI,” Hyppönen says.

That game is set to start soon. When it does, the results could be alarming. So alarming that Hyppönen ranks fully automated malware as the number one security threat for 2024. Yet lurking around the corner is an even bigger threat.

Hyppönen has a noted hypothesis about IoT security. Known as Hyppönen Law, the theory states that whenever an appliance is described as “smart,” it’s vulnerable. If that law applies to superintelligent machines, we could get into some serious trouble.

Hyppönen expects to witness the impact.

“I think we will become the second most intelligent being on the planet during my lifetime,” he says. “I don’t think it’s going to happen in 2024. But I think it’s going to happen during my lifetime.”

That would add urgency to fears about artificial general intelligence. To maintain human control of AGI, Hyppönen advocates for strong alignment with our goals and needs.

“The things we are building must have an understanding of humanity and share its long-term interests with humans…  The upside is huge — bigger than anything ever — but the downside is also bigger than anything ever.”

Categories
Entertainment

The Handmaid’s Story Star Yvonne Strahovski Welcomes Child No. 3

Yvonne Strahovski is entering the new year with a new family member. 

The Handmaid’s Tale star recently welcomed baby no. 3 with husband Tim Loden

“Our third little (big!) boy thundered into the world at lightning speed, thank goodness Tim was there to catch our boy jussstttt as our amazing team made it into our home to help,” Yvonne wrote on Instagram Dec. 30 alongside a photo of her kissing the newborn as Tim held him in his arms, “such an unreal, intense, amazing experience I will never forget. Welcome my baby boy, we have been waiting for you & love you sooooo much.” 

After sharing the news, the couple—who did not reveal the little one’s name—received several congratulatory messages from Yvonne’s costars.

“My new best friend is finally here!” Ever Carradine wrote in the comments. “Can’t wait to spoil you rotten, sweet boy.” Added Bradley Whitford, “Love, love, love to you all!!!”

Categories
Science

ESA’s Tiny Pinhole Thruster is Prepared for Manufacturing. 

Rocket propulsion technology has progressed leaps and bounds since the first weaponised rockets of the Chinese and Mongolian empires. They were nothing more than rocket powered arrows and spears but they set the foundations for our exploration of space. Liquid propellant, ion engines and solar sails have all hit the headlines as we strive for more efficient methods of travel but a team has taken the next leap with a palm sized thruster system that could boost future tiny space craft across the gulf of space.

Palm sized thrusters are quite different to the gargantuan rockets we are used to, for example the Saturn V rocket that took the Apollo astronauts to the Moon which stood 110m tall. The difference for the ATHENA thrusters is that they are designed for manoeuvring and propelling cubesats and small satellites once they are in space rather than propelling rockets from the surface of the Earth. 

The Apollo 10 Saturn V during rollout. Credit: NASA

The team led by Daniel Perez Grande, CEO and Co-Founder of IENAI Spain, have called their palm sized thruster ‘Athena’, not the most catchy title but neatly represents what it does- the Adaptable, THruster based on Electrospray powered NAnotechnology.  The technology has been developed for ESA and, following a successful design stage and, if all goes to plan, a prototype will be available by the end of 2024. 

The technology relies upon something known as an electrospray which has previously been used in mass spectrometry but has now found its way into space. Each thruster has seven emitter arrays that are etched onto silicon wafers and each houses 500 pinhole emitters.  Electrically charged particles from a conductive salt are sprayed out, propelled via an electrostatic field to produce the maximum amount of thrust which can be of the order of 20km per second. The concept is very similar to the ion propulsion systems already in use but on a much smaller scale. 

Like its ION and liquid propellant cousins the thruster is highly adjustable and can be reconfigured in flight. The thrusters are eco-friendly too since the propellant is a non-toxic liquid and require no pressurised storage tanks. The small size of the thrusters means they can be grouped together in any required configuration with a total of six required to fit the face of a typical 10cm cubesats and can be clustered together on satellites and probes of up to 50kg mass. The team are hoping they can develop the technology further to work on craft up to 300kg. 

Space technology is where possible, getting smaller and smaller like most other areas of technology. In order to achieve this though the propulsion systems also need to shrink and this is potentially a more challenging ask. ATEHNA looks to be a promising development but ESA and their partners are working on two other thruster systems based upon electrospray technology all of which, seem to be bringing promising results. 

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Health

Reckitt Benckiser unit recollects presumably contaminated child formulation powder, FDA says

Enfimil infant formula, made by Mead Johnson Nutrition Co., sits on display in a supermarket in New York, U.S.

Daniel Acker | Bloomberg News | Getty Images

Baby formula maker Reckitt Benckiser’s Mead Johnson Nutrition has voluntarily chosen to recall certain batches of baby formula powder due to possible bacterial contamination, according to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

The possibly impacted batches of Nutramigen Powder, an infant formula specially designed for children allergic to cow’s milk, were produced in June and distributed throughout the summer.

“Based on the limited availability of the remaining stock of this special infant formula, it is believed that much, if not all, of the products recalled in the United States have been consumed,” Reckitt said in a statement published by the FDA on Sunday.

The company said no “illnesses or adverse events” have been recorded yet but urged consumers who have purchased Nutramigen to check the bottom of the can to see if they have one of the possibly contaminated batches.

The impacted batch numbers and their corresponding can sizes are as follows:

  • ZL3FHG, 12.6 oz cans
  • ZL3FMH, 12.6 oz cans
  • ZL3FPE, 12.6 oz cans
  • ZL3FQD, 12.6 oz cans
  • ZL3FRW, 19.8 oz cans
  • ZL3FXJ, 12.6 oz cans

The possible bacterial infection in the product can cause potentially fatal infections like sepsis and meningitis, which often have symptoms like jaundice, temperature change, poor feeding, irritability, trouble breathing and unusual movements.

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Sport

Panthers proprietor David Tepper seems to toss drink at followers

  • David Newton, ESPN Staff WriterDec 31, 2023, 06:30 PM ET

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      David Newton is an NFL reporter at ESPN and covers the Carolina Panthers. Newton began covering Carolina in 1995 and came to ESPN in 2006 as a NASCAR reporter before joining NFL Nation in 2013. You can follow Newton on Twitter at @DNewtonespn.

Carolina Panthers owner David Tepper was caught on video during Sunday’s 26-0 loss to the Jacksonville Jaguars apparently throwing a drink in the direction of Jaguars fans from his open-air suite at EverBank Stadium.

The video was posted on social media Sunday.

The incident appeared to happen with about three minutes to play after an interception by quarterback Bryce Young, who was so frustrated after a sack early in the game that he threw a tablet on the sideline.

A Panthers spokesperson declined to comment. NFL spokesperson Brian McCarthy said the league is “aware of the video” and has “no further comment at this time.”

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It came in a loss that ended Carolina’s streak of 342 games (dating to 2002) without being shut out.

It came on a day when the Panthers (2-14) assured they would have the NFL’s worst record, giving the Chicago Bears (who own Carolina’s pick) the top selection of the 2024 draft.

Carolina traded two first-round picks and top receiver DJ Moore to the Bears in April to move from ninth to first to select Young. Shortly after the draft, Tepper told a group of fans at Bank of America Stadium that Young would lead the Panthers to “Super Bowls.”

Little has gone right since. Young has ranked as one of the worst quarterbacks statistically in the NFL. The Panthers were assured weeks ago of their sixth straight losing season since Tepper paid $2.75 billion for the organization in 2018.

Tepper has fired three head coaches in-season since 2019, including Frank Reich after a 1-10 start to this season and Matt Rhule after a 1-4 start last season.

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Science

Low-cost Renewables? British OFGEN Points 48 Hour Value Hike Warning • Watts Up With That?

Essay by Eric Worrall

The British Government could bring rapid energy price relief by issuing permits to UK based fracking company Caudrilla. But this would undermine Net Zero policies.

Households issued urgent 48-hour warning as energy bills to rise by £94

Ofgem said rising costs are driven by market instability and global conflicts such as Ukraine 

Holly Evans

Households have been issued an urgent 48-hour warning to submit meter readings ahead of a £94 increase to the average home energy bill, which is due to come into effect on 1 January. 

Ofgem is increasing its price cap in response to rising wholesale prices, which has been driven because of market instability and global events, particularly the conflict in Ukraine. 

The regulator’s price cap is rising by 5 per cent from the current £1,834 for a typical dual fuel household to £1,928 from Monday, with households urged to submit readings before New Year’s Day to ensure they are charged correctly.

Read more: https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/energy-bills-rise-ofgem-meter-readings-b2471190.html

Britain sits on a lake of natural gas, 6.5 billion cubic feet under Lancashire alone. Caudrilla’s original test well in 1993 within 7 weeks of commencement was connected to the gas system, generating a steady supply of cheap energy. But the British Government since then has thrown every obstacle they can think of in the path of Caudrilla CEO Francis Egan.

One stroke of a politician’s pen could bring energy price relief to millions of British families.

How long are Britons going to continue believing the lies they’ve been fed, about the alleged dangers of global warming and fracking? At what point do Britons stop passively accepting the latest energy price hike, and demand energy self sufficiency solutions which could be implemented in weeks or months, instead of accepting yet another round of pathetic excuses about the international situation?

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